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Neutron source

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Neutron source is a general term referring to a variety devices that emit neutrons, irrespective of the mechanism used to produce the neutrons. Depending upon variables including the energy of the neutrons emitted by the source, the rate of neutrons emitted by the source, the size of the source, the cost of owning and maintaining the source, and government regulations related to the source, these devices find use in a diverse array of applications in areas of physics, engineering, medicine, nuclear weapons, petroleum exploration, biology, chemistry, nuclear power and other industries.

There are several kinds of neutron sources:

Small devices

2 examples and their decay products.
Beryllium 9 + 1.7Mev gamma ray > 1 neutron + 2 Helium 4
Mercury 198 + 6.8Mev gamma ray > 1 neutron + Mercury 197(half-life 2.7 days > Gold 197)

Large devices

Neutron flux

For most applications, a higher neutron flux is always better (since it reduces the time required to conduct the experiment, acquire the image, etc.). Amateur fusion devices, like the fusor, generate only about 300 000 neutrons per second. Commercial fusor devices can generate on the order of 109 neutrons per second, which corresponds to a useable flux of less than 105 n/(cm2 s). Large neutron beamlines around the world achieve much greater flux. Reactor-based sources now produce 1015 n/(cm2 s), and spallation sources generate greater than 1017 n/(cm2 s).

See also

External links

 


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