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Nuclear fission

Nuclear fission is a reaction in which the nucleus of an atom splits into two or more smaller nuclei. The fission process often produces gamma photons, and releases a very large amount of energy even by the energetic standards of radioactive decay.

Induced fission reaction. A neutron is absorbed by a uranium-235 nucleus, turning it briefly into an excited uranium-236 nucleus, with the excitation energy provided by the kinetic energy of the neutron plus the forces that bind the neutron. The uranium-236, in turn, splits into fast-moving lighter elements (fission products) and releases several free neutrons, one or more "prompt gamma rays" (not shown) and a (proportionally) large amount of kinetic energy.

Nuclear fission was discovered on 19 December 1938 in Berlin by German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann. Physicists Lise Meitner and her nephew Otto Robert Frisch explained it theoretically in January 1939. Frisch named the process "fission" by analogy with biological fission of living cells. In their second publication on nuclear fission in February 1939, Hahn and Strassmann predicted the existence and liberation of additional neutrons during the fission process, opening up the possibility of a nuclear chain reaction.

For heavy nuclides, it is an exothermic reaction which can release large amounts of energy both as electromagnetic radiation and as kinetic energy of the fragments (heating the bulk material where fission takes place). Like nuclear fusion, for fission to produce energy, the total binding energy of the resulting elements must be greater than that of the starting element.

Fission is a form of nuclear transmutation because the resulting fragments (or daughter atoms) are not the same element as the original parent atom. The two (or more) nuclei produced are most often of comparable but slightly different sizes, typically with a mass ratio of products of about 3 to 2, for common fissile isotopes.[1][2] Most fissions are binary fissions (producing two charged fragments), but occasionally (2 to 4 times per 1000 events), three positively charged fragments are produced, in a ternary fission. The smallest of these fragments in ternary processes ranges in size from a proton to an argon nucleus.

Apart from fission induced by a neutron, harnessed and exploited by humans, a natural form of spontaneous radioactive decay (not requiring a neutron) is also referred to as fission, and occurs especially in very high-mass-number isotopes. Spontaneous fission was discovered in 1940 by Flyorov, Petrzhak, and Kurchatov[3] in Moscow, in an experiment intended to confirm that, without bombardment by neutrons, the fission rate of uranium was negligible, as predicted by Niels Bohr; it was not negligible.[3]

The unpredictable composition of the products (which vary in a broad probabilistic and somewhat chaotic manner) distinguishes fission from purely quantum tunneling processes such as proton emission, alpha decay, and cluster decay, which give the same products each time. Nuclear fission produces energy for nuclear power and drives the explosion of nuclear weapons. Both uses are possible because certain substances called nuclear fuels undergo fission when struck by fission neutrons, and in turn emit neutrons when they break apart. This makes a self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction possible, releasing energy at a controlled rate in a nuclear reactor or at a very rapid, uncontrolled rate in a nuclear weapon.

The amount of free energy released in the fission of an equivalent amount of 235
U
is a million times more than that released in the combustion of methane or from hydrogen fuel cells.[4]

The products of nuclear fission, however, are on average far more radioactive than the heavy elements which are normally fissioned as fuel, and remain so for significant amounts of time, giving rise to a nuclear waste problem. However, the seven long-lived fission products make up only a small fraction of fission products. Neutron absorption which does not lead to fission produces Plutonium (from 238
U
) and minor actinides (from both 235
U
and 238
U
) whose radiotoxicity is far higher than that of the long lived fission products. Concerns over nuclear waste accumulation and the destructive potential of nuclear weapons are a counterbalance to the peaceful desire to use fission as an energy source. The thorium fuel cycle produces virtually no plutonium and much less minor actinides, but 232
U
- or rather its decay products - are a major gamma ray emitter. All actinides are fertile or fissile and fast breeder reactors can fission them all albeit only in certain configurations. Nuclear reprocessing aims to recover usable material from spent nuclear fuel to both enable uranium (and thorium) supplies to last longer and to reduce the amount of "waste". The industry term for a process that fissions all or nearly all actinides is a "closed fuel cycle".

Physical overview edit

Mechanism edit

Younes and Loveland define fission as, "...a collective motion of the protons and neutrons that make up the nucleus, and as such it is distinguishable from other phenomena that break up the nucleus. Nuclear fission is an extreme example of large-amplitude collective motion that results in the division of a parent nucleus into two or more fragment nuclei. The fission process can occur spontaneously, or it can be induced by an incident particle." Most of the energy from fission, about 85 percent, is found in fragment kinetic energy, while about 6 percent each comes from initial neutrons and gamma rays, then Beta decay neutrons and gamma rays, plus about 3 percent from β decay neutrinos.[4]: 21–22, 30 

 
A visual representation of an induced nuclear fission event where a slow-moving neutron is absorbed by the nucleus of a uranium-235 atom, which fissions into two fast-moving lighter elements (fission products) and additional neutrons. Most of the energy released is in the form of the kinetic velocities of the fission products and the neutrons.
 
Fission product yields by mass for thermal neutron fission of uranium-235, plutonium-239, a combination of the two typical of current nuclear power reactors, and uranium-233 used in the thorium cycle.

Radioactive decay edit

Nuclear fission can occur without neutron bombardment as a type of radioactive decay. This type of fission is called spontaneous fission, and was first observed in 1940.[4]: 22 

Nuclear reaction edit

During induced fission, a compound system is formed after an incident particle fuses with a target. The resultant excitation energy may be sufficient to emit neutrons, or gamma-rays, and nuclear scission. Fission into two fragments, binary fission, is the most common nuclear reaction. Occurring least frequently is ternary fission, in which a third particle is emitted. This third particle is commonly an α particle.[4]: 21–24  Since in nuclear fission, the nucleus emits more neutrons than the one it absorbs, a chain reaction is possible.[5]: 291, 296 

The most common fission process is binary fission, and it produces the fission products noted above, at 95±15 and 135±15 u. However, the binary process happens merely because it is the most probable. In anywhere from 2 to 4 fissions per 1000 in a nuclear reactor, a process called ternary fission produces three positively charged fragments (plus neutrons) and the smallest of these may range from so small a charge and mass as a proton (Z = 1), to as large a fragment as argon (Z = 18). The most common small fragments, however, are composed of 90% helium-4 nuclei with more energy than alpha particles from alpha decay (so-called "long range alphas" at ~ 16 MeV), plus helium-6 nuclei, and tritons (the nuclei of tritium). The ternary process is less common, but still ends up producing significant helium-4 and tritium gas buildup in the fuel rods of modern nuclear reactors.[6]

Bohr and Wheeler used their liquid drop model, the packing fraction curve of Arthur Jeffrey Dempster, and Eugene Feenberg's estimates of nucleus radius and surface tension, to estimate the mass differences of parent and daughters in fission. They then equated this mass difference to energy using Einstein's mass-energy equivalence formula. The stimulation of the nucleus after neutron bombardment was analogous to the vibrations of a liquid drop, with surface tension and the Coulomb force in opposition. Plotting the sum of these two energies as a function of elongated shape, they determined the resultant energy surface had a saddle shape. The saddle provided an energy barrier called the critical energy barrier. Energy of about 6 MeV provided by the incident neutron was necessary to overcome this barrier and cause the nucleus to fission.[4]: 10–11 [7][8] According to John Lilley, "The energy required to overcome the barrier to fission is called the activation energy or fission barrier and is about 6 MeV for A~240. It is found that the activation energy decreases as A increases. Eventually, a point is reached where activation energy disappears altogether...it would undergo very rapid spontaneous fission."[9]

Maria Goeppert Mayer later proposed the nuclear shell model for the nucleus. The chemical element isotopes that can sustain a fission chain reaction are called nuclear fuels, and are said to be 'fissile'. The most common nuclear fuels are 235U (the isotope of uranium with mass number 235 and of use in nuclear reactors) and 239Pu (the isotope of plutonium with mass number 239). These fuels break apart into a bimodal range of chemical elements with atomic masses centering near 95 and 135 u (fission products). Most nuclear fuels undergo spontaneous fission only very slowly, decaying instead mainly via an alpha-beta decay chain over periods of millennia to eons. In a nuclear reactor or nuclear weapon, the overwhelming majority of fission events are induced by bombardment with another particle, a neutron, which is itself produced by prior fission events.

Fissionable isotopes such as uranium-238 require additional energy provided by fast neutrons (such as those produced by nuclear fusion in thermonuclear weapons). While some of the neutrons released from the fission of 238
U
are fast enough to induce another fission in 238
U
, most are not, meaning it can never achieve criticality. While there is a very small (albeit nonzero) chance of a thermal neutron inducing fission in 238
U
, neutron absorption is orders of magnitude more likely.

Energetics edit

Input edit

 
The stages of binary fission in a liquid drop model. Energy input deforms the nucleus into a fat "cigar" shape, then a "peanut" shape, followed by binary fission as the two lobes exceed the short-range nuclear force attraction distance, then are pushed apart and away by their electrical charge. In the liquid drop model, the two fission fragments are predicted to be the same size. The nuclear shell model allows for them to differ in size, as usually experimentally observed.

Fission cross sections are a measurable property related to the probability that fission will occur in a nuclear reaction. Cross sections are a function of incident neutron energy, and those for U-235 and Pu-239 are a million times higher than U-238 at lower neutron energy levels. Absorption of any neutron makes available to the nucleus binding energy of about 5.3 MeV. U238 needs a fast neutron to supply the additional 1 MeV needed to cross the critical energy barrier for fission. In the case of U235 however, that extra energy is provided when U235 adjusts from an odd to an even mass. In the words of Younes and Lovelace, "...the neutron absorption on a 235
U
target forms a 236
U
nucleus with excitation energy greater than the critical fission energy, whereas in the case of n + 238
U
, the resulting 239
U
nucleus has an excitation energy below the critical fission energy."[4]: 25–28 [5]: 282–287 [10][11]

About 6 MeV of the fission-input energy is supplied by the simple binding of an extra neutron to the heavy nucleus via the strong force; however, in many fissionable isotopes, this amount of energy is not enough for fission. Uranium-238, for example, has a near-zero fission cross section for neutrons of less than 1 MeV energy. If no additional energy is supplied by any other mechanism, the nucleus will not fission, but will merely absorb the neutron, as happens when 238U absorbs slow and even some fraction of fast neutrons, to become 239U. The remaining energy to initiate fission can be supplied by two other mechanisms: one of these is more kinetic energy of the incoming neutron, which is increasingly able to fission a fissionable heavy nucleus as it exceeds a kinetic energy of 1 MeV or more (so-called fast neutrons). Such high energy neutrons are able to fission 238U directly (see thermonuclear weapon for application, where the fast neutrons are supplied by nuclear fusion). However, this process cannot happen to a great extent in a nuclear reactor, as too small a fraction of the fission neutrons produced by any type of fission have enough energy to efficiently fission 238U (fission neutrons have a mode energy of 2 MeV, but a median of only 0.75 MeV, meaning half of them have less than this insufficient energy).[12]

Among the heavy actinide elements, however, those isotopes that have an odd number of neutrons (such as 235U with 143 neutrons) bind an extra neutron with an additional 1 to 2 MeV of energy over an isotope of the same element with an even number of neutrons (such as 238U with 146 neutrons). This extra binding energy is made available as a result of the mechanism of neutron pairing effects. This extra energy results from the Pauli exclusion principle allowing an extra neutron to occupy the same nuclear orbital as the last neutron in the nucleus, so that the two form a pair. In such isotopes, therefore, no neutron kinetic energy is needed, for all the necessary energy is supplied by absorption of any neutron, either of the slow or fast variety (the former are used in moderated nuclear reactors, and the latter are used in fast-neutron reactors, and in weapons).

