Measurements of the neutron brightness from a solid methane moderator were performed at the Low Energy Neutron Source (LENS) at the Indiana University Cyclotron Facility (IUCF) to characterize the source and to test our new neutron scattering model of phase II solid methane [1]. A time-of-flight met
Investigations of the neutron performance of a methane hydrate moderator
✍ Scribed by Kay Nuenighoff; Chistoph Pohl; Virgini Bollini; Arek Bubak; Harald Conrad; Detlef Filges; Harald Glueckler; Frank Goldenbaum; Günther Hansen; Burkhard Lensing; Ralf-Dieter Neef; Norbert Paul; Krzysztof Pysz; Hartwig Schaal; Helmut Soltner; Hermann Stelzer; Holger Tietze-Jaensch; Waldemar Ninaus; Michael Wohlmuther; Phillip Ferguson; Franz Gallmeier; Eric Iverson; Sergey Koulikov; Alexander Smirnov
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2006
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 201 KB
- Volume
- 562
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0168-9002
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✦ Synopsis
The increasing interest of neutron scattering scientists in multi-spectral moderators motivated the search for reliable moderator materials fulfilling these requirements. One very elegant approach is methane hydrate as a moderator material, a material, where a methane molecule is encaged by six water molecules on average, leads to a combination of the neutron scattering properties of solid methane and ice. In this contribution the investigation of methane hydrate at T ¼ 20 K and the analysis of the resulting spectra will be discussed.
The second part of the paper deals with the observed differences between simulation and experiment in the cold energy range. It will be shown that the stainless steel beam and its possibility to reflect cold neutrons-a neutron optical effect not included in MCNPX-is responsible for the disagreement.
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