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contributor authorHagen, Alexander R.
contributor authorGrimes, Thomas F.
contributor authorArchambault, Brian C.
contributor authorHarris, Trevor N.
contributor authorTaleyarkhan, Rusi P.
date accessioned2017-05-09T01:22:26Z
date available2017-05-09T01:22:26Z
date issued2015
identifier issn2332-8983
identifier otherNERS_1_4_041004.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/159314
description abstractStateoftheart neutron detectors lack capabilities required by the fields of homeland security, health physics, and even for direct incore nuclear power monitoring. A new system being developed at Purdue’s Metastable Fluid and Advanced Research Laboratory in conjunction with S/A Labs, LLC provides capabilities that the stateoftheart lacks, and simultaneously with beta (خ²) and gamma (خ³) blindness, high (>90% intrinsic) efficiency for neutron/alpha spectroscopy and directionality, simple detection mechanism, and lowered electronic component dependence. This system, the tensioned metastable fluid detector (TMFD), provides these capabilities despite its vastly reduced cost and complexity compared with equivalent present day systems. Fluids may be placed at pressures lower than perfect vacuum (i.e.,آ negative), resulting in tensioned metastable states. These states may be induced by tensioning fluids just as one would tension solids. The TMFD works by cavitation nucleation of bubbles resulting from energy deposited by charged ions or laser photon pileup heating of fluid molecules, which are placed under sufficiently tensioned (negative) pressure states of metastability. The charged ions may be created from neutron scattering or from energetic charged particles such as alphas, alpha recoils, and fission fragments. A methodology has been created to profile the pressures in these chambers by laserinduced cavitation (LIC) for verification of a multiphysics simulation of the chambers. The methodology and simulation together have led to large efficiency gains in the current acoustically tensioned metastable fluid detector (ATMFD) system. This paper describes in detail the LIC methodology and provides background on the simulation it validates.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleCharacterization and Optimization of a Tensioned Metastable Fluid Nuclear Particle Sensor Using Laser Based Profilometry
typeJournal Paper
journal volume1
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science
identifier doi10.1115/1.4029918
journal fristpage41004
journal lastpage41004
treeJournal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science:;2015:;volume( 001 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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