Introduction
Nuclear fission, i.e., the phenomenon that one (usually heavy) atomic nucleus may separate into two or more fragments, has been discovered for more than eighty years [1, 2]. It is accompanied by the release of abundant energy [3] and has a wide range of applications. In addition to the important applications in energy and production of rare isotopes, fission also plays a crucial role in fundamental physics, such as synthesizing superheavy elements [4-6], as well as constraints on the r-process in neutron-star mergers [7] et al. Therefore, several theoretical approaches have been utilized to describe the fission process and observations [8-17]. As shown in Ref. [8], the microscopic models that were applied to fission thus far utilize the density functional theory (DFT), which is based on effective nucleon - nucleon interactions.
As one of the dominant residual correlations in the atomic nuclei, the pairing interaction is critical for understanding the fission process. Extensive studies regarding the influence of pairing interactions on the fission properties were performed, such as the effect on the fission barrier heights, fission isomer excitation energies, and collective inertia [18-23]. In Ref. [20], the fission dynamic calculation based on the covariant DFT was performed for the fission of 226Th, in which both the symmetric and asymmetric fission modes co-exist. The asymmetric fission mode dominated as the pairing force decreased, whereas the symmetric fission mode dominated as the pairing force increased. The time-dependent superfluid local density approximation (TDSLDA) method has demonstrated that fission significantly accelerates as the pairing force increases [24]. The effect of the dynamic pairing correlations on the fission process was studied in Refs. [25, 26].
In our previous work, the role of the pairing force on the static fission properties and fission dynamic process were studied [22, 27-29], which demonstrated that the variation in the strength of the pairing correlation can significantly influence the fission process. However, whether the form of pairing force can also impact the fission properties is noteworthy. A schematic pairing force was originally introduced in [30], and parameters of the density-dependent pairing correlation were studied in Refs. [31-33]. Specifically, considering Skyrme-DFT, different types of pairing forces have been used for studying the nuclear structure, such as the volume-like, surface-like, and mixed-type pairing forces. In Refs. [34-36], various types of the pairing interactions (volume-, surface-, and mixed-type pairing forces) were used to study the pairing gaps in even-even nuclei over the entire nuclear chart, the odd-even staggering behavior of binding energies around tin isotopes, and to predict the two-neutron separation energies and neutron pairing gaps[36]. In this study, whether the form of the pairing force can influence the static aspects of the fission properties and dynamics was investigated. The fission process of 240Pu was studied in Skyme DFT and the time-dependent generator coordinate method (TDGCM) plus Gaussian overlap approximation (GOA) (TDGCM + GOA) framework.
In Sect. 2, we briefly describe the main features of the theoretical approach. Details regarding the calculated results for the least-energy fission path, fission barrier, pairing energy, total kinetic energy, scission line, and mass distribution of fission fragments using various types of pairing forces are analyzed and discussed in Sect. 3. Finally, Sect. 4 presents a summary of the principal results.
Theoretical framework
Skyrme DFT was applied as the microscopic method to study the static fission properties and prepare the input files for the dynamic calculation. The dynamic process was further investigated in the framework of TDGCM. Thus, in this section, these two methods are briefly explained. Detailed formulations of the Skyrme DFT can be found in Ref. [37], and those of TDGCM can be found in Refs. [38-40].
Density functional theory approach for the description of PES
For the local density approximation of DFT, the total energy of the finite nuclei can be calculated using the space integral of the Hamiltonian density
The mean-field potential energy in the Skyrme DFT usually has the following form:
In the DFT, the pairing correlation is usually incorporated by the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov (HFB) method [37]. For the Skyrme energy density functional, a commonly used pairing force is the density-dependent, zero range potential, which can be expressed as follows: Refs. [8, 43]:
Time-dependent generator coordinate method for fission dynamics
Fission is a large-amplitude collective motion and can be described as a slow adiabatic process driven by a few collective degrees of freedom within the framework of TDGCM. In this approach, the many-body state wave function of the fissioning system can be expressed by the following generic form:
For the description of fission, the collective space is divided into an inner region with a single nuclear density distribution, and an external region that contains the two fission fragments. The scission contour defines the hyper-surface that separates the two regions. The flux of the probability current through this hyper-surface provides a measure of the probability of observing a given pair of fragments at time
Results and discussion
The influence of the different types of pairing forces on the fission properties were studied based on Skyrme DFT with SkM* parameters [48]. The DFT solvers HFBTHO(V3.00) [49] were used to calculate the potential energy surfaces (PESs). An axial symmetry was assumed. Thirty-one major shells of the axial harmonic-oscillator single-particle basis were used, and the number of the basis states were further truncated to be 1100. In this study, we considered five values of η (0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, and 1) in Eq. 3 as the different types of pairing forces. For each value of η, the pairing strength for the neutrons and protons was adjusted to reproduce a pairing gap of 240Pu extracted from the three-point formula of the odd-even mass staggering. A cutoff of 60 MeV was used as the pairing window in all the calculations.
