This application claims the benefit of priority to Chinese Application No. 201610835790.4, filed 20 Sep. 2017, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
The present disclosure relates to a neutron source, in particular to devices for generating energy-distinguished neutrons, and methods of imaging with the generated energy-distinguished neutrons.
A neutron imaging technology is an important non-destructive detection technology, which can play a huge role in aero-engine's hollow turbine blade detection, moisture distribution detection in a fuel cell, and other applications. In order to achieve neutron imaging, a high-current neutron source with a higher neutron yield is required.
At present, high-current neutron sources are reactors or spallation neutron sources. They have very high neutron yields and neutron fluence rates. However, such kinds of neutron sources have very high construction cost (˜1 billion CNYs), thus cannot be built in general scientific research and production institutes, and have expensive operation cost and a valuable beam time, which are difficult to meet requirements of the general scientific research or production institutes or other institutes which have confidentiality demands on analyzed samples.
In addition, more detail information is needed in neutron imaging analysis on objects such as aero-engine hollow turbine blades.
In view of one or more of problems in the prior art, devices for generating neutrons with a continuous energy spectrum, imaging devices and imaging methods thereof are provided.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, a neutron imaging device is provided. The device includes a neutron generation apparatus configured to generate a continuous energy spectrum neutron beam; a neutron detector configured to receive a neutron beam which penetrates an object being inspected to obtain an electrical signal; a data collection circuit coupled to the neutron detector and configured to convert the electrical signal into a digital signal; and a data processing apparatus coupled to the data acquisition circuit and configured to obtain images of the object being inspected under neutrons of different energy spectrums based on the digital signal.
According to some embodiments, the neutron generation apparatus includes a high-energy electron linear accelerator configured to generate an X-ray; a neutron conversion target which is bombarded by the X-ray to generate a neutron beam; a filter arranged downstream of the neutron conversion target and configured to filter the X-ray included in the neutron beam and generate the continuous energy spectrum neutron beam; and a collimator arranged downstream of the filter and configured to collate the filtered neutron beam so as to generate the continuous energy spectrum neutron beam which is emitted in one direction.
According to some embodiments, the neutron generation apparatus further includes a moderating reflector configured to surrounding at least partly the neutron conversion target so that neutrons generated by the neutron conversion target are emitted in one direction.
According to some embodiments, the data processing apparatus is further configured to obtain the images of the object being inspected under the neutrons of different energy spectrums based on a time-of-flight method, with a time at which a pulse X-ray is generated by the high-energy electron linear accelerator being used as a reference.
According to some embodiments, the neutron detector includes a neutron-sensitive micro-channel plate detector.
According to some embodiments, the filter includes material having a smaller cross section for neutrons and a larger cross section for photons.
According to some embodiments, the filter particularly includes beryllium or lead.
According to some embodiments, the neutron conversion target includes heavy water.
According to some embodiments, the TIME OF FLIGHT of the neutrons of different energy spectrums is calculated according to a formula below:
where L denotes a distance of flight, En denotes an energy level of neutron, and mn denotes a rest mass of neutron.
According to some embodiments, the neutron collimator is evacuated.
According to another aspect of the present disclosure, an imaging method is provided. The method includes the steps of: generating a continuous energy spectrum neutron beam by the device as previously described; receiving, by a neutron detector, the neutron beam which penetrates an object being inspected to obtain an electrical signal; converting the electrical signal into a digital signal; and obtaining images of the object being inspected under neutrons of different energy spectrums based on the digital signal.
According to yet another aspect of the present disclosure, a neutron generation apparatus is provided. The apparatus includes a high-energy electron linear accelerator configured to generate an X-ray; a neutron conversion target which is bombarded by the X-ray to generate a neutron beam; a filter arranged downstream of the neutron conversion target and configured to filter the X-ray included in the neutron beam and generate the continuous energy spectrum neutron beam; and a collimator arranged downstream of the filter and configured to collate the filtered neutron beam to generate the continuous energy spectrum neutron beam which is emitted in one direction.
According to some embodiments, the neutron generation apparatus further includes a moderating reflector configured to surrounding at least partly the neutron conversion target so that neutrons generated by the neutron conversion target are emitted in one direction.
According to some embodiments, the filter comprises material having a smaller cross section for neutrons and a larger cross section for photons.
The above technical solutions may be utilized to generate the continuous energy spectrum neutron beam so that the images of the object being inspected under the neutrons of different energy spectrums may be obtained by the time-of-flight method, improving sensitivity of the detection.
In order to better understand the present disclosure, embodiments of the present disclosure will be described according to the accompanying drawings, in which
Not all of circuits and structures of the embodiments are shown in the drawings. Throughout the drawings, same reference numerals refer to same or similar components or features.
Hereinafter, particular embodiments of the present disclosure will be described in detail, and it should be noted that the embodiments described herein are for illustrative purposes only but not intended to limit the present disclosure. In the following description, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present disclosure. It will be apparent, however, to the skilled in the art that the present disclosure needs not be practiced with these specific details. In other instances, well-known circuits, materials, or methods are not specifically described in order to avoid obscuring the present disclosure.
