6533b829fe1ef96bd128a158
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Rapid extraction of short-lived isotopes from a buffer gas cell for use in gas-phase chemistry experiments. Part I: Off-line studies with 219Rn and 221Fr
Petra Thörle-pospiechO. KalejaO. KalejaEgon JägerL. LensJ. KrierS. RaederCh. E. DüllmannJörg RunkeS. GötzAlexander YakushevMichael BlockM. GötzA. K. MistryCh. Mokrysubject
Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsChemistryBuffer gasExtraction (chemistry)Analytical chemistryTransactinide element02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesIonRecoilElectric fieldNuclear fusionGas chromatography0210 nano-technologyInstrumentationdescription
Abstract To study the chemical properties of the heaviest elements, a fast and efficient stopping and extraction of the highly energetic residues from heavy ion fusion reactions into the chemistry setup is essential. Currently used techniques like Recoil Transfer Chambers (RTC) relying on gas flow extraction provide high efficiencies for chemically non-reactive volatile species, but operate at extraction times t extr of about 0.5 s or more. Buffer Gas Cells (BGC) with electric and Radio-Frequency (RF) fields offer much faster extraction times. Here, we demonstrate the successful coupling of a BGC to a gas chromatography setup as is used for studies of chemical properties of superheavy elements. Using 223Ra and 225Ac recoil ion sources providing 219Rn and 221Fr ions for off-line tests, an extraction time t extr = 55(4) ms and an extraction efficiency of 35(3)% were achieved for the non-reactive 219Rn, while 221Fr was retained. The results show a BGC-based setup to be suitable for gas-phase experiments with short-lived volatile transactinide elements like Cn and Fl with half-lives substantially below 1 s.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-04-01 | Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment |