Abstract:
Over the last many decades, heavy-ion (HI) induced reactions have captivated
nuclear physicists across the globe, and prodigious theoretical and experimental
e orts have been made to understand the underlying dynamics. Semi-classically,
on the basis of impact parameter, the HI induced reactions are categorized into
four di erent regions, viz., i) the Coulomb region: HIs interact at large impact
parameter, and can be scattered elastically following Rutherford scattering or
inelastically with Coulomb excitation, ii) the peripheral region: HIs brush past
each other in a grazing collision resulting in direct reaction involving inelastic
scattering or a few nucleon transfer or quasi-elastic scattering (QEL), iii) the
deep inelastic region: HIs strongly interact with each other in close collisions
resulting in massive transfer or incomplete fusion (ICF) reactions, and iv) the
fusion region: an approximately head-on collision can cause the coalescence of
HIs leading to the formation of an excited compound nucleus in complete fusion
reaction (CF). The excited compound nucleus decays via emission of light nuclear
particle(s) and/or characteristic
rays leading to the evaporation residues. Fission
is also considered as one of the decay modes for excited compound nucleus, where
it principally splits into two fragments having more or less equal masses. The
nal reaction products may also be populated via the emission of light nuclear
particle(s) and characteristic
-rays from the ssion fragments.
In this thesis, a series of experiments have been performed at the Inter University
Accelerator Centre (IUAC), New Delhi to explore di erent aspects of heavyion
reactions around the Coulomb barrier and to understand the underlying dynamics.
In the rst set of experiments, to study heavy-ion induced fusion- ssion
reaction in pre-actinide region and low incident energies, the production crosssections
of ssion-like events have been measured in 12C + 169Tm system at Elab
6.4, 6.9, and 7.4 MeV/A employing the activation technique followed by o ine
-spectroscopy. In the second set, to understand the localization of input angular
momentum window, and to explore the possibility of populating high-spin states
via ICF, the gamma-transition intensity patterns of di erent reaction residues
were measured in 12C + 169Tm system in an energy range Elab 5-7.5 MeV/A
using particle-
-coincidence technique. Finally, in the third set of experiments, quasi-elastic (QEL) scattering have been measured in 7Li + 116;118Sn systems at
Elab 2.14-4.14 MeV/A (30% below to well above the barrier) using a stateof-
the-art detection system HYbrid Telescope ARray (HYTAR) in General Purpose
Scattering Chamber (GPSC) beamline. The self-supporting 116;118Sn targets
were fabricated using ultra-high vacuum (UHV) facility available in the Target
laboratory at IUAC. Various advanced characterization techniques were used to
determine their thickness and establish their purity and stability in HI beam irradiation.
The barrier distributions have been extracted from the measured QEL
excitation functions to have an insight on the e ect of breakup channels on fusion.
The experimental QEL excitation functions and the corresponding barrier distributions
are analyzed in the framework of theoretical model code CCFULL-SC.