Abstract

Calorimetric low temperature detectors (CLTD’s) for heavy-ion detection have been combined with the LOHENGRIN recoil separator at the ILL Grenoble for the determination of nuclear charge distributions of fission fragments produced by thermal neutron-induced fission of \(^{235}\)U. The LOHENGRIN spectrometer separates fission fragments according to their mass-to-ionic-charge ratio and their kinetic energy, but has no selectivity with respect to nuclear charges Z. For the separation of the nuclear charges, one can exploit the nuclear charge-dependent energy loss of the fragments passing through an energy degrader foil (absorber method). This separation requires detector systems with high energy resolution and negligible pulse height defect, as well as degrader foils which are optimized with respect to thickness, homogeneity, and energy loss straggling. In the present, contribution results of test measurements at the Maier Leibnitz tandem accelerator facility in Munich with \(^{109}\)Ag and \(^{127}\)I beams with the aim to determine the most suitable degrader material, as well as measurements at the Institut Laue–Langevin will be presented. These include a systematic study of the quality of Z-separation of fission fragments in the mass range \(82\le A \le 132\) and a systematic measurement of \(^{92}\)Rb fission yields, as well as investigations of fission yields toward the symmetry region.

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