Sources of γ rays sterilize objects, measure thicknesses without contact, display the contents of closed containers, etc. But radionuclides like
60Co are also a danger. A
switchable γ source could be useful. As usual, I didn't check what is already done or abandoned. Nor am I reliable on the topic.
Bombardment by protons or deuterons lets some targets emit γ.
- It often produces β+ emitters. When the 511keV photons from positron-electron annihilation are a drawback, shielding them away lets waste many 2MeV photons. Very few nuclides disintegrate by electron capture without β+.
- Some reactions create β- emitters, typically by deuteron absorption and proton emission. The β braked by surrounding matter (Bremsstrahlung) creates photons rarely useful that can be minimized. The disintegration often emits γ rays of single or several energies by internal transition. If the β- emitter is short-lived, the γ emission stops some time after the protons or deuterons beam. But seconds would be better than minutes.
- A beam could first produce neutrons whose absorption creates β- emitters. But neutrons take decimetres to brake, and a wide source makes fuzzy γ images. Neutrons tend to activate all materials, possibly for a long time. And they need strong protons but the double conversion is inefficient. I didn't insist.
- A few reactions just absorb a weak proton or deuteron and emit a strong photon, immediately at human scale. Most promising.
========== Example
Among these fourth-type reactions, in this message I consider
19F(p,γ)20Ne. For chemists:
19F + proton
20Ne + γ
Data is gratefully taken from the Janis books
protons (8MB) page 62 -
deuterons (3MB)
Natural fluorine is pure
19F.
20Ne is stable. I understand the γ carries 12844keV reaction energy plus 19/20 of the incident proton contribution: an energy not available from radioactivity, twice as penetrating as 1.33MeV from
60Co, for instance to measure thicker red-hot steel plates when rolled.
The first competing reaction is on p63 in the Janis book, with similar sections over the energy range
19F(p,α)
16O
The product is stable and the α stops within the source. If emitting no additional γ, this reaction looks harmless and acceptable.
The next competing reaction is on p59
19F(p,n)
19Ne
which is 4MeV endothermal, so a smaller proton energy prevents it and the others.
The useful reaction has a measured section around
40mb from 1.4 to 0.3MeV. Target fluorine can be AlF
3 since the Janis book lists no reaction of Al active at these energies. NaF and MgF
2 seem clean too.
13N from (CF
2)
n would emit 1/1000 γ at 511keV with 10min half-life. Very pure
11B is less convenient. Li and Be emit other radiations.
32%wt Al and 68%wt F brake 1.4MeV protons over 44g/m
2, that is 30g/m
2 F, as deduced from
physics.nist.govand then 40mb section let 3.8ppm of all protons create a γ, so a
1.4MeV 1.6mA 2.2kW proton beam emits 1Ci. Maybe protons up to 4MeV improve the yield but the Janis book lacks experimental data, and 1.4MeV accepts a
small cyclotron, or maybe a linear accelerator with radiofrequency quadrupoles (RFQ).
Aluminium or other, possibly cooled by water, can support AlF
3 of which 10-20µm stop the protons. The two transmutations deplete F in few years of continuous 1Ci operation, faster degradation processes are plausible.
Marc Schaefer, aka Enthalpy