Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Neutron temperature

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kinetic energy of an unbound neutron

Science withneutrons
Foundations
Neutron scattering
Other applications
Infrastructure
Neutron facilities

Theneutron detection temperature, also called theneutron energy, indicates afree neutron'skinetic energy, usually given inelectron volts. The termtemperature is used, since hot, thermal and cold neutrons aremoderated in a medium with a certain temperature. The neutron energy distribution is then adapted to theMaxwell distribution known for thermal motion. Qualitatively, the higher the temperature, the higher the kinetic energy of the free neutrons. Themomentum andwavelength of the neutron are related through thede Broglie relation. The long wavelength of slow neutrons allows for the large cross section.[1]

Neutron energy distribution ranges

[edit]

The precise boundaries of neutron energy ranges are not well defined, and differ between sources,[2] but some common names and limits are given in the following table.

Neutron energy range names[3][4]
Neutron energyNeutron wavelengthEnergy rangeProductionUsageNotes
10–7eV> 500 ÅUltracold neutronsModeration byliquid helium or soliddeuteriumNeutron optics,lifetime,electric dipole moment,condensed matter researchStorage times >15 minutes in bottles.[5]
0.0 – 25 meV≈ 2 - 6 ÅCold (slow) neutronsModeration by liquiddeuterium, liquid para-hydrogen or solidmethaneNeutron scattering
25 meV≈ 1.8 ÅThermal neutrons (at 20 °C)Room temperaturemoderatorsNuclear fission reactors,transmutation,breeding blanketsRoom temperature
25 meV–0.4 eV≈ 1.8 - 0.45 ÅEpithermal neutronsReduced moderationAbove room temperature
10–300 eV≈ 0.09 - 0.016 ÅResonance neutronsSusceptible to non-fission capture by238U.
1–20 MeV≈ 900 - 200 fmFast neutronsNuclear fission reactions, nuclear fusion reactionsFast reactors,transuranium burnup,breeding blankets,neutron bombs
> 20 MeV< 100 fmUltrafast neutronsNuclear spallation fromparticle acceleratorionsFast neutron therapy, fission researchRelativistic

The following is a detailed classification:

Thermal

[edit]

Athermal neutron is a free neutron with a kinetic energy of about 0.025eV (about 4.0×10−21J or 2.4 MJ/kg, hence a speed of 2.19 km/s), which is the energy corresponding to the most probable speed at a temperature of 290 K (17 °C or 62 °F), themode of theMaxwell–Boltzmann distribution for this temperature, Epeak =k T.

After a number of collisions with nuclei (scattering) in a medium (neutron moderator) at this temperature, thoseneutrons which are not absorbed reach about this energy level.

Thermal neutrons have a different and sometimes much larger effectiveneutron absorptioncross-section for a givennuclide than fast neutrons, and can therefore often be absorbed more easily by anatomic nucleus, creating a heavier, oftenunstableisotope of thechemical element as a result. This event is calledneutron activation.

Epithermal

[edit]

Epithermal neutrons are those with energies above the thermal energy at room temperature (i.e. 0.025 eV). Depending on the context, this can encompass all energies up to fast neutrons (as in e.g.[6][7]).

This includes neutrons produced by conversion of accelerated protons in a pitcher-catcher geometry[8]

Cold (slow) neutrons

[edit]
Cold neutron source providing neutrons at about the temperature of liquid hydrogen

Cold neutrons are thermal neutrons that have been equilibrated in a very cold substance such as liquiddeuterium. Such acold source is placed in the moderator of a research reactor or spallation source. Cold neutrons are particularly valuable forneutron scattering experiments.[9]

Ultracold neutrons are produced by inelastic scattering of cold neutrons in substances with a low neutron absorption cross section at a temperature of a few kelvins, such as soliddeuterium[10] or superfluidhelium.[11] An alternative production method is the mechanical deceleration of cold neutrons exploiting the Doppler shift.[12][13]

Ultra-cold neutrons reflect at all angles of incidence. This is because their momentum is comparable to the optical potential of materials. This effect is used to store them in bottles and study their fundamental properties[5][14] e.g. lifetime, neutron electrical-dipole moment etc... The main limitations of the use of slow neutrons is the low flux and the lack of efficient optical devices (in the case of CN and VCN). Efficient neutron optical components are being developed and optimized to remedy this lack.[15]

Fast

[edit]

Afast neutron is a free neutron with a kinetic energy level close to 1 MeV (100 TJ/kg), hence a speed of 14,000 km/s or higher. They are namedfastneutrons to distinguish them from lower-energy thermal neutrons, and high-energy neutrons produced in cosmic showers or accelerators.Fast neutrons are produced by nuclear processes:

Fast neutrons are usually undesirable in a steady-state nuclear reactor because most fissile fuel has a higher reaction rate with thermal neutrons. Fast neutrons can be rapidly changed into thermal neutrons via a process called moderation. This is done through numerous collisions with (in general) slower-moving and thus lower-temperature particles like atomic nuclei and other neutrons. These collisions will generally speed up the other particle and slow down the neutron and scatter it. Ideally, a room temperatureneutron moderator is used for this process. In reactors,heavy water,light water, orgraphite are typically used to moderate neutrons.

