Abstract

In this last of a series of three papers on the development of an advanced solid-state neutron polarizer, we present the final construction of the polarizer and the results of its commissioning. The polarizer uses spin-selective reflection of neutrons by interfaces coated with polarizing super-mirrors. The polarizer is built entirely in-house for the PF1B cold neutron beam facility at the Institut Maxvon Laue-Paul Langevin (ILL). It has been installed in the PF1B casemate and tested under real conditions. The average transmission for the "good" spin component is measured to be >30%. The polarization averaged over the capture spectrum reaches a record value of Pn ≈ 0.997 for the full angular divergence in the neutron beam, delivered by the H113 neutron guide, and the full wavelength band λ of 0.3-2.0nm. This unprecedented performance is due to a series of innovations in the design and fabrication in the following domains: choice of the substrate material, super-mirror and anti-reflecting multilayer coatings, magnetizing field, and assembling process. The polarizer is used for user experiments at PF1B since the last reactor cycle in 2020.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call