International Topical Meeting on Nuclear Research Applications and Utilization of Accelerators

4-8 May 2009, Vienna

SM/EN-20

Fast Neutron Imaging for SNM Detection

V.R. Bom

Delft University of Technology, Delft, Netherlands

Corresponding Author: V.R.Bom@TUDelft.nl

Special Nuclear Materials (SNMs) are difficult to detect because the γ emission are weak and
are being absorbed by surrounding cargo, while the neutron emissions of p.e. 1 kg weapon grade plutonium (~ 2 MeV) fall below the natural back ground beyond a stand off distance of one meter. The application of direction sensitive imaging techniques to reduce the back ground, thereby taking advantage of the isotropy of the back ground, is therefore mandatory for passive as well as active interrogation methods. A fast neutron imaging detector for the detection of SNMs in containers is being developed to be applied in the harbor of Rotterdam in cooperation with Customs Rotterdam. The detection principle is based on two subsequent elastic neutron-proton scatterings in one single large organic scintillator block. The direction cone of an incident fast neutron can be determined by observing the event locations, their time difference and the first recoil proton energy.The scintillator material must have a very short decay time because the time difference is in the nano second regime. The angular resolution of the detector is estimated from simulations to be better than 10 degrees, allowing to pinpoint a container holding 1 kg plutonium from a distance of 70 m in 6 minutes. The detector will be applied on the Rotterdam harbor terrain for monitoring containers in the stack, but would also make possible for instance checking of the full container load of a ship in one go.