Fig. 1 presents the pairing strengths of the neutrons and protons for the pairing forces with different values of η. For η near 0, the pairing tends to occur equivalently in the nuclear volume. When it is near 1, the pairing tends to peak at the nuclear surface. For η between the values of 0.0 and 0.5, the absolute value of the pairing strength increased nearly linearly. However, for η = 1.00, there was a sudden increase in the pairing strength. The surface-like pairing force requires a significantly larger strength to produce the same pairing gap compared to the volume-like or mixed-type pairing forces. These results are consistent with previous studies. As demonstrated in Refs. [50, 51], the surface pairing force also has stronger strength than the volume and mixed pairing forces.
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F001.jpg)
Potential energy surface
As indicated in Sec.2.B, considering the adiabatic approximation approach for fission dynamics, obtaining the precise multidimensional PESs is the first step toward the dynamical description of fission. In this study, we chose the quadruple moment (q20) and octuple moment (q30) as the collective parameters, which are the most important collective degrees of freedom for the nuclear fission study; they describe the elongation of the nucleus and mass asymmetry, respectively. Figure 2 presents the PESs of 240Pu calculated by using the HFB method with five different types of pairing forces (η = 0, 0.25, 0.5, 0.75, and 1.0) in the collective space of (q20, q30). The collective variables ranged from 0 to 600 b for q20, and from 0 to 60 b3/2 for q30 with the step of
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F002.jpg)
As shown in Fig. 2, there is no notable difference in the topological properties of PESs with different types of pairing forces. Double-humped fission barriers were predicted for all the cases. An inner symmetric fission barrier followed by an outer asymmetric barrier was clearly distinguished. At q20>200 b, symmetric valleys with large elongations were found. The symmetric and asymmetric fission valleys were well-separated by a ridge from (q20, q30) ≈ (150 b, 0 b3/2) to (350 b, 20 b3/2), and the height of the ridge gradually decreased as the η value increased. Therefore, the density-dependent surface pairing force led to the reduction of the ridge height. In addition, the asymmetric fission channel was favored for all the least-energy fission pathways, as indicated by the red lines in Fig. 2.
Energies of the symmetric and asymmetric fission paths as a function of the quadruple moment (q20) are provided in Figs. 3(a) and (b), respectively. The value of η varied from 0 to 1, indicating that the ”volume-like” pairing force transitioned into a surface pairing force. Fig. 3 demonstrates that the fission barrier heights and isomeric-state energy decrease as η increases. Specifically, when η>0.5, the fission barriers explicitly decrease. For the least-energy fission pathway shown in Fig. 3(b), a smaller quadruple moment is needed for the occurrence of the scission for a larger η.
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F003.jpg)
Table 1 lists the energies of the ground state, isomeric states, and fission barrier heights for the different types of pairing forces, along with the corresponding quadruple and octuple moments for each state. The energies of the isomeric state and heights of the fission barrier decrease as the η value increases. Owing to the lack of triaxial deformation in the collective space in our calculation, the heights of the fission barriers would be higher than those experimentally obtained, especially for the inner fission barrier [52, 53]. As indicated in the table, for η=1, the inner fission barrier height was near that demonstrated by the data, and the outer fission barrier was lower than that in the data, leaving no room for the triaxial degree of freedom. Thus, η=1, that is, the surface pairing force, may not be a good choice for the fission study. Based on Table 1, the deformations of these states, including the ground state, isomeric state, and inner and outer barriers, are generally not influenced by the type of pairing force. These deformations are mainly determined by the shell structure given by the mean-field potential. In our previous study [22], we also found that these deformations were relatively stable against the variations of the pairing strength.