See caption for explanation. Lighter noble gases (helium and neon depicted) have a much higher probability density peak at low speeds than heavier noble gases, but have a probability density of 0 at most higher speeds. Heavier noble gases (argon and xenon depicted) have lower probability density peaks, but have non-zero densities over much larger ranges of speeds.
A chart displaying the speed probability density functions of the speeds of a fewnoble gases at a temperature of 298.15 K (25 C). An explanation of the vertical axis label appears on the image page. Similar speed distributions are obtained forneutrons uponmoderation.

Fission energy neutrons

[edit]
Main article:Nuclear fission

Afast neutron is a free neutron with a kinetic energy level close toMeV (1.6×10−13 J), hence a speed of ~14000 km/s (~ 5% of the speed of light). They are namedfission energy orfast neutrons to distinguish them from lower-energy thermal neutrons, and high-energy neutrons produced in cosmic showers or accelerators. Fast neutrons are produced by nuclear processes such asnuclear fission. Neutrons produced in fission, as noted above, have aMaxwell–Boltzmann distribution of kinetic energies from 0 to ~14 MeV, a mean energy of 2 MeV (for235U fission neutrons), and amode of only 0.75 MeV, which means that more than half of them do not qualify as fast (and thus have almost no chance of initiating fission infertile materials, such as238U and232Th).

Fast neutrons can be made into thermal neutrons via a process called moderation. This is done with aneutron moderator. In reactors, typicallyheavy water,light water, orgraphite are used to moderate neutrons.

Fusion neutrons

[edit]
The fusion reaction rate increases rapidly with temperature until it maximizes and then gradually drops off. The D–T rate peaks at a lower temperature (about 70 keV, or 800 million kelvins) and at a higher value than other reactions commonly considered for fusion energy.
Further information:Nuclear fusion § Criteria and candidates for terrestrial reactions

D–T (deuteriumtritium) fusion is thefusion reaction that produces the most energetic neutrons, with 14.1 MeV ofkinetic energy and traveling at 17% of thespeed of light. D–T fusion is also the easiest fusion reaction to ignite, reaching near-peak rates even when the deuterium and tritium nuclei have only a thousandth as much kinetic energy as the 14.1 MeV that will be produced.

14.1 MeV neutrons have about 10 times as much energy as fission neutrons, and they are very effective at fissioning even non-fissileheavy nuclei. These high-energy fissions also produce more neutrons on average than fissions by lower-energy neutrons. D–T fusion neutron sources, such as proposedtokamak power reactors, are therefore useful fortransmutation of transuranic waste. 14.1 MeV neutrons can also produce neutrons byknocking them loose from nuclei.

On the other hand, these very high-energy neutrons are less likely to simplybe captured without causing fission or spallation. For these reasons,nuclear weapon design extensively uses D–T fusion 14.1 MeV neutrons tocause more fission. Fusion neutrons are able to cause fission in ordinarily non-fissile materials, such asdepleted uranium (uranium-238), and these materials have been used in the jackets ofthermonuclear weapons. Fusion neutrons also can cause fission in substances that are unsuitable or difficult to make into primary fission bombs, such asreactor grade plutonium. This physical fact thus causes ordinary non-weapons grade materials to become of concern in certainnuclear proliferation discussions and treaties.

Other fusion reactions produce much less energetic neutrons. D–D fusion produces a 2.45 MeV neutron andhelium-3 half of the time and producestritium and a proton but no neutron the rest of the time. D–3He fusion produces no neutron.

Intermediate-energy neutrons

[edit]
Transmutation flow inlight water reactor, which is a thermal-spectrum reactor

A fission energy neutron that has slowed down but not yet reached thermal energies is called an epithermal neutron.

Cross sections for bothcapture andfission reactions often have multipleresonance peaks at specific energies in the epithermal energy range. These are of less significance in afast-neutron reactor, where most neutrons are absorbed before slowing down to this range, or in a well-moderatedthermal reactor, where epithermal neutrons interact mostly with moderator nuclei, not with eitherfissile orfertileactinide nuclides. But in a partially moderated reactor with more interactions of epithermal neutrons with heavy metal nuclei, there are greater possibilities fortransient changes inreactivity that might make reactor control more difficult.

