1. On the use of lead/tin alloys as target material for the production of spallation neutrons
- Author
-
Ph. Richard, S. Thies, R. Keil, V.T. Lebedev, M. Daum, A. Egorov, Klaus Kirch, T. Bryś, F. Atchison, Ch. Perret, St. Joray, G. Kühne, D.N. Orlova, P. Baumann, Reinhold Henneck, A. Pichlmaier, R. Krutova, P. Fierlinger, P. Fuchs, A. Serebrov, and H. Obermeier
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Metallurgy ,Alloy ,chemistry.chemical_element ,engineering.material ,Small-angle neutron scattering ,Corrosion ,chemistry ,Neutron cross section ,engineering ,Neutron source ,Spallation ,Neutron ,Tin ,Instrumentation - Abstract
We have examined the suitability of lead (Pb)/tin (Sn) alloys with atomic ratios between 4:1 and 12:1 for use as a spallation target material for the PSI spallation ultracold neutron source. The measured corrosion rate with distilled water, R c 6 × 10 - 5 cm / year , is more than a factor of 80, less than for normal Pb; this corrosion rate is satisfactory. Microscopic investigations of the surface after the exposure to water revealed no visual changes. Small angle neutron scattering showed that the alloy is mechanically stable under thermal cycling. An experimental simulation of a water-cooled spallation neutron target made of Pb/Sn pebbles with a filling factor of 60% was investigated; the pulsed proton beam was simulated using hot and cold water in the target ‘cooling’ circuit. With realistic operational parameters for the cooling circuit, serious deformation of the PbSn pebbles occurred which finally blocked the cooling circuit. The Pb/Sn alloys solve the corrosion problem but its mechanical properties are inadequate leading to too short a lifetime to be practical in the PSI spallation source.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF