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Photon and Neutron Production as In Situ Diagnostics of Proton-Boron Fusion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2024

B. M. Hegelich
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, The University of Texas, Austin 78712, USA
L. Labun*
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, The University of Texas, Austin 78712, USA
O. Z. Labun
Affiliation:
Department of Physics, The University of Texas, Austin 78712, USA
T. A. Mehlhorn
Affiliation:
Mehlhorn Engineering Consulting Services, Beaverton, OR, USA HB11 Energy Holdings Pty, 11 Wyndora Ave, Freshwater, NSW 2096, Australia
*
Correspondence should be addressed to L. Labun; labun@utexas.edu

Abstract

Short-pulse, ultrahigh-intensity lasers have opened new regimes for studying fusion plasmas and creating novel ultrashort ion beams and neutron sources. Diagnosing the plasma in these experiments is important for optimizing the fusion yield but difficult due to the picosecond time scales, 10 s of micron-cubed volumes, and high densities. We propose to use the yields of photons and neutrons produced by parallel reactions involving the same reactants to diagnose the plasma conditions and predict the yields of specific reactions of interest. In this work, we focus on verifying the yield of the high-interest aneutronic proton-boron fusion reaction 11Bp,2α4He, which is difficult to measure directly due to the short stopping range of the produced αs in most materials. We identify promising photon-producing reactions for this purpose and compute the ratios of the photon yield to the α yield as a function of plasma parameters. In beam-fusion experiments, the 11C yield is an easily-measurable observable to verify the α yield. In light of our results, improving and extending measurements of the cross-sections for these parallel reactions are important steps to gain greater control over these laser-driven fusion plasmas.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © 2023 B. M. Hegelich et al.
Figure 0

Table 1: Primary reactions in the range of proton energies. The range of CoM energy for which data are available as well as the maximum cross-section and its CoM energy are given for numerical comparison. All data retried from sources in the EXFOR and JANIS databases, with the exception of 11Bp,2α4He for which we use the concordant normalization of Reference [22].

Figure 1

Table 2: Secondary reactions in the range of α particle energies. The range of CoM energy for which data are available as well as the maximum cross-section and its CoM energy are given for numerical comparison.

Figure 2

Figure 1: Cross-sections of primary reactions (a) and secondary reactions (b) Data from EXFOR with all sources combined. The scales are logarithmic, and the extent of the energy range is different on each.

Figure 3

Table 3: Half-lives and decay modes of unstable nuclei produced by reactions in Tables 1 and 2.

Figure 4

Figure 2: (a) Stopping power, dE/ dx, for protons in pure boron and boron-nitride, cold and warm T = 1 keV thick targets. (b) Resulting range zs equation (11).

Figure 5

Figure 3: Thick target yields for the reactions in Table 1. Solid bands show the error propagated from the cross-section. Error bars, where visible, present the numerical error.

Figure 6

Figure 4: Yield ratio of α to 11C for a normalized Maxwellian input proton spectrum in boron, comparing the yield with and without beam energy losses in the target. Target temperature makes a negligible difference to the energy loss for proton energies in this regime, and the T = 1 keV curve lies on top of the T = 0. Solid bands show the error propagated from the cross-section. Error bars, where visible, present the numerical error.

Figure 7

Figure 5: Ratio of photon (γ) yield to α yield in a quasi-thermal plasma as a function of proton mean kinetic energy. At left for the 11Bp,γ12C reaction and at right for the 10Bp,γ11C reaction. The yield increases rapidly as the mean kinetic energy nears the CM energy corresponding to the threshold for the cross-section (of Figure 1) and then plateaus. Different curves correspond to different boron to proton kinetic energy, showing that the yield is only sensitive to the relative kinetic energy if the boron mean kinetic energy is much less than the proton mean kinetic energy. Error bars, where visible, present the numerical error.

Figure 8

Figure 6: Yield ratios: number of photons per 11Bp,2α4He reaction for 11Bp,γ12C and 10Bp,γ11C processes.

Figure 9

Figure 7: Yield ratios: measured total α and 11Bp,2α4He yield relative to measured 11C for boron and boron-nitride targets. Beam energy losses are included with a cold target.