Ratios of capture reactions to fission reactions are also worse (more captures without fission) in mostnuclear fuels such asplutonium-239, making epithermal-spectrum reactors using these fuels less desirable, as captures not only waste the one neutron captured but also usually result in anuclide that is notfissile with thermal or epithermal neutrons, though stillfissionable with fast neutrons. The exception isuranium-233 of thethorium cycle, which has good capture-fission ratios at all neutron energies.

High-energy neutrons

[edit]

High-energy neutrons have much more energy than fission energy neutrons and are generated as secondary particles byparticle accelerators or in the atmosphere fromcosmic rays. These high-energy neutrons are extremely efficient ationization and far more likely to causecell death thanX-rays or protons.[20][21]

Fast-neutron reactor and thermal-neutron reactor compared

[edit]

Mostfission reactors arethermal-neutron reactors that use aneutron moderator to slow down ("thermalize") the neutrons produced bynuclear fission. Moderation substantially increases the fissioncross section forfissile nuclei such asuranium-235 orplutonium-239. In addition,uranium-238 has a much lower capture cross section for thermal neutrons, allowing more neutrons to cause fission of fissile nuclei and propagate the chain reaction, rather than being captured by238U. The combination of these effects allowslight water reactors to uselow-enriched uranium.Heavy water reactors andgraphite-moderated reactors can even usenatural uranium as these moderators have much lowerneutron capturecross sections than light water.[22]

An increase in fuel temperature also raises uranium-238's thermal neutron absorption byDoppler broadening, providingnegative feedback to help control the reactor. When the coolant is a liquid that also contributes to moderation and absorption (light water or heavy water), boiling of the coolant will reduce the moderator density, which can provide positive or negative feedback (a positive or negativevoid coefficient), depending on whether the reactor is under- or over-moderated.

Intermediate-energy neutrons have poorer fission/capture ratios than either fast or thermal neutrons for most fuels. An exception is theuranium-233 of thethorium cycle, which has a good fission/capture ratio at all neutron energies.

Fast-neutron reactors use unmoderatedfast neutrons to sustain the reaction, and require the fuel to contain a higher concentration offissile material relative tofertile material (uranium-238). However, fast neutrons have a better fission/capture ratio for many nuclides, and each fast fission releases a larger number of neutrons, so afast breeder reactor can potentially "breed" more fissile fuel than it consumes.

