What nuclear fission is
What does "Settled science / engineering" mean?
Broad scientific and engineering consensus. Not seriously disputed by domain experts. — Several short posts restate this; treat 'energy-density-comparison' as canonical and link the rest as examples.
Splitting a heavy nucleus (usually uranium-235) unleashes the binding energy of the atom as heat, and a self-sustaining chain reaction keeps it going — an awesome bit of physics we've learned to hold perfectly steady for years.
In one lineSplitting heavy atoms releases heat that ultimately spins a turbine.
Editor's note on sources & how this was curated
Several short posts restate this; treat 'energy-density-comparison' as canonical and link the rest as examples.
Canonical explainer
2010-06-06 · Rod AdamsEnergy Density Comparison
One of the primary advantages that nuclear energy sources have over chemical energy competitors is energy density. Using our current, rather primitive technology that essentially obtains nuclear energy from the 0.7% fraction of uranium that is easily fissioned with a single, low energy neutron, uranium contains about 16,000 times as much energy per unit weight…
One of the primary advantages that nuclear energy sources have over chemical energy competitors is energy density. Using our current, rather primitive technology that essentially obtains nuclear energy from the 0.7% fraction of uranium that is easily fissioned with a single, low energy neutron, uranium contains about 16,000 times as much energy per unit weight as coal. As we improve our technology, and the need for improved utilization increases, we will begin using high energy neutrons with repeated interactions to break the far more common U-238 into smaller pieces plus energy and we will take advantage of the excellent properties of Th-232 to fission after being hit with two low energy neutrons.
When those known techniques reach the commercial stage, the ratio of energy content per unit mass between nuclear fuels and chemical fuels will be closer to 2,000,000 to 1 and even that measure understates the advantage that nuclear reactions have over chemical reactions.
The understatement there is caused by the fact that combustion fuels are not self contained; they will only release their energy when combined with oxygen. If you count the mass of all required reactants, which is often not done since our common atmosphere contains sufficient quantities of oxygen to support combustion, the ratio of energy density between nuclear reactions and chemical reactions is closer to 10,000,000 to one. The implications of very dense fuels for machinery and support equipment design can be incredible if the engineers and accountants can learn how to take full advantage of the physics.
All those numbers can be complicated to explain to people. My artistic friends at PopAtomic.org have produced a poster that helps visually explain the first set of numbers. Comments are always welcome; I will admit to pride of authorship, but also a desire to learn and improve. Based on what I know about PopAtomic, they feel the same way.
What does a fission chain reaction need to sustain itself?
- ✓A neutron splits a U-235 nucleus, releasing heat plus more neutrons.
- ✓Those neutrons split more atoms — a self-sustaining chain reaction.
- ✓Lost mass becomes energy; the rest is just boiling water for a turbine.
✓ Active recall
1. Roughly how much coal does a single uranium fuel pellet replace in energy terms?
2. What part of a reactor slows neutrons so the chain reaction can sustain?