Throughout the specification, reference to “an embodiment”, “embodiment”, “an example” or “example” means that a particular feature, structure, or characteristic described in connection with the embodiment or example is included in at least one embodiment of the present disclosure. Therefore, the phrase “in one embodiment”, “in an embodiment”, “an example” or “example” throughout the specification does not necessarily refer to the same embodiment or example. In addition, specific features, structures, or characteristics may be combined in one or more embodiments or examples in any suitable combination and/or sub-combination. In addition, it will be understood by the skilled in the art that the drawings provided herein are for the purpose of illustration and that the drawings are not necessarily drawn in scale. The term “and/or” used herein includes any and all combinations of one or more of the items as listed.
For the problems in the prior art, the embodiments of the present disclosure provide an apparatus for generating continuous energy spectrum neutrons, wherein a high-energy electron linear accelerator generates an X-ray, which bombards a neutron conversion target to obtain a neutron beam. Then a filter is arranged to filter the X-ray mixed in the neutron beam to obtain the continuous energy spectrum neutron beam. And the filtered neutron beams are collated to obtain the continuous energy spectrum neutron beam which is emitted in one direction. According to other embodiments, with a time at which a pulsed X-ray is generated by the high-energy electron linear accelerator being used as a reference, the images of the object being inspected under the neutrons of different energy spectrums may be obtained based on the time-of-flight method, so as to improve detection sensitivity of the object being inspected. For example, the neutron beam penetrating the object being inspected, such as a turbine blade, is received by the neutron detector to obtain the electrical signal. The data collection circuit converts the electrical signal into the digital signal, so that the data processing device, such as a computer, obtains the images of the object being inspected under the neutrons of different energy spectrums based on the digital signal.
As shown in
The neutrons generated by the (γ, n) reaction are fast neutrons. After the neutron conversion target 130 and the moderating reflector 120 are applied, energy of a part of neutrons will be reduced. Therefore, after penetrating the filtering body 140, the energy of the neutrons will appear as a continuous distribution. Since the electron accelerator is a pulse source, the neutrons will also be emitted out at pulses. In general, it is the continuous energy spectrum neutrons with a pulse structure in time that penetrate the filtering body 140. The neutrons with higher energy have a faster velocity of flight, while the neutrons with lower energy have a slower velocity of flight, which lead to different times for them to arrive at the detector, as shown in a formula (1) below, where L denotes the a distance of flight, En denotes an energy of neutron, and mn denotes a rest mass of neutron. In view of the fact that a distance dOD between the object being inspected and the neutron detector 170 is much less than the distance L between the neutron conversion target and the object being inspected, influence of dOD is ignored in the formula (1) below.
Different energy levels of the different neutron beams result in respective times of flight of the neutron beams over the same distance. As shown in
As such, the position information and the time information of the neutrons which penetrate the object being inspected are measured by the position and time sensitive neutron detector 170, the data collection circuit 180 coupled to the neutron detector 170, and the data processing apparatus 190 coupled to the data collection circuit 190. With a pulse instance of the high-energy electron linear accelerator being used as a time reference zero point, the energy of the neutrons are measured based on a time at which the neutrons arrive at the detector, and the images under the neutrons of different energies are stored respectively. For example, the neutron detector 170 receives the neutron beam that penetrates the object being inspected to obtain the electrical signal. The data collection circuit 180 is coupled to the neutron detector 170 to convert the electrical signal into the digital signal. The data processing apparatus 190, such as a computer, is coupled to the data collection circuit 180 to obtain the images of the object being inspected under the neutrons of different energies based on the digital signal. According to some embodiments, the data processing apparatus 190 obtains the images of the object being inspected under the neutrons of different energy spectrums based on the time-of-flight method, with a time at which a pulse X-ray is generated by the high-energy electron linear accelerator being used as a reference.
After the user has input an operation command by the input apparatus 195 such as a keyboard and a mouse, the processor 196 reads the neutron position information obtained by the neutron detector 170 within the specific period of time, and displays on the display apparatus 197 such as a LCD display or outputs a processing result directly in a form of a hard copy such as printing.
Although the present disclosure has been explained in terms of checking the aero-engine blades as an example in the above embodiments, the skilled in the art will realize that the above embodiments may be used for other applications, such as battery inspection and the like.
While the present disclosure has been described with reference to several typical embodiments, it should be understood that the terms used here are illustrative and exemplary but not restrictive. Since the present disclosure can be embodied in many forms without departing from the spirit or substance of the present disclosure, it should be understood that the above-described embodiments are not limited to any of the foregoing details, but should be construed broadly within the spirit and scope of the present disclosure as defined by the appended claims. Thus, all variations and modifications that fall within the scope of the claims or the equivalents thereof are intended to be covered by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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201610835790.4 | Sep 2016 | CN | national |