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Magnetically Activated and Guided Isotope Separation

English · Hardback

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Description

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This thesis describes a proof-of-principle experiment demonstrating a technique for stable isotope enrichment called Magnetically Activated and Guided Isotope Separation (MAGIS). Over the past century many enriched isotopes have become available, thanks largely to electromagnetic separators called calutrons. Due to substantial maintenance and operating costs, the United States decommissioned the last of its calutrons in 1998, leading to demand for alternative methods of isotope separation. The work presented here suggests the promise for MAGIS as a viable alternative to the calutrons.
The MAGIS technique combines optical pumping with a scalable magnetic field gradient to enrich atoms of a specific isotope in an atomic beam. Benchmarking this work against the calutron using lithium as a test case, the author demonstrated comparable enrichment in a manner that should scale to the production of similar quantities, while requiring vastly less energy input.

List of contents

Introduction.- Application to Lithium - Experiment Overview.- Measurements.- Apparatus Scaling, Beyond Lithium, and Conclusions.

About the author

Dr Thomas Mazur is now with the School of Medicine, Washington University in St Louis, USA. He completed his PhD with Prof Mark Raizen at the University of Texas at Austin in 2014.

Summary

This thesis describes a proof-of-principle experiment demonstrating a technique for stable isotope enrichment called Magnetically Activated and Guided Isotope Separation (MAGIS). Over the past century many enriched isotopes have become available, thanks largely to electromagnetic separators called calutrons. Due to substantial maintenance and operating costs, the United States decommissioned the last of its calutrons in 1998, leading to demand for alternative methods of isotope separation. The work presented here suggests the promise for MAGIS as a viable alternative to the calutrons.The MAGIS technique combines optical pumping with a scalable magnetic field gradient to enrich atoms of a specific isotope in an atomic beam. Benchmarking this work against the calutron using lithium as a test case, the author demonstrated comparable enrichment in a manner that should scale to the production of similar quantities, while requiring vastly less energy input.

Product details

Authors Thomas R Mazur, Thomas R. Mazur
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 31.12.2015
 
EAN 9783319239545
ISBN 978-3-31-923954-5
No. of pages 124
Dimensions 162 mm x 243 mm x 11 mm
Weight 327 g
Illustrations XIV, 124 p. 23 illus.
Series Springer Theses
Springer Theses
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Physics, astronomy > Atomic physics, nuclear physics

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