Author
Listed:
- Jennifer A. Shusterman
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Hunter College of the City University of New York
Graduate Center of the City University of New York)
- Nicholas D. Scielzo
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
- Keenan J. Thomas
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
- Eric B. Norman
(University of California, Berkeley)
- Suzanne E. Lapi
(University of Alabama at Birmingham)
- C. Shaun Loveless
(University of Alabama at Birmingham)
- Nickie J. Peters
(University of Missouri, Columbia)
- J. David Robertson
(University of Missouri, Columbia)
- Dawn A. Shaughnessy
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
- Anton P. Tonchev
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
Abstract
The probability that a nucleus will absorb a neutron—the neutron capture cross-section—is important to many areas of nuclear science, including stellar nucleosynthesis, reactor performance, nuclear medicine and defence applications. Although neutron capture cross-sections have been measured for most stable nuclei, fewer results exist for radioactive isotopes, and statistical-model predictions typically have large uncertainties1. There are almost no nuclear data for neutron-induced reactions of the radioactive nucleus 88Zr, despite its importance as a diagnostic for nuclear security. Here, by exposing 88Zr to the intense neutron flux of a nuclear reactor, we determine that 88Zr has a thermal neutron capture cross-section of 861,000 ± 69,000 barns (1σ uncertainty), which is five orders of magnitude larger than the theoretically predicted value of 10 barns2. This is the second-largest thermal neutron capture cross-section ever measured and no other cross-section of comparable size has been discovered in the past 70 years. The only other nuclei known to have values greater than 105 barns3–6 are 135Xe (2.6 × 106 barns), a fission product that was first discovered as a poison in early reactors7,8, and 157Gd (2.5 × 105 barns), which is used as a detector material9,10, a burnable reactor poison11 and a potential medical neutron capture therapy agent12. In the case of 88Zr neutron capture, both the target and the product (89Zr) nuclei are radioactive and emit intense γ-rays upon decay, allowing sensitive detection of miniscule quantities of these radionuclides. This result suggests that as additional measurements with radioactive isotopes become feasible with the operation of new nuclear-science facilities, further surprises may be uncovered, with far-reaching implications for our understanding of neutron capture reactions.
Suggested Citation
Jennifer A. Shusterman & Nicholas D. Scielzo & Keenan J. Thomas & Eric B. Norman & Suzanne E. Lapi & C. Shaun Loveless & Nickie J. Peters & J. David Robertson & Dawn A. Shaughnessy & Anton P. Tonchev, 2019.
"The surprisingly large neutron capture cross-section of 88Zr,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 565(7739), pages 328-330, January.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:565:y:2019:i:7739:d:10.1038_s41586-018-0838-z
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0838-z
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