According to Younes and Loveland, "Actinides like 235
U
that fission easily following the absorption of a thermal (0.25 meV) neutron are called fissile, whereas those like 238
U
that do not easily fission when they absorb a thermal neutron are called fissionable.".[4]: 25 

Output edit

After an incidient particle has fused with a parent nucleus, if the excitation energy is sufficient, the nucleus breaks into fragments. This is called scission, and occurs at about 10−20 seconds. The fragments can emit prompt neutrons at between 10−18 and 10−15 seconds. At about 10−11 seconds, the fragments can emit gamma rays. At 10−3 seconds β decay, β-delayed neutrons, and gamma rays are emitted from the decay products.[4]: 23–24 

Typical fission events release about two hundred million eV (200 MeV) of energy, the equivalent of roughly >2 trillion kelvin, for each fission event. The exact isotope which is fissioned, and whether or not it is fissionable or fissile, has only a small impact on the amount of energy released. This can be easily seen by examining the curve of binding energy (image below), and noting that the average binding energy of the actinide nuclides beginning with uranium is around 7.6 MeV per nucleon. Looking further left on the curve of binding energy, where the fission products cluster, it is easily observed that the binding energy of the fission products tends to center around 8.5 MeV per nucleon. Thus, in any fission event of an isotope in the actinide mass range, roughly 0.9 MeV are released per nucleon of the starting element. The fission of 235U by a slow neutron yields nearly identical energy to the fission of 238U by a fast neutron. This energy release profile holds true for thorium and the various minor actinides as well.[13]

 
Animation of a Coulomb explosion in the case of a cluster of positively charged nuclei, akin to a cluster of fission fragments. Hue level of color is proportional to (larger) nuclei charge. Electrons (smaller) on this time-scale are seen only stroboscopically and the hue level is their kinetic energy

When a uranium nucleus fissions into two daughter nuclei fragments, about 0.1 percent of the mass of the uranium nucleus[14] appears as the fission energy of ~200 MeV. For uranium-235 (total mean fission energy 202.79 MeV[15]), typically ~169 MeV appears as the kinetic energy of the daughter nuclei, which fly apart at about 3% of the speed of light, due to Coulomb repulsion. Also, an average of 2.5 neutrons are emitted, with a mean kinetic energy per neutron of ~2 MeV (total of 4.8 MeV).[16] The fission reaction also releases ~7 MeV in prompt gamma ray photons. The latter figure means that a nuclear fission explosion or criticality accident emits about 3.5% of its energy as gamma rays, less than 2.5% of its energy as fast neutrons (total of both types of radiation ~6%), and the rest as kinetic energy of fission fragments (this appears almost immediately when the fragments impact surrounding matter, as simple heat).[17][18]

Some processes involving neutrons are notable for absorbing or finally yielding energy — for example neutron kinetic energy does not yield heat immediately if the neutron is captured by a uranium-238 atom to breed plutonium-239, but this energy is emitted if the plutonium-239 is later fissioned. On the other hand, so-called delayed neutrons emitted as radioactive decay products with half-lives up to several minutes, from fission-daughters, are very important to reactor control, because they give a characteristic "reaction" time for the total nuclear reaction to double in size, if the reaction is run in a "delayed-critical" zone which deliberately relies on these neutrons for a supercritical chain-reaction (one in which each fission cycle yields more neutrons than it absorbs). Without their existence, the nuclear chain-reaction would be prompt critical and increase in size faster than it could be controlled by human intervention. In this case, the first experimental atomic reactors would have run away to a dangerous and messy "prompt critical reaction" before their operators could have manually shut them down (for this reason, designer Enrico Fermi included radiation-counter-triggered control rods, suspended by electromagnets, which could automatically drop into the center of Chicago Pile-1). If these delayed neutrons are captured without producing fissions, they produce heat as well.[19]

Binding energy edit

 
The "curve of binding energy": A graph of binding energy per nucleon of common isotopes.

The binding energy of the nucleus is the difference between the rest-mass energy of the nucleus and the rest-mass energy of the neutron and proton nucleons. The binding energy formula includes volume, surface and Coulomb energy terms that include empirically derived coefficients for all three, plus energy ratios of a deformed nucleus relative to a spherical form for the surface and Coulomb terms. Additional terms can be included such as symmetry, pairing, the finite range of the nuclear force, and charge distribution within the nuclei to improve the estimate.[4]: 46–50  Normally binding energy is referred and plotted as average binding energy per nucleon.[9]

According to Lilley, "The binding energy of a nucleus B is the energy required to separate it into its constituent neutrons and protons."[9]

 
where A is mass number, Z is atomic number, mH is the atomic mass of a hydrogen atom, mn is the mass of a neutron, and c is the speed of light. Thus, the mass of an atom is less than the mass of its constituent protons and neutrons, and assuming the average binding energy of its electrons is negligible. The binding energy B is expressed in energy units, using Einstein's mass-energy equivalence relationship. The binding energy also provide s an estimate of the total energy released from fission.[9]

The curve of binding energy is characterized by a broad maximum near mass number 60 at 8.6 MeV, then gradually decreases to 7.6 MeV at the highest mass numbers. Mass numbers higher than 238 are rare. At the lighter end of the scale, peaks are noted for helium-4, and the multiples such as beryllium-8, Carbon-12, oxygen-16, neon-20 and magnesium-24. Binding energy due to the nuclear force approaches a constant value for large A, while the Coulomb acts over a larger distance so that electrical potential energy per proton grows as Z increases. Fission energy is released when a A larger than 120 nucleus fragments. Fusion energy is released when lighter nuclei combine.[9]

Carl Friedrich von Weizsäcker's semi-empirical mass formula may be used to express the binding energy as the sum of five terms that includes volume energy, a surface correction, Coulomb energy, a symmetry term, and a pairing term:[9]

 
where the nuclear binding energy is proportional to the nuclear volume, while nucleons near the surface interact with fewer nucleons reduces the effect of the volume term. According to Lilley, "For all naturally occurring nuclei, the surface-energy term dominates and the nucleus exists in a state of equilibrium." The negative contribution of Coulomb energy arises from the repulsive electric force of the protons. The symmetry term arises from the fact that effective forces in the nucleus is stronger for unlike neutron-proton pairs, rather than like neutron-neutron or proton-proton pairs. The pairing term arises from the fact that like nucleons form spin-zero pairs in the same spatial state. The pairing is positive if N and Z are both even, adding to the binding energy.[9]

In fission there is a preference to yield fragments with even proton numbers, which is called the odd-even effect on the fragments' charge distribution. However, no odd-even effect is observed on fragment mass number distribution. This result is attributed to nucleon pair breaking.

In nuclear fission events the nuclei may break into any combination of lighter nuclei, but the most common event is not fission to equal mass nuclei of about mass 120; the most common event (depending on isotope and process) is a slightly unequal fission in which one daughter nucleus has a mass of about 90 to 100 u and the other the remaining 130 to 140 u.[20]

Stable nuclei, and unstable nuclei with very long Half-lifes, follow a trend of stability evident when Z is plotted against N. For lighters nuclei less than N pf 20, the line has the slope n=Z, while the heavier nuclei require additional neutrons to remain stable. Nuclei that are neutron or proton rich have excessive binding energy for stability, and the excess energy may convert a neutron to a proton or a neutron to a proton via the weak nuclear force.[9]

Neutron-induced fission of U-235 emits total energy of 207 MeV, of which about 200 MeV is recoverable, Prompt fission fragments amount to 168 MeV, which are easily stopped with a fraction of a millimeter. Prompt neutrons total 5 MeV, and this energy is recovered as heat via scattering in the reactor. However, many fission fragments are neutron rich and decay via β- emissions. According to Lilley, "The radioactive decay energy from the fission chains is the second release of energy due to fission. It is much less than the prompt energy, but it is a significant amount and is why reactors must continue to be cooled after they have been shut down and why the waste products must be handled with great care and stored safely."[9]

Chain reactions edit

 
A schematic nuclear fission chain reaction. 1. A uranium-235 atom absorbs a neutron and fissions into two new atoms (fission fragments), releasing three new neutrons and some binding energy. 2. One of those neutrons is absorbed by an atom of uranium-238 and does not continue the reaction. Another neutron is simply lost and does not collide with anything, also not continuing the reaction. However, the one neutron does collide with an atom of uranium-235, which then fissions and releases two neutrons and some binding energy. 3. Both of those neutrons collide with uranium-235 atoms, each of which fissions and releases between one and three neutrons, which can then continue the reaction.

John Lilley states, "...neutron-induced fission generates extra neutrons which can induce further fissions in the next generation and so on in a chain reaction. The chain reaction is characterized by the neutron multiplication factor k, which is defined as the ratio of the number of neutrons in one generation to the number in the preceding generation. If, in a reactor, k is less than unity, the reactor is subcritical, the number of neutrons decreases and the chain reaction dies out. If k> 1, the reactor is supercritical and the chain reaction diverges. This is the situation in a fission bomb where growth is at an explosive rate. If k is exactly unity, the reactions proceed at a steady rate and the reactor is said to be critical. It is possible to achieve criticality in a reactor using natural uranium as fuel, provided that the neutrons have been efficiently moderated to thermal energies." Moderators include light water, heavy water, and graphite.[9]: 269, 274 

According to John C. Lee, "For all nuclear reactors in operation and those under development, the nuclear fuel cycle is based on one of three fissile materials, 235U, 233U, and 239Pu, and the associated isotopic chains. For the current generation of LWRs, the enriched U contains 2.5~4.5 wt% of 235U, which is fabricated into UO2 fuel rods and loaded into fuel assemblies."[21]

Lee states, "One important comparison for the three major fissile nuclides, 235U, 233U, and 239Pu, is their breeding potential. A breeder is by definition a reactor that produces more fissile material than it consumes and needs a minimum of two neutrons produced for each neutron absorbed in a fissile nucleus. Thus, in general, the conversion ratio (CR) is defined as the ratio of fissile material produced to that destroyed...when the CR is greater than 1.0, it is called the breeding ratio (BR)...233U offers a superior breeding potential for both thermal and fast reactors, while 239Pu offers a superior breeding potential for fast reactors."[21]

Fission reactors edit

 
The cooling towers of the Philippsburg Nuclear Power Plant, in Germany.

Critical fission reactors are the most common type of nuclear reactor. In a critical fission reactor, neutrons produced by fission of fuel atoms are used to induce yet more fissions, to sustain a controllable amount of energy release. Devices that produce engineered but non-self-sustaining fission reactions are subcritical fission reactors. Such devices use radioactive decay or particle accelerators to trigger fissions.

Critical fission reactors are built for three primary purposes, which typically involve different engineering trade-offs to take advantage of either the heat or the neutrons produced by the fission chain reaction:

While, in principle, all fission reactors can act in all three capacities, in practice the tasks lead to conflicting engineering goals and most reactors have been built with only one of the above tasks in mind. (There are several early counter-examples, such as the Hanford N reactor, now decommissioned).

As of 2019, the 448 nuclear power plants worldwide provided a capacity of 398 GWE, with about 85% being light-water cooled reactors such as pressurized water reactors or boiling water reactors. Energy from fission is transmitted through conduction or convection to the nuclear reactor coolant, then to a heat exchanger, and the resultant generated steam is used to drive a turbine or generator.[21]: 1–4 

For a more detailed description of the physics and operating principles of critical fission reactors, see nuclear reactor physics. For a description of their social, political, and environmental aspects, see nuclear power.

