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College students help develop waste-measuring device at Hanford
A partnership between Washington River Protection Solutions (WRPS) and Washington State University has resulted in the development of a device to measure radioactive and chemical tank waste at the Hanford Site. WRPS is the contractor at Hanford for the Department of Energy’s Office of Environmental Management.
Jian-Yu Zhu, Hao-Wei Dai, Wen-Xiong Xie
Nuclear Technology | Volume 192 | Number 2 | November 2015 | Pages 172-180
Technical Paper | Radiation Measurements and General Instrumentation | doi.org/10.13182/NT14-115
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
Algorithms for locating the neutron source by neutron time-of-flight (TOF) measurement are established and discussed for monoenergetic and multienergetic neutrons in this paper. For the monoenergetic neutron source, the location of the source could be estimated by locating the position where the variance between the actual TOF and the calculation gains its minimum. For multienergetic neutrons the maximum likelihood (ML) method has been applied to process the time-correlation measurement. The efficiencies of location estimations are studies with simulations. In the simulations, the TOFs are acquired by time-correlation measurement of three neutron detectors surrounding the suspected area of the neutron source. The results indicate that the location of monoenergetic neutron sources could be estimated by the neutron TOF acquired by three detectors, while for multienergetic neutron sources, the likelihood method could be used to locate the most probable location, as well as its possible distribution of location. As the result of large-scale simulation and comparison, the ML estimation method is more effective than traditional methods, especially in conditions of low count rates or low resolution.