Nuclear Energy (Fission and Fusion) Flashcards
When should you treat the neutron and proton as having slightly different masses?
Dealing with fusion or fission
(Calculating mass defects, binding energies or mass difference)
Define mass defect (∆m)
Mass lost when nucleons (protons and neutrons) come together to form nucleus
Define binding energy
Energy released when nucleons (protons and neutrons) come together to form nucleus
How is binding energy related to mass defect (∆m)?
Define 1 atomic mass unit
Mass of 1/12 of a carbon-12 atom
(1.661x10-27kg)
What’s the next step here?
Multiply by 931.5MeV
What’s the next step here?
Use E=mc2
Sketch the binding energy per nucleon graph
Label the fusion and fission regions
Why are they there
Energy only released if binding energy per nucleon increases
Define metastable state in radioactive decay
Long-lived excited state of nucleus
Eventually it de-excites emitting γ
How many possible decays are there?
2β- and 3γ
What is nuclear fission?
Heavy nucleus splits into two lighter nuclei releasing energy and neutrons
What are the 2 main isotopes used as fuel in nuclear reactors?
U-235, U-238
How do you calculate the energy released in this fission reaction?
Calculate the mass difference (∆mdiff)
How do you calculate if a reaction is possible?
If mass difference is positive reaction is possible
What are the main components of the nuclear reactor?
- Fuel rods - U-235
- Control rods - Boron
- Moderator - water or graphite
- Coolant - CO2 or water
What does the moderator do in a nuclear reactor?
Reduce neutrons’ speeds to thermal speeds through elastic collisions
(More likely to be absorbed by U-235)
What do the control rods do in a nuclear reactor?
Absorb some neutrons
Stop chain reaction occurring
What does the coolant do in a nuclear reactor?
Transfer heat from fuel rods to the water that spins the turbines
What are the main safety features of the nuclear reactor?
- Reaction happens inside thick walled concrete vessel
- Control rods fully inserted if meltdown starts
- Reactor flooded with water to remove thermal energy if meltdown starts
In nuclear reactors how are spent fuel rods disposed?
- Removed remotely from reactor
- Stored in cooling ponds for up to 1 year
- Vitrified by mixing with molten glass
- Sealed in barrels
- Stored in mountains or deep underground
What is nuclear fusion?
Two lighter nuclei are combined to form one heavier nuclei and release energy
Why is nuclear fusion so difficult to achieve?
Requires incredibly high temperatures and pressures
- To ionise the isotopes
- To bring isotopes close enough to overcome electromagnetic repulsion
In fusion how close do the ionised isotopes need to get?
Close enough for the strong force to be larger than electromagnetic
(<1fm)
What are the two main fusion isotopes in stars (in their main sequence)
Deuterium → H-2
Tritium → H-3