Question 7.6: Earlier in this chapter we learned that when a uranium or pl......

Earlier in this chapter we learned that when a uranium or plutonium nucleus absorbs a low-speed neutron, it does not necessarily split apart. What percentage of the time does this happen for U-233 and Pu-239? If 30 billion U-233 and Pu-239 atoms absorb a thermal neutron, how much thermal energy is

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The probability of a uranium or plutonium nucleus absorbing a low-speed neutron and not splitting apart is given by σ_c/σ_a, where σ_a = σ_c + σ_f. From Table 7.4, we see that a U-233 nucleus does not fission about 8% of the time it absorbs a thermal neutron and a Pu-239 nucleus does not fission about 26% of the time. In this case, they simply emit a gamma ray to return to a stable state.
Thirty billion fissions are required to produce 1 J of thermal energy. If each of these isotopes absorbs 30 billion neutrons, the fission of U-233 will produce 0.92 × 1 = 0.92 J and the fission of Pu-239 will produce 0.74 × 1 = 0.74 J.

TABLE 7.4
Probability of Fission and Capture due to the Absorption of a Thermal Neutron
Nuclear Fuel Capture Cross Section σ_c (barns) Fission Cross Section σ_f (barns) Absorption Cross Section σ_a (barns) (σ_a = σ_c + σ_f) Probability of Fission

(σ_f/σ_a) (%)

Probability of Radiative Capture(σ_c/σ_a) (%)
U-233 45.800 528.45 574.25 92 8
U-235 96.685 585.086 681.77 86 14
Pu-239 270.000 747.401 1017.41 74 26
Pu-241 362.000 1012.0 1374.00 74 26
Note: Cross sections taken from Appendix C.

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