Last version:
FLUKA 2023.3.4, April 10th 2024
(last respin 2023.3.4)
flair-2.3-0d 13-Sep-2023

News:

-- Fluka Release
( 10.04.2024 )

FLUKA 2023.3.4 has been released.


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COMPOUND

defines a compound, alloy or mixture, made of several materials, or even a mixture of different isotopes

See also ASSIGNMAt, CORRFACT, LOW-MAT, MATERIAL, MAT-PROP

If WHAT(1) > 0.0 and WHAT(2) > 0.0 :

        WHAT(1) = atom relative content of first material in the compound
        WHAT(2) = index (or name) of first material

If WHAT(1) < 0.0 and WHAT(2) > 0.0 :

      |WHAT(1)| = mass fraction of first material in the compound
       WHAT(2)  = index (or name) of first material

If WHAT(1) < 0.0 and WHAT(2) < 0.0 :

      |WHAT(1)| = volume fraction of first material in the compound
      |WHAT(2)| = index (or name) of first material

No default

In a similar way, WHAT(3) and WHAT(4) refer to the second material in the compound, WHAT(5) and WHAT(6) to the third one.

     SDUM    = name of the compound

     Default (option COMPOUND not requested): no compound is defined

For more than three materials in the same compound, add as many COMPOUND cards with the same SDUM name as needed (but the maximum number of components per compound is 80, and the maximum total number of components is 1000).

Notes:

  • 1) Option COMPOUND must always be used in conjunction with a MATERIAL card having the same SDUM name (see MATERIAL). MATERIAL cards used for this purpose provide the density of the compound, its material number and name (WHAT(1) and WHAT(2) of the MATERIAL option, namely atomic number and weight, are ignored).

  • 3) The atom (or molecule) content, mass fraction or volume fraction need only to be given on a relative basis (normalisation is done automatically by the program).

  • 4) Partial pressures of an (ideal) gas are equivalent to molecule fractions and also to volume fractions.

  • 5) If a compound is defined by volume fractions of the components (either elements or compounds themselves - see Note 8 below for recursive definitions), FLUKA internally calculates the atomic densities of each component using the densities indicated in the respective MATERIAL cards: in this case, therefore, (and only in this case), it is important that these correspond to the actual densities.

  • 6) Isotopic compositions other than natural can be defined by the COMPOUND option too.

  • 7) When using the LOW-NEUT option (explicitly or by default set by the DEFAULTS option), a special data set containing low-energy neutron cross sections for each material used must be available. The data sets are combined in a single file, delivered with the FLUKA program (logical input unit 9, see (3)). Each low-energy neutron data set is identified either by name (if equal to a FLUKA name and unique or first with that name), or/and by one or more identifiers given with a card LOW-MAT when necessary to remove ambiguity. In the case of a composite material defined by a COMPOUND option, two possibilities are allowed (see LOW-MAT):
              a - to associate the FLUKA material with a pre-mixed neutron data
                set. In this case interactions take place with individual nuclei
                at high energy, while average cross sections are used for
                low-energy neutrons. Note that no pre-mixed neutron data set is
                yet available (at the moment the standard sets contain pure
                elements only).
              b - to associate the FLUKA material with several elemental neutron
                data sets (one per component element). In this case both
                high-energy and low-energy neutron interactions take place with
                individual nuclei. This is the only possibility at present but
                it may change in the future.

  • 8) Recursion is allowed, i.e. the components of a composite material can be composite materials. The depth of recursion is only limited by the size of the internal arrays (in case of overflow a message is issued and the job is terminated). Different levels of recursion can use different units in the definition of the component fractions (atoms, mass or volume fractions). Note, however, that if a compound is put together from different composite molecules, the atomic and molecular fractions have to be given without normalisation (use the chemical formulae directly). What follows is an example (for a number-based input) of a simple compound BOOZE containing 50 weight percent of water and 50 of ethanol.

