Title of article :
Design and initial 1D radiography tests of the FANTOM mobile fast-neutron radiography and tomography system
Author/Authors :
Andersson، نويسنده , , P. and Valldor-Blücher، نويسنده , , J. and Andersson Sundén، نويسنده , , E. and Sjِstrand، نويسنده , , H. and Jacobsson-Svنrd، نويسنده , , S.، نويسنده ,
Pages :
12
From page :
82
To page :
93
Abstract :
The FANTOM system is a tabletop sized fast-neutron radiography and tomography system newly developed at the Applied Nuclear Physics Division of Uppsala University. The main purpose of the system is to provide time-averaged steam-and-water distribution measurement capability inside the metallic structures of two-phase test loops for light water reactor thermal–hydraulic studies using a portable fusion neutron generator. The FANTOM system provides a set of 1D neutron transmission data, which may be inserted into tomographic reconstruction algorithms to achieve a 2D mapping of the steam-and-water distribution. s paper, the selected design of FANTOM is described and motivated. The detector concept is based on plastic scintillator elements, separated for spatial resolution. Analysis of pulse heights on an event-to-event basis is used for energy discrimination. Although the concept allows for close stacking of a large number of detector elements, this demonstrator is equipped with only three elements in the detector and one additional element for monitoring the yield from the neutron generator. rst measured projections on test objects of known configurations are presented. These were collected using a Sodern Genie 16 neutron generator with an isotropic yield of about 1E8 neutrons per second, and allowed for characterization of the instrument׳s capabilities. At an energy threshold of 10 MeV, the detector offered a count rate of about 500 cps per detector element. The performance in terms of spatial resolution was validated by fitting a Gaussian Line Spread Function to the experimental data, a procedure that revealed a spatial unsharpness in good agreement with the predicted FWHM of 0.5 mm.
Keywords :
Fast-neutron radiography , Scintillator detectors , Void-distribution measurements
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Record number :
2012309
Link To Document :
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