Assessment of Five Concrete Types as Candidate Shielding Materials for a Compact Radiation Source Based on the IECF

Rawheya Ahmed, Galal Saad Hassan, Thomas Scott, Mahmoud Bakr

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle (Academic Journal)peer-review

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

A radiation source based on the inertial electrostatic confinement fusion (IECF) system is being developed for multidisciplinary research applications. The radiation outputs from the IECF system are 2.45 MeV fast neutrons and the associated co-generated X-rays with an energy less than 3 MeV. A radiation shielding study has been performed on five types of concrete to define the most efficient material for the shielding design of the system. The proposed materials were ilmenite-magnetite concrete (IMC), ordinary concrete-1 (OC-1), barite-containing concrete (BC), ordinary concrete-2 (OC-2), and serpentine-containing concrete (SC). A numerical model was applied to determine the effective removal cross-section coefficients (∑ Rt ) for the fast neutrons and the total mass attenuation coefficients ( µ m ), the half-value layer ( HVL), the mean free path ( MFP), the effective atomic number ( Z eff ), and effective electron density ( N eff ) for photons inside the materials. The model considered the radiation source energy and the material properties of the concrete types. The results revealed that the serpentine-containing concrete exhibited the highest ∑ Rt with 12 cm of concrete thickness needed to attenuate an incident neutron flux to 1/100 of its initial value. In addition, the BC shows the highest µ m with a 38 cm concrete thickness needed to attenuate the 3 MeV energy X-ray flux to 1/100 of its initial value. This study suggests that a 40 cm thickness of SC or BC adequately shields the radiation generated from an IECF system with a maximum particle production rate of up to 1 × 10 7 n/s.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2845
JournalMaterials
Volume16
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Apr 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was funded by UKRI-STFC Central Laser Facility, Science and Technology Facilities Council, grant number ST/P000134/1, and Astral systems: A Novel Compact Particle Generator for Medical Applications.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by the authors.

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