EPJ Web of Conferences (Jan 2020)

What can we learn from (n,xnγ) cross sections about reaction mechanism and nuclear structure?

  • Kerveno Maëlle,
  • Dupuis Marc,
  • Borcea Catalin,
  • Boromiza Marian,
  • Capote Roberto,
  • Dessagne Philippe,
  • Henning Greg,
  • Hilaire Stéphane,
  • Kawano Toshihiko,
  • Negret Alexandra,
  • Nyman Markus,
  • Olacel Adina,
  • Party Eliot,
  • Plompen Arjan,
  • Romain Pascal,
  • Sin Mihaela

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/202023901023
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 239
p. 01023

Abstract

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Inelastic (n,n') cross section is a key quantity to accurately simulate reactor cores, and its precision was shown to need significant improvements. To bypass the experimental difficulties to detect neutrons from (n,xn) reaction and to discriminate inelastically scattered neutrons from those following the fission process in case of fissile targets, an indirect but yet powerful method is used: the prompt γ-ray spectroscopy. Along this line, our collaboration has developed the GRAPhEME setup, optimized for actinides, at the GELINA facility to measure partial (n,xn γ) cross sections, from which the total (n,xn) cross section can be inferred. (n,xn γ) experiments with actinides are still particularly challenging, as their structure presents a high level density at low energy, and the competing neutron-induced fission reaction contaminates the γ-energy distribution. New precise measurements of the partial (n,xn γ) cross sections provide a stringent test to theoretical model and offer a way to improve them. This is a path to a better determination of the total inelastic scattering cross sections. In this contribution we discuss modeling aspects of the 238U and 182W (n,n' γ) reactions, also measured with GRAPhEME, using the three codes TALYS, EMPIRE and CoH. We will highlight the needed/expected improvements on reaction modeling and nuclear structure input.