Publication | Open Access
Mechanisms Suppressing Superheavy Element Yields in Cold Fusion Reactions
47
Citations
29
References
2019
Year
Nuclear Beam PhysicsNuclear PhysicsEngineeringCross SectionsNuclear FissionControlled Nuclear FusionNucleationSuperheavy ElementsLow-energy Nuclear StructureFusion Reactor MaterialNuclear DynamicsHigh-energy Nuclear ReactionPhysicsNuclear TheoryAtomic PhysicsFusion EnergyNuclear ReactionsCold Fusion ReactionsExperimental Nuclear PhysicsNatural SciencesApplied PhysicsDiffusion ProcessChemical Kinetics
Superheavy elements are formed in fusion reactions which are hindered by fast nonequilibrium processes. To quantify these, mass-angle distributions and cross sections have been measured, at beam energies from below-barrier to 25% above, for the reactions of ^{48}Ca, ^{50}Ti, and ^{54}Cr with ^{208}Pb. Moving from ^{48}Ca to ^{54}Cr leads to a drastic fall in the symmetric fission yield, which is reflected in the measured mass-angle distribution by the presence of competing fast nonequilibrium deep inelastic and quasifission processes. These are responsible for reduction of the compound nucleus formation probablity P_{CN} (as measured by the symmetric-peaked fission cross section), by a factor of 2.5 for ^{50}Ti and 15 for ^{54}Cr in comparison to ^{48}Ca. The energy dependence of P_{CN} indicates that cold fusion reactions (involving ^{208}Pb) are not driven by a diffusion process.
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