Abstract

The use of passive and active interrogation techniques to evaluate materials concerning their content of special nuclear materials (SNM) is fundamental in fields such as nuclear safeguards and security. Detection of fast neutrons and γ rays, which are a characteristic signature of SNM, has several potential advantages compared with the commonly used systems based on thermal and epithermal neutron counters, the most important being the much shorter required coincidence times and the correspondingly reduced rate of background events due to accidental coincidences. Organic scintillators are well suited for this purpose due to their fast timing properties and composition being based on carbon and hydrogen with large elastic scattering cross-sections for fast neutrons. Organic scintillators also have suitable detection efficiency for γ rays and exhibit pulse shape properties which are favorable for distinguishing between neutrons and γ rays. This paper presents experimental results and Monte Carlo simulations for a neutron–neutron and γ-neutron coincidence detection setup for identification and characterization of SNM based on such detectors. The measurements were carried out on different samples of PuO2 material with varying content of 240Pu at the Joint Research Center (JRC) of the European Commission, Ispra, Italy. The results demonstrate significant advantages of fast neutron-γ coincidence detection over fast neutron–neutron coincidence counting for certain applications, e.g. for nuclear security systems, even in the presence of moderate amounts of shielding.

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