Fission Product Range Effects on HEU Fissile Gas Monitoring for UF6 Gas

Year
1997
Author(s)
John T. Mihalczo - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
T.E. Valentine - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Jose March-Leuba - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
John K. Mattingly - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
R.B. Perez - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
John K. Munro - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Abstract
The amount of 235U in UF6 flowing in a pipe can be monitored by counting gamma rays emitted from fission fragments carried along by the flowing gas. Neutron sources are mounted in an annular sleeve that is filled with moderator material and surrounds the pipe. This provides a source of thermal neutrons to produce the fission fragments. Those fragments that remain in the gas stream following fission are carried past a gamma detector. A typical fragment will be quite unstable, giving up energy as it decays to a more stable isotope with a significant amount of this energy being emitted in the form of gamma rays. A given fragment can emit several gamma rays over its lifetime. The gamma ray emission activity level of a distribution of fission fragments decreases with time. The monitoring system software uses models of these processes to interpret the gamma radiation counting data measured by the gamma detectors.