Fast reactor control cannot depend solely on Doppler broadening or on negative void coefficient from a moderator. However, thermal expansion of the fuel itself can provide quick negative feedback. Perennially expected to be the wave of the future, fast reactor development has been nearly dormant with only a handful of reactors built in the decades since theChernobyl accident due to low prices in theuranium market, although there is now a revival with several Asian countries planning to complete larger prototype fast reactors in the next few years.[when?]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^de Broglie, Louis."On the Theory of Quanta"(PDF).aflb.ensmp.fr. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 7 November 2014. Retrieved2 February 2019.
  2. ^H. Tomita, C. Shoda, J. Kawarabayashi, T. Matsumoto, J. Hori, S. Uno, M. Shoji, T. Uchida, N. Fukumotoa and T. Iguchia,Development of epithermal neutron camera based on resonance-energy-filtered imaging with GEM, 2012, quote: "Epithermal neutrons have energies between 1 eV and 10 keV and smaller nuclear cross sections than thermal neutrons."
  3. ^Carron, N.J. (2007).An Introduction to the Passage of Energetic Particles Through Matter. p. 308.Bibcode:2007ipep.book.....C.
  4. ^"Neutron Energy".www.nuclear-power.net. Retrieved27 January 2019.
  5. ^ab"Introduction",Ultracold Neutrons, WORLD SCIENTIFIC, pp. 1–9, 2019-09-23,doi:10.1142/9789811212710_0001,ISBN 978-981-12-1270-3,S2CID 243745548, retrieved2022-11-11{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  6. ^W. C. Feldman et al., Fluxes of Fast and Epithermal Neutrons from Lunar Prospector: Evidence for Water Ice at the Lunar Poles.Science281,1496-1500(1998).DOI:10.1126/science.281.5382.1496
  7. ^Mirfayzi, S.R., Yogo, A., Lan, Z. et al. Proof-of-principle experiment for laser-driven cold neutron source. Sci Rep 10, 20157 (2020).https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-77086-y
  8. ^Akifumi YOGO, Developments of Laser-Driven Neutron Source based on "Pitcher-Catcher" Method, The Review of Laser Engineering, 2018, Volume 46, Issue 10, Pages 582-, Released on J-STAGE December 18, 2020.https://doi.org/10.2184/lsj.46.10_582
  9. ^brian.maranville@nist.gov (2017-04-17)."How neutrons are useful".NIST.Archived from the original on 2021-01-25. Retrieved2021-01-21.
  10. ^B. Lauss (May 2012). "Startup of the high-intensity ultracold neutron source at the Paul Scherrer Institute".Hyperfine Interact.211 (1):21–25.arXiv:1202.6003.Bibcode:2012HyInt.211...21L.doi:10.1007/s10751-012-0578-7.S2CID 119164071.
  11. ^R. Golub & J. M. Pendlebury (1977). "The interaction of Ultra-Cold Neutrons (UCN) with liquid helium and a superthermal UCN source".Phys. Lett. A.62 (5):337–339.Bibcode:1977PhLA...62..337G.doi:10.1016/0375-9601(77)90434-0.
  12. ^A. Steyerl; H. Nagel; F.-X. Schreiber; K.-A. Steinhauser; R. Gähler; W. Gläser; P. Ageron; J. M. Astruc; W. Drexel; G. Gervais & W. Mampe (1986). "A new source of cold and ultracold neutrons".Phys. Lett. A.116 (7):347–352.Bibcode:1986PhLA..116..347S.doi:10.1016/0375-9601(86)90587-6.
  13. ^Stefan Döge; Jürgen Hingerl & Christoph Morkel (Feb 2020)."Measured velocity spectra and neutron densities of the PF2 ultracold-neutron beam ports at the Institut Laue–Langevin".Nucl. Instrum. Methods A.953 163112.arXiv:2001.04538.Bibcode:2020NIMPA.95363112D.doi:10.1016/j.nima.2019.163112.S2CID 209942845.Archived from the original on 2021-02-24. Retrieved2020-04-24.
  14. ^Jenke, Tobias; Bosina, Joachim; Micko, Jakob; Pitschmann, Mario; Sedmik, René; Abele, Hartmut (2021-06-01)."Gravity resonance spectroscopy and dark energy symmetron fields".The European Physical Journal Special Topics.230 (4):1131–1136.arXiv:2012.07472.Bibcode:2021EPJST.230.1131J.doi:10.1140/epjs/s11734-021-00088-y.ISSN 1951-6401.S2CID 229156429.
  15. ^Hadden, Elhoucine; Iso, Yuko; Kume, Atsushi; Umemoto, Koichi; Jenke, Tobias; Fally, Martin; Klepp, Jürgen; Tomita, Yasuo (2022-05-24)."Nanodiamond-based nanoparticle-polymer composite gratings with extremely large neutron refractive index modulation". In McLeod, Robert R; Tomita, Yasuo; Sheridan, John T; Pascual Villalobos, Inmaculada (eds.).Photosensitive Materials and their Applications II. Vol. 12151. SPIE. pp. 70–76.Bibcode:2022SPIE12151E..09H.doi:10.1117/12.2623661.ISBN 978-1-5106-5178-4.S2CID 249056691.
  16. ^abcByrne, James (2011).Neutrons, nuclei, and matter: an exploration of the physics of slow neutrons (Dover ed.). Mineola, N.Y: Dover Publications. p. 259.ISBN 978-0-486-48238-5.
  17. ^Zijp WL, Nolthenius HJ, Baard JH,European Commission (1989).Nuclear data guide for reactor neutron metrology. Dordrecht: Kluwer. p. 359.ISBN 0-7923-0486-1. CD-NA-12-354-EN-C.
  18. ^Watt, B. E. (15 September 1952). "Energy Spectrum of Neutrons from Thermal Fission of U235".Physical Review.87 (6):1037–1041.Bibcode:1952PhRv...87.1037W.doi:10.1103/PhysRev.87.1037.
  19. ^Kauffman, Andrew; Herminghuysen, Kevin; Van Zile, Matthew; White, Susan; Hatch, Joel; Maier, Andrew; Cao, Lei R. (October 2024)."Review of research and capabilities of 500 kW research reactor at the Ohio State University".Annals of Nuclear Energy.206 110647.Bibcode:2024AnNuE.20610647K.doi:10.1016/j.anucene.2024.110647.
  20. ^Freeman, Tami (May 23, 2008)."Facing up to secondary neutrons". Medical Physics Web. Archived fromthe original on 2010-12-20. Retrieved2011-02-08.
  21. ^Heilbronn, L.; Nakamura, T; Iwata, Y; Kurosawa, T; Iwase, H; Townsend, LW (2005)."Expand+Overview of secondary neutron production relevant to shielding in space".Radiation Protection Dosimetry.116 (1–4):140–143.doi:10.1093/rpd/nci033.PMID 16604615.Archived from the original on 2019-01-26. Retrieved2019-01-25.
  22. ^"Some Physics of Uranium. Accessed March 7, 2009". Archived fromthe original on November 5, 2019. RetrievedMarch 8, 2009.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Neutron_temperature&oldid=1337876144"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2026 Movatter.jp