Fission bombs edit

 
The mushroom cloud of the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, Japan, on 9 August 1945 rose over 18 kilometres (11 mi) above the bomb's hypocenter. An estimated 39,000 people were killed by the atomic bomb,[22] of whom 23,145–28,113 were Japanese factory workers, 2,000 were Korean slave laborers, and 150 were Japanese combatants.[23][24][25]

The objective of an atomic bomb is to produce a device, according to Serber, "...in which energy is released by a fast neutron chain reaction in one or more of the materials known to show nuclear fission." According to Rhodes, "Untamped, a bomb core even as large as twice the critical mass would completely fission less than 1 percent of its nuclear material before it expanded enough to stop the chain reaction from proceeding. Tamper always increased efficiency: it reflected neutrons back into the core and its inertia...slowed the core's expansion and helped keep the core surface from blowing away." Rearrangement of the core material's subcritical components would need to proceed as fast as possible to ensure effective detonation. Additionally, a third basic component was necessary, "...an initiator - a Ra + Be source or, better, a Po + Be source, with the radium or polonium attached perhaps to one piece of the core and the beryllium to the other, to smash together and spray neutrons when the parts mated to start the chain reaction." However, any bomb would "necessitate locating, mining and processing hundreds of tons of uranium ore...", while U-235 separation or the production of Pu-239 would require additional industrial capacity.[5]: 460–463 

History edit

Discovery of nuclear fission edit

 
Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner in 1912

The discovery of nuclear fission occurred in 1938 in the buildings of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society for Chemistry, today part of the Free University of Berlin, following over four decades of work on the science of radioactivity and the elaboration of new nuclear physics that described the components of atoms. In 1911, Ernest Rutherford proposed a model of the atom in which a very small, dense and positively charged nucleus of protons was surrounded by orbiting, negatively charged electrons (the Rutherford model).[26] Niels Bohr improved upon this in 1913 by reconciling the quantum behavior of electrons (the Bohr model). In 1928, George Gamow proposed the Liquid drop model, which became essential to understanding the physics of fission.[5]: 49–51, 70–77, 228 [4]: 6–7 

In 1896, Henri Becquerel had found, and Marie Curie named, radioactivity. In 1900, Rutherford and Frederick Soddy, investigating the radioactive gas emanating from thorium, "conveyed the tremendous and inevitable conclusion that the element thorium was slowly and spontaneously transmuting itself into argon gas!"[5]: 41–43 

In 1919, following up on an earlier anomaly Ernest Marsden noted in 1915, Rutherford attempted to "break up the atom." Rutherford was able to accomplish the first artificial transmutation of nitrogen into oxygen, using alpha particles directed at nitrogen 14N + α → 17O + p.  Rutherford stated, "...we must conclude that the nitrogen atom is disintegrated," while the newspapers stated he had split the atom. This was the first observation of a nuclear reaction, that is, a reaction in which particles from one decay are used to transform another atomic nucleus. It also offered a new way to study the nucleus. Rutherford and James Chadwick then used alpha particles to "disintegrate" boron, fluorine, sodium, aluminum, and phosphorus before reaching a limitation associated with the energy of his alpha particle source.[5] Eventually, in 1932, a fully artificial nuclear reaction and nuclear transmutation was achieved by Rutherford's colleagues Ernest Walton and John Cockcroft, who used artificially accelerated protons against lithium-7, to split this nucleus into two alpha particles. The feat was popularly known as "splitting the atom", and would win them the 1951 Nobel Prize in Physics for "Transmutation of atomic nuclei by artificially accelerated atomic particles", although it was not the nuclear fission reaction later discovered in heavy elements.[27]

English physicist James Chadwick discovered the neutron in 1932.[28] Chadwick used an ionization chamber to observe protons knocked out of several elements by beryllium radiation, following up on earlier observations made by Joliot-Curies. In Chadwick's words, "...In order to explain the great penetrating power of the radiation we must further assume that the particle has no net charge..." The existence of the neutron was first postulated by Rutherford in 1920, and in the words of Chadwick, "...how on earth were you going to build up a big nucleus with a large positive charge? And the answer was a neutral particle."[5]: 153–165  Subsequently, he communicated his findings in more detail.[29]

In the words of Richard Rhodes, referring to the neutron, "It would therefore serve as a new nuclear probe of surpassing power of penetration." Philip Morrison stated, "A beam of thermal neutrons moving at about the speed of sound...produces nuclear reactions in many materials much more easily than a beam of protons...traveling thousands of times faster." According to Rhodes, "Slowing down a neutron gave it more time in the vicinity of the nucleus, and that gave it more time to be captured." Fermi's team, studying radiative capture which is the emission of gamma radiation after the nucleus captures a neutron, studied sixty elements, inducing radioactivity in forty. In the process, they discovered the ability of hydrogen to slow down the neutrons.[5]: 165, 216–220 

Enrico Fermi and his colleagues in Rome studied the results of bombarding uranium with neutrons in 1934.[30] Fermi concluded that his experiments had created new elements with 93 and 94 protons, which the group dubbed ausonium and hesperium. However, not all were convinced by Fermi's analysis of his results, though he would win the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics for his "demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation, and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons". The German chemist Ida Noddack notably suggested in 1934 that instead of creating a new, heavier element 93, that "it is conceivable that the nucleus breaks up into several large fragments."[31] However, the quoted objection comes some distance down, and was but one of several gaps she noted in Fermi's claim. Although Noddack was a renowned analytical chemist, she lacked the background in physics to appreciate the enormity of what she was proposing.[32]

 
The nuclear fission display at the Deutsches Museum in Munich. The table and instruments are originals,[33][34] but would not have been together in the same room.

After the Fermi publication, Otto Hahn, Lise Meitner, and Fritz Strassmann began performing similar experiments in Berlin. Meitner, an Austrian Jew, lost her Austrian citizenship with the Anschluss, the union of Austria with Germany in March 1938, but she fled in July 1938 to Sweden and started a correspondence by mail with Hahn in Berlin. By coincidence, her nephew Otto Robert Frisch, also a refugee, was also in Sweden when Meitner received a letter from Hahn dated 19 December describing his chemical proof that some of the product of the bombardment of uranium with neutrons was barium. Hahn suggested a bursting of the nucleus, but he was unsure of what the physical basis for the results were. Barium had an atomic mass 40% less than uranium, and no previously known methods of radioactive decay could account for such a large difference in the mass of the nucleus. Frisch was skeptical, but Meitner trusted Hahn's ability as a chemist. Marie Curie had been separating barium from radium for many years, and the techniques were well-known. Meitner and Frisch then correctly interpreted Hahn's results to mean that the nucleus of uranium had split roughly in half. Frisch suggested the process be named "nuclear fission", by analogy to the process of living cell division into two cells, which was then called binary fission. Just as the term nuclear "chain reaction" would later be borrowed from chemistry, so the term "fission" was borrowed from biology.[35]

News spread quickly of the new discovery, which was correctly seen as an entirely novel physical effect with great scientific—and potentially practical—possibilities. Meitner's and Frisch's interpretation of the discovery of Hahn and Strassmann crossed the Atlantic Ocean with Niels Bohr, who was to lecture at Princeton University. I.I. Rabi and Willis Lamb, two Columbia University physicists working at Princeton, heard the news and carried it back to Columbia. Rabi said he told Enrico Fermi; Fermi gave credit to Lamb. Bohr soon thereafter went from Princeton to Columbia to see Fermi. Not finding Fermi in his office, Bohr went down to the cyclotron area and found Herbert L. Anderson. Bohr grabbed him by the shoulder and said: "Young man, let me explain to you about something new and exciting in physics."[36]

It was clear to a number of scientists at Columbia that they should try to detect the energy released in the nuclear fission of uranium from neutron bombardment. On 25 January 1939, a Columbia University team conducted the first nuclear fission experiment in the United States,[37] which was done in the basement of Pupin Hall. The experiment involved placing uranium oxide inside of an ionization chamber and irradiating it with neutrons, and measuring the energy thus released. The results confirmed that fission was occurring and hinted strongly that it was the isotope uranium 235 in particular that was fissioning. The next day, the Fifth Washington Conference on Theoretical Physics began in Washington, D.C. under the joint auspices of the George Washington University and the Carnegie Institution of Washington. There, the news on nuclear fission was spread even further, which fostered many more experimental demonstrations.[38] The 6 January 1939 Hahn and Strassman paper announced the discover of fission. In their second publication on nuclear fission in February 1939, Hahn and Strassmann used the term Uranspaltung (uranium fission) for the first time, and predicted the existence and liberation of additional neutrons during the fission process, opening up the possibility of a nuclear chain reaction.[39] The 11 February 1939 paper by Meitner and Frisch compared the process to the division of a liquid drop and estimated the energy released at 200 MeV.[40] The 1 September 1939 paper by Bohr and Wheel used this liquid drop model to quantify fission details, including the energy released, estimated the cross section for neutron-induced fission, and deduced 235
U
was the major contributor to that cross section and slow-neutron fission.[41][5]: 262, 311 [4]: 9–13 

Fission chain reaction realized edit

During this period the Hungarian physicist Leó Szilárd realized that the neutron-driven fission of heavy atoms could be used to create a nuclear chain reaction. Such a reaction using neutrons was an idea he had first formulated in 1933, upon reading Rutherford's disparaging remarks about generating power from neutron collisions. However, Szilárd had not been able to achieve a neutron-driven chain reaction using beryllium. Szilard stated, "...if we could find an element which is split by neutrons and which would emit two neutrons when it absorbs one neutron, such an element, if assembled in sufficiently large mass, could sustain a nuclear chain reaction." On 25 January 1939, after learning of Hahn's discovery from Eugene Wigner, Szilard noted, "...if enough neutrons are emitted...then it should be, of course, possible to sustain a chain reaction. All of the things which H. G. Wells predicted appeared suddenly real to me." After the Hahn-Strassman paper was published, Szilard noted in a letter to Lewis Strauss, that during the fission of uranium, "the energy released in this new reaction must be very much higher than all previously known cases...," which might lead to "large-scale production of energy and radioactive elements, unfortunately also perhaps to atomic bombs."[42][5]: 26–28, 203–204, 213–214, 223–225, 267–268 

Szilard now urged Fermi (in New York) and Frédéric Joliot-Curie (in Paris) to refrain from publishing on the possibility of a chain reaction, lest the Nazi government become aware of the possibilities on the eve of what would later be known as World War II. With some hesitation Fermi agreed to self-censor. But Joliot-Curie did not, and in April 1939 his team in Paris, including Hans von Halban and Lew Kowarski, reported in the journal Nature that the number of neutrons emitted with nuclear fission of uranium was then reported at 3.5 per fission.[43] Szilard and Walter Zinn found "...the number of neutrons emitted by fission to be about two." Fermi and Anderson estimated "a yield of about two neutrons per each neutron captured."[5]: 290–291, 295–296 

 
Drawing of the first artificial reactor, Chicago Pile-1.

With the news of fission neutrons from uranium fission, Szilárd immediately understood the possibility of a nuclear chain reaction using uranium. In the summer, Fermi and Szilard proposed the idea of a nuclear reactor (pile) to mediate this process. The pile would use natural uranium as fuel. Fermi had shown much earlier that neutrons were far more effectively captured by atoms if they were of low energy (so-called "slow" or "thermal" neutrons), because for quantum reasons it made the atoms look like much larger targets to the neutrons. Thus to slow down the secondary neutrons released by the fissioning uranium nuclei, Fermi and Szilard proposed a graphite "moderator", against which the fast, high-energy secondary neutrons would collide, effectively slowing them down. With enough uranium, and with sufficiently pure graphite, their "pile" could theoretically sustain a slow-neutron chain reaction. This would result in the production of heat, as well as the creation of radioactive fission products.[5]: 291, 298–302 

In August 1939, Szilard, Teller and Wigner thought that the Germans might make use of the fission chain reaction and were spurred to attempt to attract the attention of the United States government to the issue. Towards this, they persuaded Albert Einstein to lend his name to a letter directed to President Franklin Roosevelt. On 11 October, the Einstein–Szilárd letter was delivered via Alexander Sachs. Roosevelt quickly understood the implications, stating, "Alex, what you are after is to see that the Nazis don't blow us up." Roosevelt ordered the formation of the Advisory Committee on Uranium.[5]: 303–309, 312–317 

In February 1940, encouraged by Fermi and John R. Dunning, Alfred O. C. Nier was able to separate U-235 and U-238 from uranium tetrachloride in a glass mass spectrometer. Subsequently, Dunning, bombarding the U-235 sample with neutrons generated by the Columbia University cyclotron, confirmed "U-235 was responsible for the slow neutron fission of uranium."[5]: 297–298, 332 

At the University of Birmingham, Frisch teamed up with Peierls, who had been working on a critical mass formula. assuming isotope separation was possible, they considered 235U, which had a cross section not yet determined, but which was assumed to be much larger than that of natural uranium. They calculated only a pound or two in a volume less than a golf ball, would result in a chain reaction faster than vaporization, and the resultant explosion would generate temperature greater than the interior of the sun, and pressures greater than the center of the earth. Additionally, the costs of isotope separation "would be insignificant compared to the cost of the war." By March 1940, encouraged by Mark Oliphant, they wrote the Frisch–Peierls memorandum in two parts, "On the construction of a 'super-bomb; based on a nuclear chain reaction in uranium," and "Memorandum on the on the properties of a radioactive 'super-bomb.' ". On 10 April 1940, the first meeting of the MAUD Committee was held.[5]: 321–325, 330–331, 340–341 

In December 1940, Franz Simon at Oxford, wrote his Estimate of the size of an actual separation plant." In it, Simon proposed gaseous diffusion as the best method for uranium isotope separation.[5]: 339, 343 

On 28 March 1941, Emilio Segré and Glen Seaborg reported on the "strong indications that 94239 undergoes fission with slow neutrons." This meant chemical separation was an alternative to uranium isotope separation. Instead, a nuclear reactor fueled with ordinary uranium could produce a plutonium isotope as a nuclear explosive substitute for 235U. In May, they demonstrated the cross section of plutonium was 1.7 times that of U235. When plutonium's cross section for fast fission was measured to be ten times that of U238, plutonium became a viable option for a bomb.[5]: 346–355, 366–368 

In October 1941, MAUD released its final report to the U.S. Government. The report stated, "We have now reached the conclusion that it will be possible to make an effective uranium bomb...The material for the first bomb could be ready by the end of 1943..."[5]: 368–369 

In November 1941, John Dunning and Eugene T. Booth were able to demonstrate the enrichment of uranium through gaseous barrier diffusion. On 27 November, Bush delivered to third National Academy of Sciences report to Roosevelt. The report, amongst other things, called for parallel development of all isotope-separation systems. On 6 December, Bush and Conant reorganized the Uranium Committee's tasks, with Harold Urey developing gaseous diffusion, Lawrence developing electromagnetic separation, Eger V. Murphree developing centrifuges, and Arthur Compton responsible for theoretical studies and design.[5]: 381, 387–388 

On 23 April 1942, Met Lab scientists discussed seven possible ways to extract plutonium from irradiated uranium, and decided to pursue investigation of all seven. On 17 June, the first batch of uranium nitrate hexahydrate (UNH) was undergoing neutron bombardment in the Washington University in St. Louis cyclotron. On 27 July, the irradiated UNH was ready for Glenn T. Seaborg's team. On 20 August, using ultramicrochemistry techniques, they successfully extracted plutonium.[5]: 408–415 

In April 1939, creating a chain reaction in natural uranium became the goal of Fermi and Szilard, as opposed to isotope separation. Their first efforts involved five hundred pounds of uranium oxide from the Eldorado Radium Corporation. Packed into fifty-two cans two inches in diameter and two feet long in a tank of manganese solution, they were able to confirm more neutrons were emitted than absorbed. However, the hydrogen within the water absorbed the slow neutrons necessary for fission. Carbon in the form of graphite, was then considered, because of its smaller capture cross section. In April 1940, Fermi was able to confirm carbon's potential for a slow-neutron chain reaction, after receiving National Carbon Company's graphite bricks at their Pupin Laboratories. In August and September, the Columbia team enlarged upon the cross section measurements by making a series of exponential "piles". The first piles consisted of a uranium-graphite lattice, consisting of 288 cans, each containing 60 pounds of uranium oxide, surrounded by graphite bricks. Fermi's goal was to determine critical mass necessary to sustain neutron generation. Fermi defined the reproduction factor k for assessing the chain reaction, with a value of 1.0 denoting a sustained chain reaction. In September 1941, Fermi's team was only able to achieve a k value of 0.87. In April 1942, before the project was centralized in Chicago, they had achieved 0.918 by removing moisture from the oxide. In May 1942, Fermi planned a full-scale chain reacting pile, Chicago Pile-1, after one of the exponential piles at Stagg Field reached a k of 0.995. Between 15 September and 15 November, Herbert L. Anderson and Walter Zinn built sixteen exponential piles. Acquisition of purer forms of graphite, without traces of boron and its large cross section, became paramount. Also important was the acquisition of highly purified forms of oxide from Mallinckrodt Chemical Works. Finally, acquiring pure uranium metal from the Ames process, meant the replacement of oxide pseudospheres with Frank Spedding's "eggs". Starting on 16 November 1942, Fermi had Anderson and Zinn working in two twelve-hours shifts, constructing a pile that eventually reached 57 layers by 1 Dec. The final pile consisted of 771,000 pounds of graphite, 80,590 pounds of uranium oxide, and 12,400 pounds of uranium metal, with ten cadmium control rods. Neutron intensity was measured with a boron trifluoride counter, with the control rods removed, after the end of each shift. On 2 Dec. 1942, with k approaching 1.0, Fermi had all but one of the control rod removed, and gradually removed the last one. The neutron counter clicks increased, as did the pen recorder, when Fermi announced "The pile has gone critical." They had achieved a k of 1.0006, which meant neutron intensity doubled every two minutes, in addition to breeding plutonium.[5]: 298–301, 333–334, 394–397, 400–401, 428–442 

Manhattan Project and beyond edit

In the United States, an all-out effort for making atomic weapons was begun in late 1942. This work was taken over by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in 1943, and known as the Manhattan Engineer District. The top-secret Manhattan Project, as it was colloquially known, was led by General Leslie R. Groves. Among the project's dozens of sites were: Hanford Site in Washington, which had the first industrial-scale nuclear reactors and produced plutonium; Oak Ridge, Tennessee, which was primarily concerned with uranium enrichment; and Los Alamos, in New Mexico, which was the scientific hub for research on bomb development and design. Other sites, notably the Berkeley Radiation Laboratory and the Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago, played important contributing roles. Overall scientific direction of the project was managed by the physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer.

In July 1945, the first atomic explosive device, dubbed "The Gadget", was detonated in the New Mexico desert in the Trinity test. It was fueled by plutonium created at Hanford. In August 1945, two more atomic devices – "Little Boy", a uranium-235 bomb, and "Fat Man", a plutonium bomb – were used against the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Natural fission chain-reactors on Earth edit

Criticality in nature is uncommon. At three ore deposits at Oklo in Gabon, sixteen sites (the so-called Oklo Fossil Reactors) have been discovered at which self-sustaining nuclear fission took place approximately 2 billion years ago. Unknown until 1972 (but postulated by Paul Kuroda in 1956[44]), when French physicist Francis Perrin discovered the Oklo Fossil Reactors, it was realized that nature had beaten humans to the punch. Large-scale natural uranium fission chain reactions, moderated by normal water, had occurred far in the past and would not be possible now. This ancient process was able to use normal water as a moderator only because 2 billion years before the present, natural uranium was richer in the shorter-lived fissile isotope 235U (about 3%), than natural uranium available today (which is only 0.7%, and must be enriched to 3% to be usable in light-water reactors).

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • (PDF). U.S. Department of Energy. January 1993. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2014-03-19. Retrieved 2012-01-03.
  • (PDF). U.S. Department of Energy. January 1993. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2012-01-03.
  • Bulgac, Aurel; Jin, Shi; Stetcu, Ionel (2020). "Nuclear Fission Dynamics: Past, Present, Needs, and Future". Frontiers in Physics. 8: 63. arXiv:1912.00287. Bibcode:2020FrP.....8...63B. doi:10.3389/fphy.2020.00063.

External links edit

  • The Effects of Nuclear Weapons
  • The Discovery of Nuclear Fission 2010-02-16 at the Wayback Machine Historical account complete with audio and teacher's guides from the American Institute of Physics History Center
  • atomicarchive.com Nuclear Fission Explained
  • Nuclear Files.org What is Nuclear Fission?
  • Nuclear Fission Animation

