Abstract

Background 37Ar, produced from the neutron activation of 40Ca in sub-surface rock and soil, is important for nuclear explosion monitoring. Most of the cross section measurements done for the 40Ca(n,α) 37 Ar reaction are in the fast neutron region. A thermal cross section measurement was attempted in 1989, with the assumption that the 4-8 MeV neutrons would be completely thermalized with 8-cm of water. Methods The experimental setup was modeled using Monte Carlo N-Particle code to see if the assumptions for the neutron distribution were accurate. A model of a 3.0 MeV deuteron source was used to recreate the neutron source from the experiment. Additional modeling was done using SCALE to compare the predictions of 37Ar yields when using the measured cross section from 1989 compared to current nuclear data models. Results Modeling showed the neutron distribution was closer to 10% thermal and 90% fast as opposed to entirely thermalized. The additional modeling showed how the overestimation of the thermal cross section would affect the predicted yield of 37Ar. Conclusions Based on the modeling results, the assumption that all the 4-8 MeV neutrons are thermalized with 8-cm of water is not accurate. The high fraction of fast neutrons interacting with the Ca will result in an overestimation of the thermal cross section.

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