Neutron research facility

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

A neutron research facility is most commonly a big laboratory operating a large-scale

thermal neutrons to a suite of research instruments. The neutron source usually is a research reactor or a spallation source. In some cases, a smaller facility will provide high energy neutrons (e.g. 2.5 MeV or 14 MeV fusion neutrons) using existing neutron generator
technologies.

List of neutron facilities

The following list is intended to be exhaustive and to cover active facilities as well as those that are shut down.

Australia
Bangladesh
Canada
China
Czech Republic
  • Neutron Physics Laboratory (within CANAM infrastructure)[1]
Denmark
  • Risø
    (reactors 1958–2000)
Egypt
France
Germany
  • FRM I – Technical University, Garching (1957–2000)
  • FRM II – Technical University, Garching (2004–)
  • FRMZ –Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Mainz (1967–)
  • FRJ-2 at Forschungszentrum Jülich (1962–2006)
  • Jülich Centre for Neutron Science (2005–), a virtual facility that operates instruments at other facilities (FRM II, ILL, SNS)
  • FRG-1 – GKSS, Geesthacht near Hamburg (1958–2010)
  • Hahn-Meitner-Institut
Hungary
India
Indonesia
Japan
Netherlands
Norway
Poland
Russia
South Africa
South Korea
  • High-Flux Advanced Neutron Application Reactor (
    KAERI
    )
Sweden
Switzerland
Ukraine
United Kingdom
United States

References

  1. ^ "Neutron Physics Laboratory (NPL) - Ústav jaderné fyziky AV ČR".
  2. ^ "TU Delft Reactor Institute". Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  3. ^ "SINQ | SINQ | Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI)".
  4. ^ "Research with Neutrons and Muons (NUM) | NUM | Paul Scherrer Institut (PSI)".

External links