nuclear, fission, split, atom, redirects, here, album, noisia, split, atom, confused, with, nuclear, fusion, reaction, which, nucleus, atom, splits, into, more, smaller, nuclei, fission, process, often, produces, gamma, photons, releases, very, large, amount, . Split the atom redirects here For the album by Noisia see Split the Atom Not to be confused with Nuclear fusion Nuclear fission is a reaction in which the nucleus of an atom splits into two or more smaller nuclei The fission process often produces gamma photons and releases a very large amount of energy even by the energetic standards of radioactive decay Induced fission reaction A neutron is absorbed by a uranium 235 nucleus turning it briefly into an excited uranium 236 nucleus with the excitation energy provided by the kinetic energy of the neutron plus the forces that bind the neutron The uranium 236 in turn splits into fast moving lighter elements fission products and releases several free neutrons one or more prompt gamma rays not shown and a proportionally large amount of kinetic energy Nuclear fission was discovered on 19 December 1938 in Berlin by German chemists Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann Physicists Lise Meitner and her nephew Otto Robert Frisch explained it theoretically in January 1939 Frisch named the process fission by analogy with biological fission of living cells In their second publication on nuclear fission in February 1939 Hahn and Strassmann predicted the existence and liberation of additional neutrons during the fission process opening up the possibility of a nuclear chain reaction For heavy nuclides it is an exothermic reaction which can release large amounts of energy both as electromagnetic radiation and as kinetic energy of the fragments heating the bulk material where fission takes place Like nuclear fusion for fission to produce energy the total binding energy of the resulting elements must be greater than that of the starting element Fission is a form of nuclear transmutation because the resulting fragments or daughter atoms are not the same element as the original parent atom The two or more nuclei produced are most often of comparable but slightly different sizes typically with a mass ratio of products of about 3 to 2 for common fissile isotopes 1 2 Most fissions are binary fissions producing two charged fragments but occasionally 2 to 4 times per 1000 events three positively charged fragments are produced in a ternary fission The smallest of these fragments in ternary processes ranges in size from a proton to an argon nucleus Apart from fission induced by a neutron harnessed and exploited by humans a natural form of spontaneous radioactive decay not requiring a neutron is also referred to as fission and occurs especially in very high mass number isotopes Spontaneous fission was discovered in 1940 by Flyorov Petrzhak and Kurchatov 3 in Moscow in an experiment intended to confirm that without bombardment by neutrons the fission rate of uranium was negligible as predicted by Niels Bohr it was not negligible 3 The unpredictable composition of the products which vary in a broad probabilistic and somewhat chaotic manner distinguishes fission from purely quantum tunneling processes such as proton emission alpha decay and cluster decay which give the same products each time Nuclear fission produces energy for nuclear power and drives the explosion of nuclear weapons Both uses are possible because certain substances called nuclear fuels undergo fission when struck by fission neutrons and in turn emit neutrons when they break apart This makes a self sustaining nuclear chain reaction possible releasing energy at a controlled rate in a nuclear reactor or at a very rapid uncontrolled rate in a nuclear weapon The amount of free energy released in the fission of an equivalent amount of 235 U is a million times more than that released in the combustion of methane or from hydrogen fuel cells 4 The products of nuclear fission however are on average far more radioactive than the heavy elements which are normally fissioned as fuel and remain so for significant amounts of time giving rise to a nuclear waste problem However the seven long lived fission products make up only a small fraction of fission products Neutron absorption which does not lead to fission produces Plutonium from 238 U and minor actinides from both 235 U and 238 U whose radiotoxicity is far higher than that of the long lived fission products Concerns over nuclear waste accumulation and the destructive potential of nuclear weapons are a counterbalance to the peaceful desire to use fission as an energy source The thorium fuel cycle produces virtually no plutonium and much less minor actinides but 232 U or rather its decay products are a major gamma ray emitter All actinides are fertile or fissile and fast breeder reactors can fission them all albeit only in certain configurations Nuclear reprocessing aims to recover usable material from spent nuclear fuel to both enable uranium and thorium supplies to last longer and to reduce the amount of waste The industry term for a process that fissions all or nearly all actinides is a closed fuel cycle Contents 1 Physical overview 1 1 Mechanism 1 1 1 Radioactive decay 1 1 2 Nuclear reaction 1 2 Energetics 1 2 1 Input 1 2 2 Output 1 3 Binding energy 1 4 Chain reactions 1 5 Fission reactors 1 6 Fission bombs 2 History 2 1 Discovery of nuclear fission 2 2 Fission chain reaction realized 2 3 Manhattan Project and beyond 2 4 Natural fission chain reactors on Earth 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksPhysical overview editMechanism edit Younes and Loveland define fission as a collective motion of the protons and neutrons that make up the nucleus and as such it is distinguishable from other phenomena that break up the nucleus Nuclear fission is an extreme example of large amplitude collective motion that results in the division of a parent nucleus into two or more fragment nuclei The fission process can occur spontaneously or it can be induced by an incident particle Most of the energy from fission about 85 percent is found in fragment kinetic energy while about 6 percent each comes from initial neutrons and gamma rays then Beta decay neutrons and gamma rays plus about 3 percent from b decay neutrinos 4 21 22 30 nbsp A visual representation of an induced nuclear fission event where a slow moving neutron is absorbed by the nucleus of a uranium 235 atom which fissions into two fast moving lighter elements fission products and additional neutrons Most of the energy released is in the form of the kinetic velocities of the fission products and the neutrons nbsp Fission product yields by mass for thermal neutron fission of uranium 235 plutonium 239 a combination of the two typical of current nuclear power reactors and uranium 233 used in the thorium cycle Radioactive decay edit Nuclear fission can occur without neutron bombardment as a type of radioactive decay This type of fission is called spontaneous fission and was first observed in 1940 4 22 Nuclear reaction edit During induced fission a compound system is formed after an incident particle fuses with a target The resultant excitation energy may be sufficient to emit neutrons or gamma rays and nuclear scission Fission into two fragments binary fission is the most common nuclear reaction Occurring least frequently is ternary fission in which a third particle is emitted This third particle is commonly an a particle 4 21 24 Since in nuclear fission the nucleus emits more neutrons than the one it absorbs a chain reaction is possible 5 291 296 The most common fission process is binary fission and it produces the fission products noted above at 95 15 and 135 15 u However the binary process happens merely because it is the most probable In anywhere from 2 to 4 fissions per 1000 in a nuclear reactor a process called ternary fission produces three positively charged fragments plus neutrons and the smallest of these may range from so small a charge and mass as a proton Z 1 to as large a fragment as argon Z 18 The most common small fragments however are composed of 90 helium 4 nuclei with more energy than alpha particles from alpha decay so called long range alphas at 16 MeV plus helium 6 nuclei and tritons the nuclei of tritium The ternary process is less common but still ends up producing significant helium 4 and tritium gas buildup in the fuel rods of modern nuclear reactors 6 Bohr and Wheeler used their liquid drop model the packing fraction curve of Arthur Jeffrey Dempster and Eugene Feenberg s estimates of nucleus radius and surface tension to estimate the mass differences of parent and daughters in fission They then equated this mass difference to energy using Einstein s mass energy equivalence formula The stimulation of the nucleus after neutron bombardment was analogous to the vibrations of a liquid drop with surface tension and the Coulomb force in opposition Plotting the sum of these two energies as a function of elongated shape they determined the resultant energy surface had a saddle shape The saddle provided an energy barrier called the critical energy barrier Energy of about 6 MeV provided by the incident neutron was necessary to overcome this barrier and cause the nucleus to fission 4 10 11 7 8 According to John Lilley The energy required to overcome the barrier to fission is called the activation energy or fission barrier and is about 6 MeV for A 240 It is found that the activation energy decreases as A increases Eventually a point is reached where activation energy disappears altogether it would undergo very rapid spontaneous fission 9 Maria Goeppert Mayer later proposed the nuclear shell model for the nucleus The chemical element isotopes that can sustain a fission chain reaction are called nuclear fuels and are said to be fissile The most common nuclear fuels are 235U the isotope of uranium with mass number 235 and of use in nuclear reactors and 239Pu the isotope of plutonium with mass number 239 These fuels break apart into a bimodal range of chemical elements with atomic masses centering near 95 and 135 u fission products Most nuclear fuels undergo spontaneous fission only very slowly decaying instead mainly via an alpha beta decay chain over periods of millennia to eons In a nuclear reactor or nuclear weapon the overwhelming majority of fission events are induced by bombardment with another particle a neutron which is itself produced by prior fission events Fissionable isotopes such as uranium 238 require additional energy provided by fast neutrons such as those produced by nuclear fusion in thermonuclear weapons While some of the neutrons released from the fission of 238 U are fast enough to induce another fission in 238 U most are not meaning it can never achieve criticality While there is a very small albeit nonzero chance of a thermal neutron inducing fission in 238 U neutron absorption is orders of magnitude more likely Energetics edit Input edit nbsp The stages of binary fission in a liquid drop model Energy input deforms the nucleus into a fat cigar shape then a peanut shape followed by binary fission as the two lobes exceed the short range nuclear force attraction distance then are pushed apart and away by their electrical charge In the liquid drop model the two fission fragments are predicted to be the same size The nuclear shell model allows for them to differ in size as usually experimentally observed Fission cross sections are a measurable property related to the probability that fission will occur in a nuclear reaction Cross sections are a function of incident neutron energy and those for U 235 and Pu 239 are a million times higher than U 238 at lower neutron energy levels Absorption of any neutron makes available to the nucleus binding energy of about 5 3 MeV U238 needs a fast neutron to supply the additional 1 MeV needed to cross the critical energy barrier for fission In the case of U235 however that extra energy is provided when U235 adjusts from an odd to an even mass In the words of Younes and Lovelace the neutron absorption on a 235 U target forms a 236 U nucleus with excitation energy greater than the critical fission energy whereas in the case of n 238 U the resulting 239 U nucleus has an excitation energy below the critical fission energy 4 25 28 5 282 287 10 11 About 6 MeV of the fission input energy is supplied by the simple binding of an extra neutron to the heavy nucleus via the strong force however in many fissionable isotopes this amount of energy is not enough for fission Uranium 238 for example has a near zero fission cross section for neutrons of less than 1 MeV energy If no additional energy is supplied by any other mechanism the nucleus will not fission but will merely absorb the neutron as happens when 238U absorbs slow and even some fraction of fast neutrons to become 239U The remaining energy to initiate fission can be supplied by two other mechanisms one of these is more kinetic energy of the incoming neutron which is increasingly able to fission a fissionable heavy nucleus as it exceeds a kinetic energy of 1 MeV or more so called fast neutrons Such high energy neutrons are able to fission 238U directly see thermonuclear weapon for application where the fast neutrons are supplied by nuclear fusion However this process cannot happen to a great extent in a nuclear reactor as too small a fraction of the fission neutrons produced by any type of fission have enough energy to efficiently fission 238U fission neutrons have a mode energy of 2 MeV but a median of only 0 75 MeV meaning half of them have less than this insufficient energy 12 Among the heavy actinide elements however those isotopes that have an odd number of neutrons such as 235U with 143 neutrons bind an extra neutron with an additional 1 to 2 MeV of energy over an isotope of the same element with an even number of neutrons such as 238U with 146 neutrons This extra binding energy is made available as a result of the mechanism of neutron pairing effects This extra energy results from the Pauli exclusion principle allowing an extra neutron to occupy the same nuclear orbital as the last neutron in the nucleus so that the two form a pair In such isotopes therefore no neutron kinetic energy is needed for all the necessary energy is supplied by absorption of any neutron either of the slow or fast variety the former are used in moderated nuclear reactors and the latter are used in fast neutron reactors and in weapons According to Younes and Loveland Actinides like 235 U that fission easily following the absorption of a thermal 0 25 meV neutron are called fissile whereas those like 238 U that do not easily fission when they absorb a thermal neutron are called fissionable 4 25 Output edit After an incidient particle has fused with a parent nucleus if the excitation energy is sufficient the nucleus breaks into fragments This is called scission and occurs at about 10 20 seconds The fragments can emit prompt neutrons at between 10 18 and 10 15 seconds At about 10 11 seconds the fragments can emit gamma rays At 10 3 seconds b decay b delayed neutrons and gamma rays are emitted from the decay products 4 23 24 Typical fission events release about two hundred million eV 200 MeV of energy the equivalent of roughly gt 2 trillion kelvin for each fission event The exact isotope which is fissioned