Abstract

Large neutron absorption resonances in the nuclides present in irradiation samples reduce the irradiating neutron flux at energies close to a resonance. In neutron activation analysis of optically thick samples with resonant isotopes, this self-shielding effect can be significant, and must be accounted for to ensure accurate measurements. Here we show that an ensemble artificial neural network can be used to accurately predict the epithermal self-shielding factors in wires composed of up to 57 nuclides. Importantly, the neural network can account for resonance interference that affects the self-shielding in samples containing nuclides with large overlapping resonances. We use Monte Carlo simulations of sample wires irradiated in a thermal neutron spectrum to create the data for training the neural network and validate its predictions. A Gaussian negative log likelihood loss function is combined with the ensemble to estimate the confidence in the predicted self-shielding factors when ground-truth data are unavailable.

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