1 / 31

Very Cold Moderator Development at LENS

Very Cold Moderator Development at LENS. David V. Baxter and W. M. Snow Indiana University. A. Bogdanov, V. P. Derenchuk, H. Kaiser, C. M. Lavelle, M. A. Lone, M. B. Leuschner, H. O. Meyer, H. Nann, R. Pynn, N. Remmes , T. Rinckel, Y. Shin P. Sokol. OUTLINE. What/why is LENS?

kasi
Download Presentation

Very Cold Moderator Development at LENS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Very Cold Moderator Development at LENS David V. Baxter and W. M. Snow Indiana University A. Bogdanov, V. P. Derenchuk, H. Kaiser, C. M. Lavelle, M. A. Lone, M. B. Leuschner, H. O. Meyer, H. Nann, R. Pynn, N. Remmes, T. Rinckel, Y. Shin P. Sokol

  2. OUTLINE • What/why is LENS? • Neutronic design; what is unique about LENS? • Why is LENS ideal for very cold netron development? • Conclusions

  3. What is LENS? • Low Energy Neutron Source: based on low-energy (p,nx) reactions (Ep<13MeV) in Be. • The source is tightly coupled to a cold moderator (e.g. solid CH4 at 3K<T<30K). • LENS will have a variable pulse width (from ~10 ms to more than 1.0 ms). • In long-pulse mode, LENS will have a time-averaged cold neutron intensity suitable for SANS and other materials research. • A small number of scattering instruments will be developed to utilize these neutrons. • Budget : $14 M+ for construction; $1.5M/yr operations

  4. LENS Missions Materials research Education LENS Instrumentation development

  5. The Facility Timeline-Source • Phase I (Early ’05: 7MeV, 7mA, 0.2% DF; 1011 n/s) • Moderator studies: Benchmarking LENS performance, lower T, different materials, … • Simple diffraction experiments • Phase II (July ‘07: 7MeV, 20mA, 0.5% DF; 1012 n/s) • Moderator composition studies/neutronic improvements • Start pushing to lower spectral temperatures ->VCNS • Initial SANS measurements • Total cross section measurements • Phase III (Jan. ’08: 13 MeV, 1013n/s) • SANS studies • Development of SESAME instrument • Eventual power (13MeV, 50mA, 5% DF; 1014 n/s)

  6. The Facility Timeline-Instruments • SANS • Commissioning of final instrument July 2007 • Experiments on confined water, polymer networks, fractal structures in geological samples, nano-particles Sept. 2007. • SESAME • Magnetic component development Summer 2007 • Initial construction Oct. 2007 • Initial commissioning Jan. 2008 • Total elastic scattering instrument • Conceptual design Summer 2007 • Possible construction to begin in Fall 2007 (not yet fully funded) • Micro-SANS • Seeking funding • Others …

  7. IUCF

  8. IUCF

  9. Facility Layout: 2005 - 2006

  10. Protons in linac: 15 Dec. 2004 DTL Power RFQ power Proton Current

  11. Neutrons in 2-D Detector: 15 Dec. 2004

  12. Target Moderator Reflector (TMR)

  13. Target Moderator Reflector (TMR)

  14. Empty Moderator Spectrum Detector at 5.7 m

  15. Cryogenics inserted in TMR2

  16. Moderator Assembly PT-410 Al Poly CH4 50 cm Water

  17. Spectra Captured every 10 Minutes 5-point low-pass filter applied

  18. Phase II Structure of Methane Circle at the center represents an essentially freely rotating molecule, all others are hindered rotors that librate in place.

  19. Calculated Cross Section of Methane in Phase II From Grieger, J. Chem. Phys. 109, 3161 (1998).

  20. Shin kernel: Total cross section

  21. Shin kernel- freq. spectrum

  22. Shin kernel: 20 K CH4 spectra

  23. MCNP kernel (Y. Shin) Free Rotational and Phonon modes Tunneling, Librational and Phonon modes

  24. Methane-Argon Moderator: Excitation Spectrum Prager et. al., J. Chem. Phys. Vol. 95, 569-575 (1991)

  25. Facility Layout: 2007

  26. Scattering Hall Update: 2007

  27. Scattering Hall Update: 2007 22 Feb 2007 29 March 2007

  28. Pictures of Upgrade: SANS

  29. Conclusions • LENS has been producing cold neutrons for some time, and has recently done so at its second target station. • Neutronic performance is within 20% of predictions at low E (cold and thermal). • Spectral temperature of <30K has been realized, and work is underway to reduce this. This will be a major goal for the project over the next 3 years. • Future improvements to neutronics should increase cold flux by more than 30% (more on this tomorrow). • We have started to explore new materials, and are looking for more ideas in this area!

More Related