APS Logo

An Experiment Simulating the Production, Capture, and Detection of <sup>8</sup>Li from an ICF Implosion

POSTER

Abstract

Inertial confinement Fusion (ICF) is a possible tool for measuring light-ion nuclear cross sections. One way to do this might be to trap and detect the radioactive decays of the product nuclei produced using a doped target capsule. Some of the highest yield light-ion reactions that could be studied using this technique are 6Li(t,p)8Li and 9Be(t,α)8Li, both of which produce 8Li. In order to simulate this method, a natural lithium film was deposited onto a tungsten substrate, which was then activated via the 7Li(d,p)8Li reaction using the SUNY Geneseo Pelletron accelerator. A current pulse of up to 1000 A was discharged through the tungsten raising its temperature to as high as about 1500 °C in less than a few milliseconds, causing the lithium to rapidly evaporate and produce a gas of neutral lithium atoms which then travelled outward and stuck to the aluminum getter detector foil of the Short-Lived Isotope Counting System (SLICS). This phoswich detector was used to identify beta particles and count in situ the 840 ms beta decay curve for 8Li as a function of time in order to estimate the efficiency of SLICS for trapping and detecting ICF reaction products.

Presenters

  • Andrew L Martin

    Houghton College

Authors

  • Andrew L Martin

    Houghton College

  • Adam Brown

    Houghton College

  • Chunsun Lei

    Houghton College

  • Andrew Hotchkiss

    Houghton College

  • Mark E Yuly

    Houghton College

  • James G McLean

    SUNY Geneseo

  • Stephen J Padalino

    SUNY Geneseo

  • Chad J Forrest

    Lab for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester

  • Thomas C Sangster

    University of Rochester, Laboratory for Laser Energetics, Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester

  • Sean P Regan

    Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester, University of Rochester, Laboratory for Laser Energetics, U. of Rochester