JAEA-JRC Collaborative Development Of Delayed Gamma-ray Spectroscopy For Nuclear Material Evaluation (3): Fissile Mass Estimation With Uranium Samples

Year
2020
Author(s)
Fabiana Rossi - Japan Atomic Energy Agency
Mitsuo Koizumi - Japan Atomic Energy Agency
Hee-Jae Lee - Japan Atomic Energy Agency
Douglas C. Rodriguez - Japan Atomic Energy Agency
Thon Takahashi - Japan Atomic Energy Agency
Kamel Abbas - Joint Research Center, Ispra, Italy
Tatjana Bogucarska - Joint Research Centre, Ispra
Jean-Michel Crochemore - Joint Research Center, Ispra, Italy.
Bent Pedersen - EC Joint Research Centre, Ispra
Giovanni Varasano - Joint Research Centre, Ispra
Abstract

Delayed Gamma-ray Spectroscopy (DGS) is a nondestructive assay technique with the capability to quantify the fissile composition of small nuclear material samples from reprocessing plants. In recent years, the Japan Atomic Energy Agency in collaboration with the Joint Research Centre (JRC) performed several experiments using uranium and plutonium standard samples. In this paper, we present some of our recent experiment results showing the feasibility of DGS for fissile mass estimation. In particular, we interrogate uranium samples of different enrichment and we are showing that we were able to qualify significant peaks even for a depleted uranium sample above 2.7 MeV. Applying correction factors for neutron self-shielding and gamma self-absorption, we obtained a mass linear correlation when considering total integrated counts above 3.3 MeV as well as specific individual peak counts.