and whether or not it is fissionable or fissile has only a small impact on the amount of energy released This can be easily seen by examining the curve of binding energy image below and noting that the average binding energy of the actinide nuclides beginning with uranium is around 7 6 MeV per nucleon Looking further left on the curve of binding energy where the fission products cluster it is easily observed that the binding energy of the fission products tends to center around 8 5 MeV per nucleon Thus in any fission event of an isotope in the actinide mass range roughly 0 9 MeV are released per nucleon of the starting element The fission of 235U by a slow neutron yields nearly identical energy to the fission of 238U by a fast neutron This energy release profile holds true for thorium and the various minor actinides as well 13 nbsp Animation of a Coulomb explosion in the case of a cluster of positively charged nuclei akin to a cluster of fission fragments Hue level of color is proportional to larger nuclei charge Electrons smaller on this time scale are seen only stroboscopically and the hue level is their kinetic energyWhen a uranium nucleus fissions into two daughter nuclei fragments about 0 1 percent of the mass of the uranium nucleus 14 appears as the fission energy of 200 MeV For uranium 235 total mean fission energy 202 79 MeV 15 typically 169 MeV appears as the kinetic energy of the daughter nuclei which fly apart at about 3 of the speed of light due to Coulomb repulsion Also an average of 2 5 neutrons are emitted with a mean kinetic energy per neutron of 2 MeV total of 4 8 MeV 16 The fission reaction also releases 7 MeV in prompt gamma ray photons The latter figure means that a nuclear fission explosion or criticality accident emits about 3 5 of its energy as gamma rays less than 2 5 of its energy as fast neutrons total of both types of radiation 6 and the rest as kinetic energy of fission fragments this appears almost immediately when the fragments impact surrounding matter as simple heat 17 18 Some processes involving neutrons are notable for absorbing or finally yielding energy for example neutron kinetic energy does not yield heat immediately if the neutron is captured by a uranium 238 atom to breed plutonium 239 but this energy is emitted if the plutonium 239 is later fissioned On the other hand so called delayed neutrons emitted as radioactive decay products with half lives up to several minutes from fission daughters are very important to reactor control because they give a characteristic reaction time for the total nuclear reaction to double in size if the reaction is run in a delayed critical zone which deliberately relies on these neutrons for a supercritical chain reaction one in which each fission cycle yields more neutrons than it absorbs Without their existence the nuclear chain reaction would be prompt critical and increase in size faster than it could be controlled by human intervention In this case the first experimental atomic reactors would have run away to a dangerous and messy prompt critical reaction before their operators could have manually shut them down for this reason designer Enrico Fermi included radiation counter triggered control rods suspended by electromagnets which could automatically drop into the center of Chicago Pile 1 If these delayed neutrons are captured without producing fissions they produce heat as well 19 Binding energy edit Main articles fission product and fission product yield nbsp The curve of binding energy A graph of binding energy per nucleon of common isotopes The binding energy of the nucleus is the difference between the rest mass energy of the nucleus and the rest mass energy of the neutron and proton nucleons The binding energy formula includes volume surface and Coulomb energy terms that include empirically derived coefficients for all three plus energy ratios of a deformed nucleus relative to a spherical form for the surface and Coulomb terms Additional terms can be included such as symmetry pairing the finite range of the nuclear force and charge distribution within the nuclei to improve the estimate 4 46 50 Normally binding energy is referred and plotted as average binding energy per nucleon 9 According to Lilley The binding energy of a nucleus B is the energy required to separate it into its constituent neutrons and protons 9 m A Z Z m H N m n B c 2 displaystyle m mathbf A mathbf Z mathbf Z m H mathbf N m n mathbf B c 2 nbsp where A is mass number Z is atomic number mH is the atomic mass of a hydrogen atom mn is the mass of a neutron and c is the speed of light Thus the mass of an atom is less than the mass of its constituent protons and neutrons and assuming the average binding energy of its electrons is negligible The binding energy B is expressed in energy units using Einstein s mass energy equivalence relationship The binding energy also provide s an estimate of the total energy released from fission 9 The curve of binding energy is characterized by a broad maximum near mass number 60 at 8 6 MeV then gradually decreases to 7 6 MeV at the highest mass numbers Mass numbers higher than 238 are rare At the lighter end of the scale peaks are noted for helium 4 and the multiples such as beryllium 8 Carbon 12 oxygen 16 neon 20 and magnesium 24 Binding energy due to the nuclear force approaches a constant value for large A while the Coulomb acts over a larger distance so that electrical potential energy per proton grows as Z increases Fission energy is released when a A larger than 120 nucleus fragments Fusion energy is released when lighter nuclei combine 9 Carl Friedrich von Weizsacker s semi empirical mass formula may be used to express the binding energy as the sum of five terms that includes volume energy a surface correction Coulomb energy a symmetry term and a pairing term 9 B a v A a s A 2 3 a c Z 2 A 1 3 a a N Z 2 A D displaystyle B a v mathbf A a s mathbf A 2 3 a c frac mathbf Z 2 mathbf A 1 3 a a frac mathbf N mathbf Z 2 mathbf A pm Delta nbsp where the nuclear binding energy is proportional to the nuclear volume while nucleons near the surface interact with fewer nucleons reduces the effect of the volume term According to Lilley For all naturally occurring nuclei the surface energy term dominates and the nucleus exists in a state of equilibrium The negative contribution of Coulomb energy arises from the repulsive electric force of the protons The symmetry term arises from the fact that effective forces in the nucleus is stronger for unlike neutron proton pairs rather than like neutron neutron or proton proton pairs The pairing term arises from the fact that like nucleons form spin zero pairs in the same spatial state The pairing is positive if N and Z are both even adding to the binding energy 9 In fission there is a preference to yield fragments with even proton numbers which is called the odd even effect on the fragments charge distribution However no odd even effect is observed on fragment mass number distribution This result is attributed to nucleon pair breaking In nuclear fission events the nuclei may break into any combination of lighter nuclei but the most common event is not fission to equal mass nuclei of about mass 120 the most common event depending on isotope and process is a slightly unequal fission in which one daughter nucleus has a mass of about 90 to 100 u and the other the remaining 130 to 140 u 20 Stable nuclei and unstable nuclei with very long Half lifes follow a trend of stability evident when Z is plotted against N For lighters nuclei less than N pf 20 the line has the slope n Z while the heavier nuclei require additional neutrons to remain stable Nuclei that are neutron or proton rich have excessive binding energy for stability and the excess energy may convert a neutron to a proton or a neutron to a proton via the weak nuclear force 9 Neutron induced fission of U 235 emits total energy of 207 MeV of which about 200 MeV is recoverable Prompt fission fragments amount to 168 MeV which are easily stopped with a fraction of a millimeter Prompt neutrons total 5 MeV and this energy is recovered as heat via scattering in the reactor However many fission fragments are neutron rich and decay via b emissions According to Lilley The radioactive decay energy from the fission chains is the second release of energy due to fission It is much less than the prompt energy but it is a significant amount and is why reactors must continue to be cooled after they have been shut down and why the waste products must be handled with great care and stored safely 9 Chain reactions edit nbsp A schematic nuclear fission chain reaction 1 A uranium 235 atom absorbs a neutron and fissions into two new atoms fission fragments releasing three new neutrons and some binding energy 2 One of those neutrons is absorbed by an atom of uranium 238 and does not continue the reaction Another neutron is simply lost and does not collide with anything also not continuing the reaction However the one neutron does collide with an atom of uranium 235 which then fissions and releases two neutrons and some binding energy 3 Both of those neutrons collide with uranium 235 atoms each of which fissions and releases between one and three neutrons which can then continue the reaction Main article Nuclear chain reaction John Lilley states neutron induced fission generates extra neutrons which can induce further fissions in the next generation and so on in a chain reaction The chain reaction is characterized by the neutron multiplication factor k which is defined as the ratio of the number of neutrons in one generation to the number in the preceding generation If in a reactor k is less than unity the reactor is subcritical the number of neutrons decreases and the chain reaction dies out If k gt 1 the reactor is supercritical and the chain reaction diverges This is the situation in a fission bomb where growth is at an explosive rate If k is exactly unity the reactions proceed at a steady rate and the reactor is said to be critical It is possible to achieve criticality in a reactor using natural uranium as fuel provided that the neutrons have been efficiently moderated to thermal energies Moderators include light water heavy water and graphite 9 269 274 According to John C Lee For all nuclear reactors in operation and those under development the nuclear fuel cycle is based on one of three fissile materials 235U 233U and 239Pu and the associated isotopic chains For the current generation of LWRs the enriched U contains 2 5 4 5 wt of 235U which is fabricated into UO2 fuel rods and loaded into fuel assemblies 21 Lee states One important comparison for the three major fissile nuclides 235U 233U and 239Pu is their breeding potential A breeder is by definition a reactor that produces more fissile material than it consumes and needs a minimum of two neutrons produced for each neutron absorbed in a fissile nucleus Thus in general the conversion ratio CR is defined as the ratio of fissile material produced to that destroyed when the CR is greater than 1 0 it is called the breeding ratio BR 233U offers a superior breeding potential for both thermal and fast reactors while 239Pu offers a superior breeding potential for fast reactors 21 Fission reactors edit nbsp The cooling towers of the Philippsburg Nuclear Power Plant in Germany Critical fission reactors are the most common type of nuclear reactor In a critical fission reactor neutrons produced by fission of fuel atoms are used to induce yet more fissions to sustain a controllable amount of energy release Devices that produce engineered but non self sustaining fission reactions are subcritical fission reactors Such devices use radioactive decay or particle accelerators to trigger fissions Critical fission reactors are built for three primary purposes which typically involve different engineering trade offs to take advantage of either the heat or the neutrons produced by the fission chain reaction power reactors are intended to produce heat for nuclear power either as part of a generating station or a local power system such as a nuclear submarine research reactors are intended to produce neutrons and or activate radioactive sources for scientific medical engineering or other research purposes breeder reactors are intended to produce nuclear fuels in bulk from more abundant isotopes The better known fast breeder reactor makes 239Pu a nuclear fuel from the naturally very abundant 238U not a nuclear fuel Thermal breeder reactors previously tested using 232Th to breed the fissile isotope 233U thorium fuel cycle continue to be studied and developed While in principle all fission reactors can act in all three capacities in practice the tasks lead to conflicting engineering goals and most reactors have been built with only one of the above tasks in mind There are several early counter examples such as the Hanford N reactor now decommissioned As of 2019 the 448 nuclear power plants worldwide provided a capacity of 398 GWE with about 85 being light water cooled reactors such as pressurized water reactors or boiling water reactors Energy from fission is transmitted through conduction or convection to the nuclear reactor coolant then to a heat exchanger and the resultant generated steam is used to drive a turbine or generator 21 1 4 For a more detailed description of the physics and operating principles of critical fission reactors see nuclear reactor physics For a description of their social political and environmental aspects see nuclear power Fission bombs edit nbsp The mushroom cloud of the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki Japan on 9 August 1945 rose over 18 kilometres 11 mi above the bomb s hypocenter An estimated 39 000 people were killed by the atomic bomb 22 of whom 23 145 28 113 were Japanese factory workers 2 000 were Korean slave laborers and 150 were Japanese combatants 23 24 25 The objective of an atomic bomb is to produce a device according to Serber in which energy is released by a fast neutron chain reaction in one or more of the materials known to show nuclear fission According to Rhodes Untamped a bomb core even as large as twice the critical mass would completely fission less than 1 percent of its nuclear material before it expanded enough to stop the chain reaction from proceeding Tamper always increased efficiency it reflected neutrons back into the core and its inertia slowed the core s expansion and helped keep the core surface from blowing away Rearrangement of the core material s subcritical components would need to proceed as fast as possible to ensure effective detonation Additionally a third basic component was necessary an initiator a Ra Be source or better a Po Be source with the radium or polonium attached perhaps to one piece of the core and the beryllium to the other to smash together and spray neutrons when the parts mated to start the chain reaction However any bomb would necessitate locating mining and processing hundreds of tons of uranium ore while U 235 separation or the production of Pu 239 would require additional industrial capacity 5 460 463 History editDiscovery of nuclear fission edit Main article Discovery of nuclear fission nbsp Otto Hahn and Lise Meitner in 1912The discovery of nuclear fission occurred in 1938 in the buildings of the Kaiser Wilhelm Society for Chemistry today part of the Free