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Tomographic Reconstruction of the Neutron Time–Energy Spectrum From a Dense Plasma Focus

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A dense plasma focus (DPF) nuclear fusion device is an attractive pulsed neutron source in many applications, due to its relatively large neutron yield, produced in a short time duration.… Click to show full abstract

A dense plasma focus (DPF) nuclear fusion device is an attractive pulsed neutron source in many applications, due to its relatively large neutron yield, produced in a short time duration. To design a DPF that generates neutrons within a specified time profile, or that generates a neutron energy spectrum with specific properties, it is necessary to characterize and model the results of the fusion process releasing the neutrons. The time–energy spectrum of fusion neutrons is an ideal quantity used in validating multiphysics codes that simulate the pinch and fusion processes, because it is a quantity that requires physics of each of the stages leading up to and ending in the fusion reaction to be simulated correctly. In particular, since DPF fusion neutrons are not monoenergetic—and there can often be several fusion pinches creating neutrons—a computer simulation matching high quality neutron spectrum measurements provides confidence in the fidelity of the simulation. In order to make such a comparison, it is first necessary to have quality measurements from which to infer the spectrum. In this work, we project neutron spectroscopy as the classical tomographic inverse problem from neutron time-of-flight data at multiple distances, but enhanced by using an additional measurement of the time profile of the fusion pinch near its source and by using detector pairs set up in a geometry that allows for scatter background subtraction. The detector pairs enhance the quality of the time-of-flight measurements, and the additional constraint posed by the measured time profile allows for reconstructions discretized as finely as the time measurements and in energy as finely as 100 keV, without the problem being underdetermined. We present results from a deuterium-fueled DPF at the U.S. Department of Energy’s Nevada National Security Site and show that we can infer the time–energy spectrum from our measurements for both single and multi-pinch fusion reactions with equal fidelity.

Keywords: time; fusion; time energy; energy; energy spectrum

Journal Title: IEEE Transactions on Plasma Science
Year Published: 2020

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