Abstract

A study was undertaken to demonstrate the feasibility of using the well-characterized BD-100R neutron bubble dosimeter as a neutron spectrometer in low-level radiation fields. The BD-100R dosimeters used in this work consisted of a test tube containing an elastic polymer with interspersed droplets of two types of Freon: Freon-12 and Freon-114. Each superheated liquid droplet is a potential nucleation site, with the minimum energy needed to form a bubble at the nucleation site being inversely proportional to the square of the difference between the applied and the vapor pressure (i.e., Emin alpha(delta P)-2. For a given dose, the number of bubbles formed continually decreases with increasing applied pressure, until a pressure is reached where no bubbles are formed, since the energy transferred can no longer vaporize the Freon. This investigation is intended to demonstrate the feasibility of measuring an unknown spectrum utilizing the dosimeter response (number of bubbles formed) as a function of the neutron energy (applied pressure). A set of 12 dosimeters was exposed under various applied pressures in a well-characterized neutron energy spectrum at the East Beam Port (EBP) of the Maryland University Training Reactor (MUTR). The dosimeters were placed inside a pressure chamber that could accommodate up to 18 dosimeters. Energy response coefficients (cross-sections) were obtained by spectral unfolding techniques on the known spectrum. The same set of dosimeters were then irradiated using a paraffin-moderated Pu/Be source. Measured spectral estimates obtained using the response coefficients were compared with numerical computations generated using the ANISN computer code. The results indicate that further research using the BD-100R as a neutron spectrometer in low radiation fields is warranted.

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