University of Berlin following over four decades of work on the science of radioactivity and the elaboration of new nuclear physics that described the components of atoms In 1911 Ernest Rutherford proposed a model of the atom in which a very small dense and positively charged nucleus of protons was surrounded by orbiting negatively charged electrons the Rutherford model 26 Niels Bohr improved upon this in 1913 by reconciling the quantum behavior of electrons the Bohr model In 1928 George Gamow proposed the Liquid drop model which became essential to understanding the physics of fission 5 49 51 70 77 228 4 6 7 In 1896 Henri Becquerel had found and Marie Curie named radioactivity In 1900 Rutherford and Frederick Soddy investigating the radioactive gas emanating from thorium conveyed the tremendous and inevitable conclusion that the element thorium was slowly and spontaneously transmuting itself into argon gas 5 41 43 In 1919 following up on an earlier anomaly Ernest Marsden noted in 1915 Rutherford attempted to break up the atom Rutherford was able to accomplish the first artificial transmutation of nitrogen into oxygen using alpha particles directed at nitrogen 14N a 17O p Rutherford stated we must conclude that the nitrogen atom is disintegrated while the newspapers stated he had split the atom This was the first observation of a nuclear reaction that is a reaction in which particles from one decay are used to transform another atomic nucleus It also offered a new way to study the nucleus Rutherford and James Chadwick then used alpha particles to disintegrate boron fluorine sodium aluminum and phosphorus before reaching a limitation associated with the energy of his alpha particle source 5 Eventually in 1932 a fully artificial nuclear reaction and nuclear transmutation was achieved by Rutherford s colleagues Ernest Walton and John Cockcroft who used artificially accelerated protons against lithium 7 to split this nucleus into two alpha particles The feat was popularly known as splitting the atom and would win them the 1951 Nobel Prize in Physics for Transmutation of atomic nuclei by artificially accelerated atomic particles although it was not the nuclear fission reaction later discovered in heavy elements 27 English physicist James Chadwick discovered the neutron in 1932 28 Chadwick used an ionization chamber to observe protons knocked out of several elements by beryllium radiation following up on earlier observations made by Joliot Curies In Chadwick s words In order to explain the great penetrating power of the radiation we must further assume that the particle has no net charge The existence of the neutron was first postulated by Rutherford in 1920 and in the words of Chadwick how on earth were you going to build up a big nucleus with a large positive charge And the answer was a neutral particle 5 153 165 Subsequently he communicated his findings in more detail 29 In the words of Richard Rhodes referring to the neutron It would therefore serve as a new nuclear probe of surpassing power of penetration Philip Morrison stated A beam of thermal neutrons moving at about the speed of sound produces nuclear reactions in many materials much more easily than a beam of protons traveling thousands of times faster According to Rhodes Slowing down a neutron gave it more time in the vicinity of the nucleus and that gave it more time to be captured Fermi s team studying radiative capture which is the emission of gamma radiation after the nucleus captures a neutron studied sixty elements inducing radioactivity in forty In the process they discovered the ability of hydrogen to slow down the neutrons 5 165 216 220 Enrico Fermi and his colleagues in Rome studied the results of bombarding uranium with neutrons in 1934 30 Fermi concluded that his experiments had created new elements with 93 and 94 protons which the group dubbed ausonium and hesperium However not all were convinced by Fermi s analysis of his results though he would win the 1938 Nobel Prize in Physics for his demonstrations of the existence of new radioactive elements produced by neutron irradiation and for his related discovery of nuclear reactions brought about by slow neutrons The German chemist Ida Noddack notably suggested in 1934 that instead of creating a new heavier element 93 that it is conceivable that the nucleus breaks up into several large fragments 31 However the quoted objection comes some distance down and was but one of several gaps she noted in Fermi s claim Although Noddack was a renowned analytical chemist she lacked the background in physics to appreciate the enormity of what she was proposing 32 nbsp The nuclear fission display at the Deutsches Museum in Munich The table and instruments are originals 33 34 but would not have been together in the same room After the Fermi publication Otto Hahn Lise Meitner and Fritz Strassmann began performing similar experiments in Berlin Meitner an Austrian Jew lost her Austrian citizenship with the Anschluss the union of Austria with Germany in March 1938 but she fled in July 1938 to Sweden and started a correspondence by mail with Hahn in Berlin By coincidence her nephew Otto Robert Frisch also a refugee was also in Sweden when Meitner received a letter from Hahn dated 19 December describing his chemical proof that some of the product of the bombardment of uranium with neutrons was barium Hahn suggested a bursting of the nucleus but he was unsure of what the physical basis for the results were Barium had an atomic mass 40 less than uranium and no previously known methods of radioactive decay could account for such a large difference in the mass of the nucleus Frisch was skeptical but Meitner trusted Hahn s ability as a chemist Marie Curie had been separating barium from radium for many years and the techniques were well known Meitner and Frisch then correctly interpreted Hahn s results to mean that the nucleus of uranium had split roughly in half Frisch suggested the process be named nuclear fission by analogy to the process of living cell division into two cells which was then called binary fission Just as the term nuclear chain reaction would later be borrowed from chemistry so the term fission was borrowed from biology 35 News spread quickly of the new discovery which was correctly seen as an entirely novel physical effect with great scientific and potentially practical possibilities Meitner s and Frisch s interpretation of the discovery of Hahn and Strassmann crossed the Atlantic Ocean with Niels Bohr who was to lecture at Princeton University I I Rabi and Willis Lamb two Columbia University physicists working at Princeton heard the news and carried it back to Columbia Rabi said he told Enrico Fermi Fermi gave credit to Lamb Bohr soon thereafter went from Princeton to Columbia to see Fermi Not finding Fermi in his office Bohr went down to the cyclotron area and found Herbert L Anderson Bohr grabbed him by the shoulder and said Young man let me explain to you about something new and exciting in physics 36 It was clear to a number of scientists at Columbia that they should try to detect the energy released in the nuclear fission of uranium from neutron bombardment On 25 January 1939 a Columbia University team conducted the first nuclear fission experiment in the United States 37 which was done in the basement of Pupin Hall The experiment involved placing uranium oxide inside of an ionization chamber and irradiating it with neutrons and measuring the energy thus released The results confirmed that fission was occurring and hinted strongly that it was the isotope uranium 235 in particular that was fissioning The next day the Fifth Washington Conference on Theoretical Physics began in Washington D C under the joint auspices of the George Washington University and the Carnegie Institution of Washington There the news on nuclear fission was spread even further which fostered many more experimental demonstrations 38 The 6 January 1939 Hahn and Strassman paper announced the discover of fission In their second publication on nuclear fission in February 1939 Hahn and Strassmann used the term Uranspaltung uranium fission for the first time and predicted the existence and liberation of additional neutrons during the fission process opening up the possibility of a nuclear chain reaction 39 The 11 February 1939 paper by Meitner and Frisch compared the process to the division of a liquid drop and estimated the energy released at 200 MeV 40 The 1 September 1939 paper by Bohr and Wheel used this liquid drop model to quantify fission details including the energy released estimated the cross section for neutron induced fission and deduced 235 U was the major contributor to that cross section and slow neutron fission 41 5 262 311 4 9 13 Fission chain reaction realized edit During this period the Hungarian physicist Leo Szilard realized that the neutron driven fission of heavy atoms could be used to create a nuclear chain reaction Such a reaction using neutrons was an idea he had first formulated in 1933 upon reading Rutherford s disparaging remarks about generating power from neutron collisions However Szilard had not been able to achieve a neutron driven chain reaction using beryllium Szilard stated if we could find an element which is split by neutrons and which would emit two neutrons when it absorbs one neutron such an element if assembled in sufficiently large mass could sustain a nuclear chain reaction On 25 January 1939 after learning of Hahn s discovery from Eugene Wigner Szilard noted if enough neutrons are emitted then it should be of course possible to sustain a chain reaction All of the things which H G Wells predicted appeared suddenly real to me After the Hahn Strassman paper was published Szilard noted in a letter to Lewis Strauss that during the fission of uranium the energy released in this new reaction must be very much higher than all previously known cases which might lead to large scale production of energy and radioactive elements unfortunately also perhaps to atomic bombs 42 5 26 28 203 204 213 214 223 225 267 268 Szilard now urged Fermi in New York and Frederic Joliot Curie in Paris to refrain from publishing on the possibility of a chain reaction lest the Nazi government become aware of the possibilities on the eve of what would later be known as World War II With some hesitation Fermi agreed to self censor But Joliot Curie did not and in April 1939 his team in Paris including Hans von Halban and Lew Kowarski reported in the journal Nature that the number of neutrons emitted with nuclear fission of uranium was then reported at 3 5 per fission 43 Szilard and Walter Zinn found the number of neutrons emitted by fission to be about two Fermi and Anderson estimated a yield of about two neutrons per each neutron captured 5 290 291 295 296 nbsp Drawing of the first artificial reactor Chicago Pile 1 With the news of fission neutrons from uranium fission Szilard immediately understood the possibility of a nuclear chain reaction using uranium In the summer Fermi and Szilard proposed the idea of a nuclear reactor pile to mediate this process The pile would use natural uranium as fuel Fermi had shown much earlier that neutrons were far more effectively captured by atoms if they were of low energy so called slow or thermal neutrons because for quantum reasons it made the atoms look like much larger targets to the neutrons Thus to slow down the secondary neutrons released by the fissioning uranium nuclei Fermi and Szilard proposed a graphite moderator against which the fast high energy secondary neutrons would collide effectively slowing them down With enough uranium and with sufficiently pure graphite their pile could theoretically sustain a slow neutron chain reaction This would result in the production of heat as well as the creation of radioactive fission products 5 291 298 302 In August 1939 Szilard Teller and Wigner thought that the Germans might make use of the fission chain reaction and were spurred to attempt to attract the attention of the United States government to the issue Towards this they persuaded Albert Einstein to lend his name to a letter directed to President Franklin Roosevelt On 11 October the Einstein Szilard letter was delivered via Alexander Sachs Roosevelt quickly understood the implications stating Alex what you are after is to see that the Nazis don t blow us up Roosevelt ordered the formation of the Advisory Committee on Uranium 5 303 309 312 317 In February 1940 encouraged by Fermi and John R Dunning Alfred O C Nier was able to separate U 235 and U 238 from uranium tetrachloride in a glass mass spectrometer Subsequently Dunning bombarding the U 235 sample with neutrons generated by the Columbia University cyclotron confirmed U 235 was responsible for the slow neutron fission of uranium 5 297 298 332 At the University of Birmingham Frisch teamed up with Peierls who had been working on a critical mass formula assuming isotope separation was possible they considered 235U which had a cross section not yet determined but which was assumed to be much larger than that of natural uranium They calculated only a pound or two in a volume less than a golf ball would result in a chain reaction faster than vaporization and the resultant explosion would generate temperature greater than the interior of the sun and pressures greater than the center of the earth Additionally the costs of isotope separation would be insignificant compared to the cost of the war By March 1940 encouraged by Mark Oliphant they wrote the Frisch Peierls memorandum in two parts On the construction of a super bomb based on a nuclear chain reaction in uranium and Memorandum on the on the properties of a radioactive super bomb On 10 April 1940 the first meeting of the MAUD Committee was held 5 321 325 330 331 340 341 In December 1940 Franz Simon at Oxford wrote his Estimate of the size of an actual separation plant In it Simon proposed gaseous diffusion as the best method for uranium isotope separation 5 339 343 On 28 March 1941 Emilio Segre and Glen Seaborg reported on the strong indications that 94239 undergoes fission with slow neutrons This meant chemical separation was an alternative to uranium isotope separation Instead a nuclear reactor fueled with ordinary uranium could produce a plutonium isotope as a nuclear explosive substitute for 235U In May they demonstrated the cross section of plutonium was 1 7 times that of U235 When plutonium s cross section for fast fission was measured to be ten times that of U238 plutonium became a viable option for a bomb 5 346 355 366 368 In October 1941 MAUD released its final report to the U S Government The report stated We have now reached the conclusion that it will be possible to make an effective uranium bomb The material for the first bomb could be ready by the end of 1943 5 368 369 In November 1941 John Dunning and Eugene T Booth were able to demonstrate the enrichment of uranium through gaseous barrier diffusion On 27 November Bush delivered to third National Academy of Sciences report to Roosevelt The report amongst other things called for parallel development of all isotope separation systems On 6 December Bush and Conant reorganized the Uranium Committee s tasks with Harold Urey developing gaseous diffusion Lawrence developing electromagnetic separation Eger V Murphree developing centrifuges and Arthur