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Solitary wave form of reaction rate in graphite diffusive medium using different neutron absorbers

  • Seyede Nasrin Hosseinimotlagh ORCID logo , Abuzar Shakeri EMAIL logo , Mohammad Ali Zarei , Jahangir Bayat , Kavoos Abbasi , Vahid Reza Rezaei , Ehsan Rasti ORCID logo , Ali Ghasempour Nesheli ORCID logo and Hamid Reza Vanaei ORCID logo
Published/Copyright: October 25, 2024
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Abstract

Graphite nuclear properties such as moderating power and absorption cross-section, are not as good as those of heavy water. But its pure form can be prepared. Its structural and thermal properties are good and it has a high thermal conductivity. The thermal neutron in graphite performs an average of 1,200 scattering collisions before it is absorbed. This very low absorption cross section makes graphite as an ideal material for applications in nuclear reactors. In the current research, graphite is assumed as a diffusive medium due to its low absorption cross-section (0.0035 b) and having a low mass close to the neutron mass. In this medium: Boron (10B), Cadmium (113Cd), Samarium (149Sm), Europium (151Eu), Hafnium (177Hf) and Gadolinium (157Gd), separately are also considered as neutron absorbers. The aim of this paper is obtaining the solitary wave form of reaction rate in graphite diffusive medium using these neutron absorbers.


Corresponding author: Abuzar Shakeri, Department of Physics, Shiraz Branch, Islamic Azad University, Shiraz, Iran, E-mail:

  1. Research ethics: Not applicable.

  2. Informed consent: Not applicable.

  3. Author contributions: All the authors have accepted responsibility for the entire content of this submitted manuscript and approved submission.

  4. Use of Large Language Models, AI and Machine Learning Tools: None declared.

  5. Conflict of interest: The authors declare no conflicts of interest regarding this article.

  6. Research funding: None declared.

  7. Data availability: Not applicable.

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Received: 2024-06-07
Accepted: 2024-10-07
Published Online: 2024-10-25
Published in Print: 2024-10-28

© 2024 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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