Abstract:
Background: In heavy-ion-induced fusion reactions, cross sections in the sub-barrier region are enhanced
compared to predictions of the one-dimensional barrier penetration model. This enhancement is often understood
by invoking deformation and coupling of the relative motion with low-lying inelastic states of the reaction
partners. However, effects of nucleon transfer on fusion below the barrier, especially for the systems having
positive Q value neutron transfer (PQNT) channels, are yet to be disentangled completely.
Purpose: We intend to study the role of the PQNT effect on the sub-barrier fusion of the 18O + 116Sn system
having positive Q value for the two-neutron stripping channel. Also we reflect on the interplay of couplings
involved in the system around the Coulomb barrier.
Method: The fusion excitation function was measured at energies from 11% below to 46% above the Coulomb
barrier for 18O + 116Sn using a recoil mass spectrometer, viz., the Heavy-Ion Reaction Analyser (HIRA).
Fusion barrier distributions were extracted from the data. Results from the experiment were analyzed within
the framework of the coupled-channels model.
Results: Fusion cross sections at energies below the Coulomb barrier showed strong enhancement compared
to predictions of the one-dimensional barrier penetration model. The fusion process is influenced by couplings
to the collective excitations with coupling to single- and two-phonon vibrational states of the target and the
projectile respectively. Inclusion of the two-neutron transfer channel in the calculation along with these couplings
could reproduce the data satisfactorily.
Conclusions: The significant role of PQNT in enhancing the sub-barrier fusion cross section for the chosen
system is not observed. It simply reduced the sub-barrier fusion cross section. Therefore, a consistent link
between PQNT and sub-barrier fusion enhancement could not be established vividly while comparing the fusion
excitation function from this work with the same from other 16,18O-induced reactions. This clearly points to the
need for more experimental as well as theoretical investigation in this field.