Measurements of enriched 155 Gd and 157Gd converters with the NMX detector on the nTOF EAR2 beam line at CERN
D. Pfeiffer, F.M. Brunbauer, I.R. Fehse, A.D. Finke, K. Fissum, K.J. Floethner, D. Janssens, M. Lisowska, H. Muller, E. Oksanen, E. Oliveri, L. Ropelewski, A. Rusu, J. Samarati, L. Scharenberg, M. van Stenis, R. Veenhof, N. Zavaritskaya

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that upgrading neutron detectors with enriched Gd significantly enhances efficiency, with experimental validation at CERN showing a minimum 60% increase, promising improved neutron detection at ESS.
Contribution
First successful time-of-flight measurements with the NMX detector prototype using enriched Gd at CERN, validating potential efficiency improvements for neutron detection.
Findings
Enriched 157Gd increases efficiency by 60-180% in the 0.8-1.8 Å range.
Resonant peaks are clearly visible in the energy spectrum.
Deviations from simulations are attributed to background and saturation effects.
Abstract
The detectors for the NMX instrument at the European Spallation Source (ESS) in Lund use natural Gd as the neutron converter. In 2024, beam time was obtained at the neutron time-of flight experiment (nTOF) at CERN to study the feasibility of an upgrade to enriched Gd. A 10 x 10 cm^2 prototype of the NMX detector was equipped with two enriched Gd samples (157Gd and 155Gd) that were attached with copper tape to the natural Gd cathode of the detector. Three sets of measurements were taken, with the beam focused on either the natural Gd, the 157Gd, or the 155Gd samples. Using the time-of-flight technique with the subsequent conversion of time-of-flight into energy, the resonant region between 1 eV and 200 eV of the 157Gd and 155Gd cross sections was studied. The peaks in the resonant region were clearly visible, having higher ADC values in the ADC spectrum. Additionally, the resonant peaks…
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