Dictionary Definition
fissile adj
1 capable of undergoing nuclear fission; "a
fissionable nucleous"; "fissionable material" [syn: fissionable] [ant: nonfissionable]
2 capable of being split or cleft or divided in
the direction of the grain; "fissile crystals"; "fissile wood"
[ant: nonfissile]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Able to be split
- Easily split along a grain
- Capable of undergoing nuclear fission
Derived terms
Translations
capable of undergoing nuclear fission
- Czech: štěpný
Extensive Definition
In nuclear
engineering, a fissile material is one that is capable of
sustaining a chain
reaction of nuclear
fission.
All known fissile materials are capable of
sustaining a chain reaction in which either thermal or slow
neutrons or fast
neutrons predominate. That is, they can all be used to
fuel:
- A thermal reactor, with a neutron moderator
- A fast reactor, with no moderator
- A nuclear explosive
Fissile vs fissionable
"Fissile" is distinguished from "fissionable". "Fissionable" are any materials with atoms that can undergo nuclear fission. "Fissile" is defined to be materials that are fissionable by neutrons with zero kinetic energy. "Fissile" thus, is more restrictive than "fissionable" — although all fissile materials are fissionable, not all fissionable materials are fissile. Some authorities even restrict the term fissionable to mean only non-fissile materials.Notably, uranium-238 is
fissionable but not fissile. Neutrons produced by fission of e.g.
U-235 have an energy of ca. 1 MeV (100 TJ/kg, i.e. a speed of
14,000 km/s) and do not cause fission of U-238, but neutrons
produced by deuterium-tritium fusion have an energy of
14.1 MeV neutrons (1400 TJ/kg, i.e. a speed of 52,000 km/s) and can
easily fission uranium-238 and other non-fissile actinides. The neutrons
produced by this fission are again not fast enough to produce new
fissions, so U-238 does not sustain a chain reaction.
Fast fission of uranium-238 in the third stage of
the fission-fusion-fission
weapons contributes greatly to their yield and fallout. Fast
fission of uranium-238 also makes a significant contribution to the
power output of some fast
breeder reactors.
- Uranium-235 which occurs in natural uranium and enriched uranium
- Plutonium-239 bred from Uranium-238 by neutron capture
- Plutonium-241 bred from Plutonium-240 by neutron capture
- Uranium-233 bred from Thorium-232 by neutron capture
In general, actinide isotopes with an odd
number of neutrons are fissile. Most nuclear fuels have odd
N
(number of protons and neutrons) and even Z (number
of protons). Isotopes with an odd number of neutrons and odd number
of protons (odd Z, even N) are shortlived because they can beta decay to
an isotope with an even number of neutrons and even number of
protons. (even Z, even N)
Fissile nuclides do not have a 100% chance of
fissioning on absorption of a neutron. The chance is dependent on
the nuclide as well as neutron energy. For low and medium-energy
neutrons, the cross
sections for fission and for capture emitting a gamma ray, and
the percentage of nonfissions are:
Nuclear fuel
To be a useful fuel for nuclear fission chain reactions, the material must:- Be in the region of the binding energy curve where a fission chain reaction is possible (i.e. above radium)
- Have a high probability of fission on neutron capture
- Release two or more neutrons on average per neutron capture (which means an even higher number on each fission, to compensate for nonfissions)
- Have a reasonably long half life
- Be available in suitable quantities
Legal controls
The
International Atomic Energy Agency used to categorize fissile
materials according to their security requirements for
transportation:
- Fissile Class I: no controls
- Fissile Class II: limits on amount of materials shipped
- Fissile Class III: special shipping arrangements are needed
but these classes were replaced in the mid
1990s.
References
See also
- Fertile material
- Fission product
- Nuclear fusion
- Fissility (disambiguation)
fissile in Spanish: Fisible
fissile in French: Isotope fissile
fissile in Italian: Materiale fissile
fissile in Hebrew: חומר בקיע
fissile in Japanese: 核分裂性物質
fissile in Polish: Materiał rozszczepialny
fissile in Portuguese: Material físsil
fissile in Slovenian: Cepljivi material
fissile in Finnish: Fissiili
fissile in Turkish: Fisil
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
alienable, breakable, brittle, brittle as glass,
crackable, crisp, crispy, crumbly, crushable, delicate, dissoluble, dissolvable, divisible, fissionable, flimsy, fracturable, fragile, frail, frangible, friable, lacerable, scissile, separable, severable, shatterable, shattery, shivery, splintery, vulnerable