Year
2023
File Attachment
Abstract
Nuclear energy depends on the development of new reactor technologies which are increasingly
safe, secure, and economical. In support of this mission, the Materials and Fuels Complex (MFC)
Analytical Laboratory at Idaho National Laboratory provides sophisticated analysis of nuclear
materials. An important component is nondestructive assay of fresh and spent fuel, reactor
components, radioactive waste, and other materials from the nuclear fuel cycle. This assay
includes gamma ray spectroscopy, which measures isotopic composition. For an accurate
measurement, a gamma ray spectrum with high resolution and high counting statistics is
desirable. However, such spectra can be difficult to obtain from the materials to be studied,
which often consist of very dilute samples. Here we present a new gamma ray spectrometer, the
High Efficiency and Resolution Microcalorimeter Spectrometer, 400 pixels (HERMES-400),
developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory in collaboration with the National Institute of
Standards and Technology and University of Colorado, installed in the MFC in 2022. The
spectrometer uses a microcalorimeter array, a gamma ray detector with unparalleled energy
resolution. Microcalorimeters are sensors which operate below 100 milliKelvin and respond
sensitively to the absorption of a photon. This can give them energy resolution on the order of
60-80 eV photopeak FWHM (full width half maximum) in the 50-250 keV range. The detector is
mounted within a dilution refrigerator, and can measure continuously, permitting multi-day
measurements with thousands of counts per second. This gamma ray spectrometer permits
precise, high statistics measurements on small amounts of novel nuclear fuel cycle materials. We
will discuss the development of this detector and present spectra demonstrating its capabilities.