Development of fast-release solid catchers for rare isotopes

ORAL

Abstract

Porous solid catchers of rare isotopes are being developed for use at high power heavy ion accelerator facilities such as RIKEN, FRIB, and RISP. Compact solid catchers are complementary to helium gas catchers for parasitic harvesting of rare isotopes in the in-flight separators. They are useful for short lived isotopes for basic nuclear physics research and longer-lived isotopes for off-line applications. Solid catchers can operate effectively with high intensity secondary beams, e.g. $\gg$ 1E10 atoms/s with release times as short as 10-100 milliseconds. A new method using a very sensitive and efficient RGA has been commissioned off-line at Argonne and is currently being shipped to Florida State University for in-beam measurements of the release curves using stable beams. The same porous solid catcher technology is also being evaluated for use in targets for the production of medical isotopes such as 211-At.

*Research supported by the U.S. DOE Office of Nuclear Physics under the SBIR Program and Contract \# DE-AC02-06CH11357 and a University of Chicago Comprehensive Cancer Center/ANL Pilot Project

Authors

  • Jerry Nolen

    • Physics Division, ANL
    • Argonne National Laboratory
  • John Greene

    • Physics Division, ANL
  • Jeffrey Elam

    • Energy Systems Div, ANL
  • Anil Mane

    • Energy Systems Div, ANL
  • Uma Sampathkumaran

    • Innosense, LLC, Torrance, CA
  • Raymond Winter

    • Innosense, LLC, Torrance, CA
  • David Hess

    • Innosense, LLC, Torrance, CA
  • Mohammad Mushfiq

    • Innosense, LLC, Torrance, CA
  • Daniel Stracener

    • Physics Division, ORNL
  • Ingo Wiendenhoever

    • Dept of Physics, Florida State University