Compton responsible for theoretical studies and design 5 381 387 388 On 23 April 1942 Met Lab scientists discussed seven possible ways to extract plutonium from irradiated uranium and decided to pursue investigation of all seven On 17 June the first batch of uranium nitrate hexahydrate UNH was undergoing neutron bombardment in the Washington University in St Louis cyclotron On 27 July the irradiated UNH was ready for Glenn T Seaborg s team On 20 August using ultramicrochemistry techniques they successfully extracted plutonium 5 408 415 In April 1939 creating a chain reaction in natural uranium became the goal of Fermi and Szilard as opposed to isotope separation Their first efforts involved five hundred pounds of uranium oxide from the Eldorado Radium Corporation Packed into fifty two cans two inches in diameter and two feet long in a tank of manganese solution they were able to confirm more neutrons were emitted than absorbed However the hydrogen within the water absorbed the slow neutrons necessary for fission Carbon in the form of graphite was then considered because of its smaller capture cross section In April 1940 Fermi was able to confirm carbon s potential for a slow neutron chain reaction after receiving National Carbon Company s graphite bricks at their Pupin Laboratories In August and September the Columbia team enlarged upon the cross section measurements by making a series of exponential piles The first piles consisted of a uranium graphite lattice consisting of 288 cans each containing 60 pounds of uranium oxide surrounded by graphite bricks Fermi s goal was to determine critical mass necessary to sustain neutron generation Fermi defined the reproduction factor k for assessing the chain reaction with a value of 1 0 denoting a sustained chain reaction In September 1941 Fermi s team was only able to achieve a k value of 0 87 In April 1942 before the project was centralized in Chicago they had achieved 0 918 by removing moisture from the oxide In May 1942 Fermi planned a full scale chain reacting pile Chicago Pile 1 after one of the exponential piles at Stagg Field reached a k of 0 995 Between 15 September and 15 November Herbert L Anderson and Walter Zinn built sixteen exponential piles Acquisition of purer forms of graphite without traces of boron and its large cross section became paramount Also important was the acquisition of highly purified forms of oxide from Mallinckrodt Chemical Works Finally acquiring pure uranium metal from the Ames process meant the replacement of oxide pseudospheres with Frank Spedding s eggs Starting on 16 November 1942 Fermi had Anderson and Zinn working in two twelve hours shifts constructing a pile that eventually reached 57 layers by 1 Dec The final pile consisted of 771 000 pounds of graphite 80 590 pounds of uranium oxide and 12 400 pounds of uranium metal with ten cadmium control rods Neutron intensity was measured with a boron trifluoride counter with the control rods removed after the end of each shift On 2 Dec 1942 with k approaching 1 0 Fermi had all but one of the control rod removed and gradually removed the last one The neutron counter clicks increased as did the pen recorder when Fermi announced The pile has gone critical They had achieved a k of 1 0006 which meant neutron intensity doubled every two minutes in addition to breeding plutonium 5 298 301 333 334 394 397 400 401 428 442 Manhattan Project and beyond edit See also Manhattan Project In the United States an all out effort for making atomic weapons was begun in late 1942 This work was taken over by the U S Army Corps of Engineers in 1943 and known as the Manhattan Engineer District The top secret Manhattan Project as it was colloquially known was led by General Leslie R Groves Among the project s dozens of sites were Hanford Site in Washington which had the first industrial scale nuclear reactors and produced plutonium Oak Ridge Tennessee which was primarily concerned with uranium enrichment and Los Alamos in New Mexico which was the scientific hub for research on bomb development and design Other sites notably the Berkeley Radiation Laboratory and the Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago played important contributing roles Overall scientific direction of the project was managed by the physicist J Robert Oppenheimer In July 1945 the first atomic explosive device dubbed The Gadget was detonated in the New Mexico desert in the Trinity test It was fueled by plutonium created at Hanford In August 1945 two more atomic devices Little Boy a uranium 235 bomb and Fat Man a plutonium bomb were used against the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Natural fission chain reactors on Earth edit Criticality in nature is uncommon At three ore deposits at Oklo in Gabon sixteen sites the so called Oklo Fossil Reactors have been discovered at which self sustaining nuclear fission took place approximately 2 billion years ago Unknown until 1972 but postulated by Paul Kuroda in 1956 44 when French physicist Francis Perrin discovered the Oklo Fossil Reactors it was realized that nature had beaten humans to the punch Large scale natural uranium fission chain reactions moderated by normal water had occurred far in the past and would not be possible now This ancient process was able to use normal water as a moderator only because 2 billion years before the present natural uranium was richer in the shorter lived fissile isotope 235U about 3 than natural uranium available today which is only 0 7 and must be enriched to 3 to be usable in light water reactors See also edit nbsp Nuclear technology portal nbsp Energy portalCold fission Fissile material Fission fragment reactor Hybrid fusion fission Nuclear fusion Nuclear propulsion PhotofissionReferences edit M G Arora amp M Singh 1994 Nuclear Chemistry Anmol Publications p 202 ISBN 81 261 1763 X Gopal B Saha 1 November 2010 Fundamentals of Nuclear Pharmacy Springer pp 11 ISBN 978 1 4419 5860 0 a b Petrzhak Konstantin 1989 Kak bylo otkryto spontannoe delenie How spontaneous fission was discovered In Chernikova Vera ed Kratkij Mig Torzhestva O tom kak delayutsya nauchnye otkrytiya Brief Moment of Triumph About making scientific discoveries in Russian Nauka pp 108 112 ISBN 5 02 007779 8 a b c d e f g h i j k Younes Walid Loveland Walter 2021 An Introduction to Nuclear Fission Springer pp 28 30 ISBN 9783030845940 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Rhodes Richard 1986 The Making of the Atomic Bomb New York Simon amp Schuster Paperbacks pp 135 138 ISBN 9781451677614 S Vermote et al 2008 Comparative study of the ternary particle emission in 243 Cm nth f and 244 Cm SF in Dynamical aspects of nuclear fission proceedings of the 6th International Conference J Kliman M G Itkis S Gmuca eds World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd Singapore ISBN 9812837523 Dempster A J 1938 The Atomic Masses of the Heavy Elements Physical Review Journals Archive American Physical Society Retrieved 9 October 2023 Feenberg eugene 1939 On the Shape and Stability of Heavy Nuclei Physical Review Journals Archive American Physical Society Retrieved 9 October 2023 a b c d e f g h i j Lilley John 2001 Nuclear Physics Principles and Application John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 7 9 13 14 38 43 265 267 ISBN 9780471979364 Bohr N 1939 Resonance in Uranium and Thorium Disintegrations and the Phenomenon of Nuclear Fission Physical Review Journals Archives American Physical Society Retrieved 9 October 2023 Essential cross sections LibreTexts Library Retrieved 9 October 2023 J Byrne 2011 Neutrons Nuclei and Matter Dover Publications Mineola NY p 259 ISBN 978 0 486 48238 5 Marion Brunglinghaus Nuclear fission European Nuclear Society Archived from the original on 2013 01 17 Retrieved 2013 01 04 Hans A Bethe April 1950 The Hydrogen Bomb Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists p 99 V Kopeikin L Mikaelyan and V Sinev 2004 Reactor as a Source of Antineutrinos Thermal Fission Energy Physics of Atomic Nuclei 67 10 1892 arXiv hep ph 0410100 Bibcode 2004PAN 67 1892K doi 10 1134 1 1811196 S2CID 18521811 These fission neutrons have a wide energy spectrum with range from 0 to 14 MeV with mean of 2 MeV and mode of 0 75 MeV See Byrne op cite NUCLEAR EVENTS AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES by the Borden institute approximately 82 of the fission energy is released as kinetic energy of the two large fission fragments These fragments being massive and highly charged particles interact readily with matter They transfer their energy quickly to the surrounding weapon materials which rapidly become heated PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 January 2017 Nuclear Engineering Overview The various energies emitted per fission event pg 4 167 MeV is emitted by means of the repulsive electrostatic energy between the 2 daughter nuclei which takes the form of the kinetic energy of the fission products this kinetic energy results in both later blast and thermal effects 5 MeV is released in prompt or initial gamma radiation 5 MeV in prompt neutron radiation 99 36 of total 7 MeV in delayed neutron energy 0 64 and 13 MeV in beta decay and gamma decay residual radiation PDF Technical University Vienna Archived from the original PDF on May 15 2018 Nuclear Fission and Fusion and Nuclear Interactions National Physical Laboratory Archived from the original on 2010 03 05 Retrieved 2013 01 04 L Bonneau P Quentin 2005 Microscopic calculations of potential energy surfaces Fission and fusion properties PDF AIP Conference Proceedings 798 77 84 Bibcode 2005AIPC 798 77B doi 10 1063 1 2137231 Archived from the original on September 29 2006 Retrieved 2008 07 28 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c Lee John C 2020 Nuclear Reactor Physics and Engineering John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 324 327 329 ISBN 9781119582328 The Atomic Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Archived 2002 10 07 at archive today atomicarchive com Nuke Rebuke Writers amp Artists Against Nuclear Energy amp Weapons The Contemporary anthology series The Spirit That Moves Us Press May 1 1984 pp 22 29 ISBN 0930370155 Tatsuichirō Akizuki Gordon Honeycombe March 1982 Nagasaki 1945 the first full length eyewitness account of the atomic bomb attack on Nagasaki Quartet Books pp 134 137 ISBN 978 0 7043 3382 6 The Impact of the A bomb Hiroshima and Nagasaki 1945 85 Iwanami Shoten 1 January 1985 pp 56 78 ISBN 978 4 00 009766 6 E Rutherford 1911 The scattering of a and b particles by matter and the structure of the atom PDF Philosophical Magazine 21 4 669 688 Bibcode 2012PMag 92 379R doi 10 1080 14786435 2011 617037 S2CID 126189920 Cockcroft and Walton split lithium with high energy protons April 1932 Outreach phy cam ac uk 1932 04 14 Archived from the original on 2012 09 02 Retrieved 2013 01 04 J Chadwick 1932 Possible Existence of a Neutron PDF Nature 129 3252 312 Bibcode 1932Natur 129Q 312C doi 10 1038 129312a0 S2CID 4076465 Chadwick J 1932 The existence of a neutron Proceedings of the Royal Society A 136 830 692 708 Bibcode 1932RSPSA 136 692C doi 10 1098 rspa 1932 0112 and Chadwick J 1933 The Bakerian Lecture The neutron Proceedings of the Royal Society A 142 846 1 25 Bibcode 1933RSPSA 142 1C doi 10 1098 rspa 1933 0152 E Fermi E Amaldi O D Agostino F Rasetti and E Segre 1934 Radioattivita provocata da bombardamento di neutroni III La Ricerca Scientifica vol 5 no 1 pages 452 453 Ida Noddack 1934 Uber das Element 93 Zeitschrift fur Angewandte Chemie 47 37 653 Bibcode 1934AngCh 47 653N doi 10 1002 ange 19340473707 Hook Ernest B 2002 Interdisciplinary Dissonance and Prematurity Ida Noddack s Suggestion of Nuclear Fission In Hook Ernest B ed Prematurity in Scientific Discovery On Resistance and Neglect Berkeley and Los Angeles University of California Press pp 124 148 ISBN 978 0 520 23106 1 OCLC 883986381 Originalgerate zur Entdeckung der Kernspaltung Hahn Meitner Strassmann Tisch Entdeckung der Kernspaltung 1938 Versuchsaufbau Deutsches Museum Munchen Faszination Museum YouTube Frisch Otto Robert 1980 What Little I Remember Cambridge University Press pp 114 117 ISBN 0 52 128010 9 The paper was composed by several long distance telephone calls Lise Meitner having returned to Stockholm in the meantime I asked an American biologist who was working with Hevesy what they call the process by which single cells divide in two fission he said so I used the term nuclear fission in that paper Placzek was sceptical couldn t I do some experiments to show the existence of those fast moving fragments of the uranium nucleus Oddly enough that thought hadn t occurred to me but now I quickly set to work and the experiment which was really very easy was done in two days and a short note about it was sent off to Nature together with the other note I had composed over the telephone with Lise Meitner Richard Rhodes 1986 The Making of the Atomic Bomb Simon and Schuster p 268 ISBN 0 671 44133 7 H L Anderson E T Booth J R Dunning E Fermi G N Glasoe amp F G Slack 1939 The Fission of Uranium Physical Review 55 5 511 Bibcode 1939PhRv 55 511A doi 10 1103 PhysRev 55 511 2 Richard Rhodes 1986 The Making of the Atomic Bomb Simon and Schuster pp 267 270 ISBN 0 671 44133 7 Hahn O Strassmann F February 1939 Nachweis der Entstehung aktiver Bariumisotope aus Uran und Thorium durch Neutronenbestrahlung Nachweis weiterer aktiver Bruchstucke bei der Uranspaltung Naturwissenschaften 27 6 89 95 Bibcode 1939NW 27 89H doi 10 1007 BF01488988 S2CID 33512939 Meitner Lisa Frisch O R 1939 Disintegration of Uranium by Neutrons a New Type of Nuclear Reaction Nature Retrieved 20 September 2023 Bohr Niels Wheeler John 1939 The Mechanism of Nuclear Fission journals aps org Physical Review Retrieved 20 September 2023 Zoellner Tom 2009 Uranium Viking Penguin pp 28 30 ISBN 978 0 670 02064 5 H Von Halban F Joliot amp L Kowarski 1939 Number of Neutrons Liberated in the Nuclear Fission of Uranium Nature 143 3625 680 Bibcode 1939Natur 143 680V doi 10 1038 143680a0 S2CID 4089039 P K Kuroda 1956 On the Nuclear Physical Stability of the Uranium Minerals PDF The Journal of Chemical Physics 25 4 781 Bibcode 1956JChPh 25 781K doi 10 1063 1 1743058 Further reading editDOE Fundamentals Handbook Nuclear Physics and Reactor Theory Volume 1 PDF U S Department of Energy January 1993 Archived from the original PDF on 2014 03 19 Retrieved 2012 01 03 DOE Fundamentals Handbook Nuclear Physics and Reactor Theory Volume 2 PDF U S Department of Energy January 1993 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2012 01 03 Bulgac Aurel Jin Shi Stetcu Ionel 2020 Nuclear Fission Dynamics Past Present Needs and Future Frontiers in Physics 8 63 arXiv 1912 00287 Bibcode 2020FrP 8 63B doi 10 3389 fphy 2020 00063 External links editThe Effects of Nuclear Weapons Annotated bibliography for nuclear fission from the Alsos Digital Library The Discovery of Nuclear Fission Archived 2010 02 16 at the Wayback Machine Historical account complete with audio and teacher s guides from the American Institute of Physics History Center atomicarchive com Nuclear Fission Explained Nuclear Files org What is Nuclear Fission Nuclear Fission Animation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nuclear fission amp oldid 1187861784, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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