 *...+....1....+....2....+....3....+....4....+....5....+....6....+....7....+....8
 MATERIAL         1.0       1.0  .0000899       3.0       0.0      0.0 HYDROGEN
 MATERIAL         6.0      12.0       2.0       4.0       0.0      0.0 CARBON
 MATERIAL         8.0      16.0   0.00143       5.0       0.0      0.0 OXYGEN
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0       1.0      20.0       0.0      0.0 WATER
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0    0.7907       7.0       0.0      0.0 ETHANOL
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0    0.9155       8.0       0.0      0.0 BOOZE
 COMPOUND         2.0       3.0       1.0       5.0       0.0      0.0 WATER
 COMPOUND         2.0       4.0       6.0       3.0       1.0      5.0 ETHANOL
 COMPOUND       -50.0      20.0     -50.0       7.0       0.0      0.0 BOOZE
 *   Note that in the above example materials 4, 5, 7 and 8 have been defined
 *   overriding the default FLUKA material numbers.This is only allowed in
 *   an explicitly number-based input, declared as such with WHAT(4) = 4.0 in
 *   command GLOBAL,

The same example, in a name-based input, could be:

 MATERIAL         1.0       1.0  .0000899       3.0       0.0      0.0 HYDROGEN
 MATERIAL         6.0      12.0       2.0       6.0       0.0      0.0 CARBON
 MATERIAL         8.0      16.0   0.00143       8.0       0.0      0.0 OXYGEN
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0       1.0      20.0       0.0      0.0 WATER
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0    0.7907       7.0       0.0      0.0 ETHANOL
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0    0.9155       8.0       0.0      0.0 BOOZE
 COMPOUND         2.0  HYDROGEN       1.0    OXYGEN       0.0      0.0 WATER
 COMPOUND         2.0    CARBON       6.0  HYDROGEN       1.0      5.0 ETHANOL
 COMPOUND       -50.0     WATER     -50.0   ETHANOL       0.0      0.0 BOOZE

Example of how COMPOUND is commonly used to define a mixture (concrete). In a number-based input:

 *...+....1....+....2....+....3....+....4....+....5....+....6....+....7....+....8
 * definition of material 27 (concrete) as compound:  H (1%), C(0.1%),
 * O(52.9107%), Na(1.6%), Mg(0.2%), Al(3.3872%), Si(33.7021%), K(1.3%),
 * Ca(4.4%), Fe(1.4%)
 MATERIAL        19.0   39.0983     0.862      26.0       0.0      0.0 POTASSIU
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0      2.35      27.0       0.0       0. CONCRETE
 COMPOUND       -0.01       3.0    -0.001       6.0 -0.529107       8. CONCRETE
 COMPOUND      -0.016      19.0    -0.002       9.0 -0.033872      10. CONCRETE
 COMPOUND   -0.337021      14.0    -0.013      26.0    -0.044      21. CONCRETE
 COMPOUND      -0.014      11.0
 *   In the above example, elements 3 (hydrogen), 6 (carbon), 8 (oxygen),
 *   9 (magnesium), 10 (aluminium), 11 (iron), 14 (silicon), 19 (sodium) and
 *   21 (calcium) are not defined because the corresponding pre-defined FLUKA
 *   materials are used (see (5)). Potassium is not pre-defined, therefore it is
 *   assigned a new numbers 26 (that keeps the numbering sequence continuous,
 *   since the last FLUKA pre-defined material has number 25). The name is
 *   chosen to correspond with the potassium neutron cross section data set.
 *   ( Chap. (10))

The same example, in a name-based input:

 MATERIAL        19.0   39.0983     0.862      26.0       0.0      0.0 POTASSIU
 MATERIAL         0.0       0.0      2.35      27.0       0.0       0. CONCRETE
 COMPOUND       -0.01  HYDROGEN    -0.001    CARBON -0.529107   OXYGEN CONCRETE
 COMPOUND      -0.016    SODIUM    -0.002  MAGNESIU -0.033872 ALUMINUM CONCRETE
 COMPOUND   -0.337021   SILICON    -0.013  POTASSIU    -0.044  CALCIUM CONCRETE
 COMPOUND      -0.014      IRON

More complex uses of COMPOUND in connection with MATERIAL and LOW-MAT are illustrated by examples in (15).

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