Advances Towards Readily Deployable Antineutrino Detectors for - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Advances Towards Readily Deployable Antineutrino Detectors for

Description:

Detected antineutrino rate is sensitive to the isotopic composition of the core ... information about core power and isotopic composition while reactor online ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:73
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: lesa1
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Advances Towards Readily Deployable Antineutrino Detectors for


1
  • Advances Towards Readily Deployable Antineutrino
    Detectors for
  • Reactor Monitoring and Safeguards

Belkis Cabrera-Palmer Sandia National
Laboratories June 9, 2009
Sandia is a multiprogram laboratory operated by
Sandia Corporation, a Lockheed Martin Company,
for the United States Department of Energys
National Nuclear Security Administration under
contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.
2
Antineutrino Detectors for Reactor Monitoring and
Safeguards
Project Team
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Adam Bernstein Nathaniel Bowden Steven Dazeley
Jim Lund Dave Reyna Lorraine Sadler Scott
Kiff Belkis Cabrera-Palmer
Publications Bernstein JAP 91, 04672,
2002 Bowden NIMA 572, pp. 985, 2007 Bowden JAP
103, 074905, 2008 Bernstein JAP 105, 064902, 2009
3
Outline
  • Antineutrino detector for reactor monitoring and
    safeguards (power and fuel evolution)
  • Technology demonstrated with underground detector
  • Going aboveground handling increased backgrounds
  • Tight shield for background reduction
  • Particle ID for background rejection

4
Detected antineutrino rates from reactors are
reasonable for cubic meter scale detectors
Detected rates are quite reasonable
Reactors emit huge numbersof antineutrinos
  • 6 antineutrinos per fission from beta decay of
    daughters
  • 1021 fissions per second ina 3,000-MWt reactor
  • 1017 antineutrinos per square meter per second at
    25-m standoff
  • 6,000 events per ton per day with a perfect
    detector
  • 600 events per ton per day with a simple detector
    (e.g., SONGS1)

About 1022 antineutrinos are emitted persecond
from a typical PWR unattenuated and in all
directions
Example detector total footprint with shielding
is 2.5 meter on a side at 25-mstandoff from a
3-GWt reactor
5
Antineutrino Detectors for Reactor Monitoring
  • Different antineutrino spectra from 235U and
    239Pu
  • The isotope fuel composition changes during the
    reactor fuel cycle 235U is consumed and 239Pu is
    produced
  • ? Detected antineutrino rate is sensitive to the
    isotopic composition of the core

Detector and reactor constants
Fuel composition dependent
6
Antineutrino Detectors for Reactor Safeguards
  • Antineutrino detectors are particularly useful
    for Reactor Monitoring and Safeguards because
  • provide real-time quantitative information about
    core power and isotopic composition while reactor
    online
  • report reactor status independent of operator
    declarations
  • continuous, non-intrusive, remote, unattended
    monitoring

7
Antineutrino detector deployed at SONGS(San
Onofre Nuclear Generating Station, a PWR)
  • Since 2003, we have deployed several
    nonproliferation detectors at SONGS
  • We have demonstrated that antineutrino based
    reactor monitoring is possible using devices that
    are automated, non-intrusive, simple and
    appropriate for reactor environment

25 m
  • Tendon galleries are an ideal location
  • Rarely accessed for plant operation
  • Close to core, but outside containment
  • Provides 10s m.w.e. overburden
  • Flux 1017 n / s m2

8
Antineutrino below-ground detector SONGS1
  • 0.64 tons of Gadolinium-doped liquid
    scintillator, water shielding, plastic muon veto
  • Automatic (relative) calibration using background
    gammas
  • ne p g e n

inverse ?-decay
  • Positron
  • immediate
  • 1- 8 MeV (incl 511 keV gs)
  • Neutron
  • Delayed capture in Gd, t 28 ms
  • g cascade 8MeV

9
Antineutrino below-ground detector SONGS1
  • Hourly averaging of data allows for detection of
    a reactor scram within 5 hours at 99.9
    confidence

See NIM A 572 (2007) 985, J. Appl. Phys. 103,
074905 (2008)
10
Antineutrino below-ground detector SONGS1
  • Daily and weekly averaging allows relative power
    tracking

Daily 8 Relative uncertainty Weeky 3
Relative uncertainty
See NIM A 572 (2007) 985, J. Appl. Phys. 103,
074905 (2008)
11
Antineutrino below-ground detector SONGS1
  • Long term monitoring-fuel composition
  • Removal of 250 kg 239Pu, replacement with 1.5
    tons of fresh 235U fuel

See NIM A 572 (2007) 985, J. Appl. Phys. 103,
074905 (2008)
12
Why an aboveground detector?
  • Underground antineutrino detection has been
    demonstrated
  • Not all PWR have available underground location
  • Having no overburden requirement vastly increases
    range of possible locations for safeguards
    applications

Challenge Increased background due to cosmic rays
Our initial goal Report reactor on/off
13
Backgrounds
aboveground
  • Positron
  • immediate
  • 1- 8 MeV (incl 511 keV gs)
  • Neutron
  • captured after thermalization (if Gd, t 28 ms )
  • Released energy depends capture agent
    (if Gd, 8MeV)
  • ? eliminate other events with similar time
    structure

correlated
uncorrelated
signal inverse ?-decay
background event
Aboveground increase in fast/slow neutron
interactions due to increase in cosmic-ray flux,
hadronic and muonic components.
14
Aboveground Bckgrnd Reduction tight shielding
  • Goal Reduce flux of incoming particle
  • Shield designs for aboveground
  • 45 cm High Density Polyethylene on all sides
  • Hermetic Muon Veto
  • Interior Volume 1.5x1x1.5m
  • Fits within a 20 container

15
Aboveground Bckgrnd Rejection Particle ID
  • Goal reject signal-like bckgrnd events
  • Ideal identify one or both of inverse beta-decay
    products
  • Alternatively, identify a bckgrnd-generating
    particles (e.g., protons)

Since the expected signal rate is 100/day, a
3-sigma background is 1000/day (to observe
reactor on/off in a week.) We estimate a total
background due to fast neutrons that recoil, and
perhaps capture, of 5,000 50,000 / day !!!
16
Aboveground Candidate Particle ID technologies
Identification of inverse ?-decay products (e,n)
Inorganic Scintillator (LGB) with neutron capture
agents 6Li natGd(11BO3)3Ce, mixed with plastic
scintillator ? identifies thermal neutron
capture in 6Li via PSD
Under investigation
6Li mixed inorganic scintillator paint ZnS(Ag) ?
identifies thermal neutron capture in Li via
PSD ? segmentation to identify pair (e-like,n)
Gd-doped segmented liquid scintillator ?
segmentation identifies pair (e-like,n)
17
Aboveground Candidate Particle ID technologies
  • Organic liquid scintillator
  • identifies protons via PSD
  • not preferred in reactor environment due to
    flammability

Need to isolate proton recoils (e)-like events
since segmentation might not reject them
Under consideration to prove aboveground
detection
Gd-doped Water Cerenkov detector ? Insensitive
to proton recoils
Initial demonstration done new deployment in
fall 2009
18
Conclusions
  • Our SONGS1 detector has demonstrated feasibility
    of antineutrino detectors for reactor monitoring
  • Aboveground capability is a must and we are
    working to demonstrate it
  • Cosmogenic backgrounds (mainly fast neutrons) are
    the main challenge for aboveground detector
  • Aboveground detection will require some
    combination of
  • - Tight shielding (active and passive)
  • - Particle identification (via material or
    geometry)
  • - Background insensitivity
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com