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- 2019
Molybdenum Sinter-Cladding of Solid Radioisotope TargetsDOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/instruments3010011 Keywords: radioisotopes, medical radioisotopes, radioisotope targetry, solid radioisotope targets, radioisotope target processing, medical cyclotrons Abstract: Abstract In solid targets for radioisotope production, the parent materials—mostly metallic—are usually attached to a substrate (metal part, often copper or silver) to support it during handling and irradiation and to facilitate liquid or gas cooling to remove the heat generated by the particle beam. This cladding process is most frequently done by electroplating. One of the biggest challenges of preparing solid, high-current, 100Mo targets is the difficulty of cladding the substrate with molybdenum—metal that cannot be electroplated. A number of cladding techniques are used with varying degrees of complexity, success, and cost. A simple cladding process, especially suitable for the production of radioisotope targets, was developed. The process uses a metal slurry (metal powder and binder) painted on the substrate and heated in a hydrogen atmosphere where the metal is sintered and diffusion-bound to the substrate in a single step. View Full-Tex
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