Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

SMURF Research at Texas A&M

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "SMURF Research at Texas A&M"— Presentation transcript:

1 SMURF Research at Texas A&M
Dr. Tye W. Botting Texas A&M University

2 Special Microbeam Utilization Research Facility

3 Overview Introduction Brief Background Current Research
Future Interests Closing Comments

4 Background Synthetic Organic Chemistry Environmental Testing
natural product precursor development Environmental Testing analytical equipment troubleshooting Nuclear Chemistry fission dynamics

5 Fission Dynamics Neutron calorimetry Timescale of nuclear fission
The TAMU Neutron Ball Timescale of nuclear fission compare two conflicting methods 4 reactions analyzed in detail statistical model analysis of data FOR MORE INFO... TAMU Cyclotron Institute (

6 Rate of Nuclear Fission
Two “clocks” that did not seem to agree Neutron evaporation clock Giant Dipole Resonance (GDR) g-ray clock Required 150+ detectors ~500 parameters per event Required statistics produced 80+ GB of data Statistical model calculations Monte Carlo methods Comparison with experiment yielded timescales

7 So, how fast is nuclear fission?
Very fast! ~110-20 seconds for medium-energy reactions

8 Current Research Accelerator Development Physics / Engineering
Improvements and additions Physics / Engineering Krypton gas neutron detector Hot water energy reclamation Health Physics Microdosimetry

9 Accelerator Development
Ion source stability Beam development Software development Accelerator control Microbeam targeting Additions

10 Physics / Engineering Improve understanding of the interaction of neutrons with matter Develop new detector technologies Energy conservation / reclamation

11 Health Physics Our main objective is to achieve a better understanding of risk to human health from everyday exposure to low doses of ionizing radiation.

12 Health Physics… Evalaution of risk at low radiation doses has been based on linear extrapolation of observed effects of very high doses. There are problems with this approach…

13 Health Physics High-dose radiation exposure results in individual cells receiving multiple hits Low-dose radiation exposure consists of sparsely distributed single hits No reason to expect that a low-dose linear extrapolation model should work

14 Our Approach Investigate both high- and low- linear energy transfer (LET) radiations positive ions (high LET) electrons and X Rays (low LET) Irradiate specific cells in vitro use low doses directly a line of cells on a dish, on individual cells look for microscopic effects mutations cell-cell communication

15 Tools Positive ion accelerator Electron accelerator X-ray apparatus
2MV Tandem Van de Graaff Electron accelerator 100keV electrostatic accelerator X-ray apparatus 1 Gray/min at Emax=250keV Hot water reflux apparatus trial run in progress

16 2MV Tandem Van de Graaff Alphatross Ion Source
Bending and Focusing Elements Charging System Tandem = “double ended” Produces 4 MeV protons, 6 MeV alphas Experimental Beam Lines Neutron “beam” Positive-Ion Microbeam

17 Accelerator Tank Magnet Ion Source

18 Magnet Accelerator Tank

19 Pelletron Charging System
Illustration courtesy of... National Electrostatics Corp. (

20 Experimental Beamlines
Neutron “beam” Protons incident on LiF target Positive-Ion Microbeam 5mm beam thickness Targeting Individual cell nuclei Line traces

21 Microbeam Microscope Assembly Detectors (3 photomultipliers)
direct and camera Detectors (3 photomultipliers) special petri dishes go below Fine collimators 2 sets of x and y axes Beam Stop Coarse collimators 1 set, only y axis

22 Cell culture dishes

23 Electron Accelerator Only 4 feet high
Different type of collimator assembly Accelerator tube has up to 100,000 Volts to produce up to 100keV electrons

24 Results Accelerator Development Improved ion-source stability
Added positive-ion microbeam assembly Made its endstation software functional Developed usable proton and neutron beams Added neutron production beam line and facility Always a work in progress!

25 Results… Physics / Engineering
Krypton gas neutron detector experiments run Data still being analyzed to determine next step(s) Hot water energy conservation / reclamation Designed apparatus Construction nearing completion Should begin trial runs within the month

26 Results… Health Physics X-ray irradiations (adapt and challenge)
Appears low doses good for cell survival upon later higher-dose exposure Positive-ion irradiations Mixed low-dose results (cell-line effect?) Electron irradiations Appears that low fluence low-LET radiation is not as damaging as predicted by the linear extrapolation model

27 Results Notes An interesting observation has arisen that irradiation of petri dishes prior to cell culturing seems to contribute to in vitro cell death.

28 Future Directions At TAMU: Continued accelerator development
Continued microbeam work Perhaps non-biological applications Further refinement of the Kr n-detectors Hot water energy reclamation trial runs Acquiring PIXE/RBS capability

29 Wider Future Directions…
Using PIXE/RBS to characterize surface pollution and degradation Further investigation of irradiation pre-treatment as a bio-inhibitory Application of nuclear science methods in materials science in general

30 Thank you all very much for your time and for the opportunity to visit both NCPTT and NSULA.


Download ppt "SMURF Research at Texas A&M"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google