Ground state | Isomeric state | Inner barrier | Outer barrier | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Exp | -1813.45 [54] | 2.8 [55] | 6.05* [56] | 5.15* [56] | |
0.0 | -1805.06 | 2.83 | 9.83 | 6.90 | |
Energy/MeV | 0.25 | -1805.15 | 2.63 | 9.58 | 6.64 |
0.5 | -1805.35 | 2.59 | 9.32 | 6.46 | |
0.75 | -1805.68 | 2.31 | 8.72 | 5.84 | |
1.0 | -1806.44 | 1.55 | 7.12 | 4.36 | |
0.0 | (30,0) | (86,0) | (54,0) | (124,8) | |
Deformation | 0.25 | (30,0) | (86,0) | (54,0) | (124,8) |
(q20/b,q30/b3/2) | 0.5 | (30,0) | (86,0) | (54,0) | (126,8) |
0.75 | (30,0) | (86,0) | (54,0) | (124,8) | |
1.0 | (30,0) | (86,0) | (54,0) | (124,8) |
Pairing energies
Figure 4 presents the pairing energies at different deformations for various types of pairing forces. The pairing energies at the ground and isomeric states are smaller than those at the fission barriers. At the same state, the pairing energy increases as the value of η increases, especially for η=1, which is the surface-type pairing force. The pairing gaps at different deformations are provided in Fig. 5. Once again, the pairing gap has a minimum at the ground state and a second minimum at the isomeric states. The pairing gaps are large around the fission barriers. For the adjustment of the strength of the different pairing forces used in this study, the same values of the pairing gaps in 240Pu were used. The figure demonstrates that at the smaller deformation region, the pairing gaps from the different types of pairing forces were relatively similar. However, when the deformation was large, explicit discrepancies appeared (q20>150 b). For the pairing force with a smaller η value, the neutron and proton pairing gaps were generally smaller.
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F004.jpg)
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F005.jpg)
Mass tensor
The mass tensor
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F006.jpg)
Scission lines
Determining the scission frontier is critical for describing the fission dynamics. In DFT, the operator
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F007.jpg)
Total kinetic energy
An important quantity in induced fission is the total kinetic energy (TKE), which is obtained by the fission fragments. In this study, the total kinetic energy of the two separated fragments at the scission point can be estimated as the Coulomb repulsive interaction
Fission yields
Figure 9 presents the mass and charge yields obtained with the code FELIX (version 2) [47] based on the TDGCM+GOA framework using the different types of pairing forces, which are compared with the experimental data. As a critical microscopic input of fission dynamic calculations, the mass tensor is calculated by the GCM or ATDHFB methods. In this calculation, qN= 4 was used to determine the scission line. Generally, the discrepancies between the calculated pre-neutron mass distribution and charge distributions obtained by using the mass tensors by the GCM and ATDHFB methods are small. Furthermore, the mass and charge yields calculated by using the mixed-pairing force with η =0.5 combined with the mass tensor by the ATDHFB method demonstrated the best agreement with the experimental data.
-202403/1001-8042-35-03-014/alternativeImage/1001-8042-35-03-014-F009.jpg)
The impact of the different types of pairing forces on the mass and charge distributions is apparent. For the calculated results obtained by the ATDHFB mass tensor, the position of the peak was nearly constant for η= 0.0, 0.25, and 0.5, and moved toward the heavy fragment as η= 0.75 and 1.0. For the results with GCM mass tensor, the mass and charge distributions of the fission fragment shifted toward the more heavy fragment as η increased (panels (a) and (c)). Furthermore, the theoretical calculations obtained by the TDGCM with ATDHFB mass tensors (panels (b) and (d)) demonstrated that the yields from the symmetric fission channel increased as η increased, which was related to the decrease in the height of the ridge as η increased, as shown in Fig. 2.
Summary
In this study, we focused on analyzing the influence of different types of pairing forces on the fission properties in the framework of SkM*-DFT and TDGCM+GOA, considering the 239Pu(n, f) reaction as an example. Different types of pairing interactions were considered in the HFB approximation. The η parameter was tuned to obtain the different types of pairing forces and to test the sensitivity of the calculations. η = 0, 0.5, and 1.0 are referred to as the volume-, surface-, and mixed-type pairing forces in the literature, respectively; we also used η = 0.25 and 0.75 for test purposes.
The PES, mass tensor, scission line, and TKE were calculated. The results demonstrated a significant sensitivity of the fission process to the choice of the η. An increase in the η value led to lower ground-state and isomeric-state energies, as well as fission barriers. Considering surface pairing (
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