Feasibility study of a compact Neutron Resonance Transmission Analysis instrument
Ezra M. Engel, Ethan A. Klein, Areg Danagoulian

TL;DR
This paper explores the design of a compact Neutron Resonance Transmission Analysis instrument using Monte Carlo simulations, aiming to enable portable, accurate isotopic analysis for nuclear inspection and verification.
Contribution
It introduces a novel MC-based design for a compact NRTA instrument utilizing a moderated DT neutron source, suitable for field applications.
Findings
Accurate time-of-flight neutron energy reconstructions demonstrated.
High isotopic differentiation accuracy achieved in simulations.
Potential for rapid, portable nuclear material analysis.
Abstract
Neutron Resonance Transmission Analysis (NRTA) uses resonant absorption of neutrons to infer the absolute isotopic composition of a target object, enabling applications in a broad range of fields such as archaeology, materials analysis of nuclear fuel, and arms control treaty verification. In the past, NRTA involved large user facilities and complex detector systems. However, recent advances in the intensity of compact neutron sources have made compact neutron imaging designs increasingly feasible. This work describes the Monte Carlo (MC) based design of a compact epithermal NRTA radiographic instrument which uses a moderated, compact deuterium-tritium (DT) neutron source and an epithermal neutron detector. Such an instrument would have a wide range of applications, and would be especially impactful for such scenarios as nuclear inspection and arms control verification exercises, where…
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