Discover

AVLIS

An atomic vapor laser isotope separation experiment at LLNL. Green light is from a copper vapor pump laser used to pump a highly tuned dye laser which is producing the orange light.

'AVLIS' Is an acronym which stands for atomic vapor laser isotope separation and is a method by which specially tuned lasers are used to separate isotopes of uranium using selective ionization of hyperfine transitions.
In the largest technology transfer in U.S. government history, in 1994 the AVLIS process was transferred to the United States Enrichment Corporation for commercialization. However, on June 9, 1999 after a $100 million investment, USEC cancelled its AVLIS program.
The AVLIS process provides high energy efficiency comparable with gas centrifuges, high separation factor, and low volume of radioactive waste.
AVLIS continues to be developed by some countries and it presents some specific challenges to international monitoring ([1]). Iran is now known to have had a secret AVLIS program. However, since it was uncovered in 2003, Iran has claimed to have dismantled it ([2],[3]).
Similar technology, using molecules instead of atoms, is the molecular laser isotope separation, MLIS.

Contents
Principle
References
See also
External links

Principle


The absorption lines of 235 and 238U differ slightly due to hyperfine structure; for example, the 238U absorption peak shifts from 502.74 nanometers to 502.73 nm in 235U. AVLIS uses tunable dye lasers, which can be precisely tuned, so that only 235U absorbs the photons and selectively undergoes excitation and then photoionization. The ions are then electrostatically deflected to a collector, while the neutral unwanted uranium-238 passes through.
The AVLIS system consists from a vaporizer and a collector, forming the separation system, and the laser system. The vaporizer produces a stream of pure gaseous uranium.
The laser commonly used is a two-stage tunable pulsed dye laser usually pumped by a copper vapor laser; the master oscillator is low-power but highly precise, and its power is increased by a dye laser amplifier acting as optical amplifier. Three frequencies ("colors") of lasers are used for full ionization of uranium-235. [4]

References




★ Petr A. Bokhan, Vladimir V. Buchanov, Nikolai V. Fateev, Mikhail M. Kalugin, Mishik A. Kazaryan, Alexander M. Prokhorov, Dmitrij E. Zakrevskii: ''Laser Isotope Separation in Atomic Vapor''. Wiley-VCH, Berlin, August 2006, ISBN 3-527-40621-2

See also



Nuclear power

Nuclear fuel cycle

Gaseous diffusion

Gas centrifuge

Calutron

Molecular laser isotope separation

Chemical reaction by isotope selective laser (CRISLA)

External links



USEC News Release Cancelling AVLIS

Report on Iranian AVLIS program, PDF, 42KB.

Oxford Research Group report on Iran's nuclear activities.

Laser isotope separation uranium enrichment

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves