6533b82dfe1ef96bd129088a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Nuclear structure dependence of fusion hindrance in heavy element synthesis

Aditya WakhleJ. WalsheJ. KhuyagbaatarBettina LommelK. Vo-phuocDuc Huy LuongAlexander YakushevE.v. PrasadCedric SimenelEdward SimpsonIan CarterMahananda DasguptaC. SenguptaCh. E. DüllmannH. M. DavidD. Y. JeungElizabeth WilliamsBirgit KindlerJ.f. SmithD. C. RaffertyKaitlin CookDavid Hinde

subject

PhysicsFusion010308 nuclear & particles physicsFissionNuclear TheoryNuclear structure7. Clean energy01 natural sciencesNuclear physics0103 physical sciencesProduction (computer science)Heavy ionHeavy elementDetector arrayNuclear Experiment010306 general physics

description

The production of the heaviest elements in fusion-evaporation reactions is substantially limited by very low cross sections, as fusion cross sections (including fusion-fission) are greatly reduced by the competing quasifission mechanism. Using the Australian National University Heavy Ion Accelerator Facility and CUBE detector array, fission fragments from the $^{48}\mathrm{Ti}+^{204,208}\mathrm{Pb}$ and $^{50}\mathrm{Ti}+^{206,208}\mathrm{Pb}$ reactions have been measured, with the aim to investigate how the competition between quasifission and fusion-fission evolves with small changes in entrance-channel properties associated mainly with the nuclear structure. Analysis of mass-distribution widths of strongly mass-angle-correlated fission fragments within the framework of the compound-nucleus fission theory demonstrates significant differences in quasifission (and therefore fusion) probabilities among the four reactions. The impact of nuclear structure on fusion highlights the importance of future radioactive beams.

https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevc.97.064618