12–17 Jun 2016
University of Ottawa
America/Toronto timezone
Welcome to the 2016 CAP Congress! / Bienvenue au congrès de l'ACP 2016!

Simulating the DESCANT Neutron Detection Array with the Geant4 Monte Carlo Toolkit

13 Jun 2016, 14:00
15m
Colonel By B012 (University of Ottawa)

Colonel By B012

University of Ottawa

SITE Building, 800 King Edward Ave, Ottawa, ON
Oral (Student, In Competition) / Orale (Étudiant(e), inscrit à la compétition) Nuclear Physics / Physique nucléaire (DNP-DPN) M2-1 Nuclear Structure I (DNP) / Structure nucléaire I (DPN)

Speaker

Mr Joseph Turko (University of Guelph)

Description

The DEuterated SCintillator Array for Neutron Tagging (DESCANT) is a newly developed high-efficiency neutron detection array composed of 70 hexagonal deuterated scintillators. Due to the anisotropic nature of elastic neutron-deuteron (n,d) scattering, the pulse-height spectra of a deuterated scintillator contains a forward-peaked structure that can be used to determine the energy of the incident neutron without using traditional time-of-flight methods. Simulations of the array are crucial in order to interpret the DESCANT pulse heights, determine the efficiencies of the array, and examine its capabilities in conducting various nuclear decay experiments. To achieve this, we plan: (i) a verification of the low-energy hadronic neutron physics packages in Geant4, (ii) a comparison of simulated spectra with data from a simple cylindrical “test can” detector geometry, (iii) expanding the simulated light response to a prototype DESCANT detector, and (iv) simulating the entire DESCANT array.

Primary author

Mr Joseph Turko (University of Guelph)

Co-authors

Andrew MacLean (University of Guelph) Evan Rand (University of Guelph) Dr Paul Garrett (University of Guelph) Mr Vinzenz Bildstein (University of Guelph)

Presentation materials

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