Conceptual design of the early implementation of the NEutron Detector Array (NEDA) with AGATA

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccessDate
2016Author
Hüyük, TayfunDi Nitto, Antonio
Jaworski, Grzegorz
Gadea, Andres
Valiente-Dobon, Jose Javier
Nyberg, Johan
Palacz, Marcin
Soederstroem, Paer-Anders
Jose Aliaga-Varea, Ramon
de Angelis, Giacomo
Ataç, Ayşe
Collado, Javier
Domingo-Pardo, Cesar
Egea, Francisco Javier
Mustafa Erduran, Nizamettin
Ertürk, Sefa
de France, Gilles
Gadea, Rafael
Gonzalez, Vicente
Herrero-Bosch, Vicente
Kaşkaş, Ayse
Modamio, Victor
Moszynski, Marek
Sanchis, Enrique
Triossi, Andrea
Wadsworth, Robert
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The NEutron Detector Array (NEDA) project aims at the construction of a new high-efficiency compact neutron detector array to be coupled with large gamma-ray arrays such as AGATA. The application of NEDA ranges from its use as selective neutron multiplicity filter for fusion-evaporation reaction to a large solid angle neutron tagging device. In the present work, possible configurations for the NEDA coupled with the Neutron Wall for the early implementation with AGATA has been simulated, using Monte Carlo techniques, in order to evaluate their performance figures. The goal of this early NEDA implementation is to improve, with respect to previous instruments, efficiency and capability to select multiplicity for fusion-evaporation reaction channels in which 1, 2 or 3 neutrons are emitted. Each NEDA detector unit has the shape of a regular hexagonal prism with a volume of about 3.23 l and it is filled with the EJ301 liquid scintillator, that presents good neutron-gamma discrimination properties. The simulations have been performed using a fusion-evaporation event generator that has been validated with a set of experimental data obtained in the Ni-58 + Fe-56 reaction measured with the Neutron Wall detector array.