nuclear energy
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
nuclear energy the energy stored in the nucleus of an atom and released through fission, fusion, or radioactivity . In these processes a small amount of mass is converted to energy according to the relationship E = mc2 , where E is energy, m is mass, and c is the speed of light (see relativity ). The most pressing problems concerning nuclear energy are the possibility of an accident at a nuclear reactor or fuel plant, such as those which occurred at Three Mile Island (1979), Chernobyl (1986), and Takaimura, Japan (1999), and the potential threat to the continued existence of the human race posed by nuclear weapons (see disarmament, nuclear ).
Nuclear Reactions
The release of nuclear energy is associated with changes from less stable to more stable nuclei and produces far more energy for a given mass of fuel than any other source of energy. In fission processes, a fissionable nucleus absorbs a neutron, becomes unstable, and splits into two nearly equal nuclei. In fusion processes, two nuclei combine to form a single, heavier nucleus. The most stable nuclei—those with the highest binding energies per nucleon holding their components together—are in the middle range of atomic weights, with the maximum stability at weights near 60. Thus, fission, which produces two lighter fragments, occurs for very heavy nuclei, while fusion occurs for the lightest nuclei.
Nuclear Fission
The process of nuclear fission was discovered in 1938 by Otto Hahn and Fritz Strassmann and was explained in early 1939 by Lise Meitner and Otto Frisch. The fissionable isotope of uranium, U-235, can be split by bombarding it with a slow, or thermal, neutron. (Slow neutrons are called "thermal" because their average kinetic energies are about the same as those of the molecules of air at ordinary temperatures.) The atomic numbers of the nuclei resulting from the fission add up to 92, which is the atomic number of uranium. A number of pairs of product nuclei are possible, with the most frequently produced fragments being krypton and barium.
Since this reaction also releases an average of 2.5 neutrons, a chain reaction is possible, provided at least one neutron per fission is captured by another nucleus and causes a second fission. In an atomic bomb , the number is greater than 1 and the reaction increases rapidly to an explosion. In a nuclear reactor , where the chain reaction is controlled, the number of neutrons producing additional fission must be exactly 1.0 in order to maintain a steady flow of energy.
Uranium-235, which occurs naturally as one part in 140 in a natural mixture of uranium isotopes, is not the only material fissionable by thermal neutrons. Uranium-233 and plutonium-239 can also be used but must be produced artificially. Uranium-233 is produced from thorium-232, which absorbs a neutron and then undergoes beta decay (the loss of an electron). Plutonium-239 is produced in a similar manner from uranium-238, which is the most common isotope of natural uranium. The average energy released by the fission of uranium-235 is 200 million electron volts, and that released by uranium-233 and plutonium-239 is comparable. Fission can also occur spontaneously, but the time required for a heavy nucleus to decay spontaneously by fission (10 million billion years in the case of uranium-238) is so long that induced fission by thermal neutrons is the only practical application of nuclear fission. However, spontaneous fission of uranium can be used in the dating of very old rock samples.
The development of nuclear energy from fission reactions began with the program to produce atomic weapons in the United States. Early work was carried out at several universities, and the first sustained nuclear chain reaction was achieved at the Univ. of Chicago in 1942 by a group under Enrico Fermi. Later the weapons themselves were developed at Los Alamos, N.Mex., under the direction of J. Robert Oppenheimer (see Manhattan Project ).
Nuclear Fusion
Nuclear fusion, although it was known theoretically in the 1930s as the process by which the sun and most other stars radiate their great output of energy, was not achieved by scientists until the 1950s. Fusion reactions are also known as thermonuclear reactions because the temperatures required to initiate them are more than 1,000,000°C. In the hydrogen bomb , such temperatures are provided by the detonation of a fission bomb. The energy released during fusion is even greater than that released during fission. Moreover, the fuel for fusion reactions, isotopes of hydrogen, is readily available in large amounts, and there is no release of radioactive byproducts.
In stars ordinary hydrogen, whose nucleus consists of a single proton, is the fuel for the reaction and is fused to form helium through a complex cycle of reactions (see nucleosynthesis ). This reaction takes place too slowly, however, to be of practical use on the earth. The heavier isotopes of hydrogen— deuterium and tritium —have much faster fusion reactions.
For sustained, controlled fusion reactions, a fission bomb obviously cannot be used to trigger the reaction. The difficulties of controlled fusion center on the containment of the nuclear fuel at the extremely high temperatures necessary for fusion for a time long enough to allow the reaction to take place. For deuterium-tritium fusion, this time is about 0.1 sec. At such temperatures the fuel is no longer in one of the ordinary states of matter but is instead a plasma , consisting of a mixture of electrons and charged atoms. Obviously, no solid container could hold such a hot mixture; therefore, containment attempts have been based on the electrical and magnetic properties of a plasma, using magnetic fields to form a "magnetic bottle." In 1994 U.S. researchers achieved a fusion reaction that lasted about a second and generated 10.7 million watts, using deuterium and tritium in a magnetically confined plasma. The use of tritium lowers the temperature required and increases the rate of the reaction, but it also increases the release of radioactive neutrons . Another method has used laser beams aimed at tiny pellets of fusion fuel.
If practical controlled fusion is achieved, it could have great advantages over fission as a source of energy. Deuterium is relatively easy to obtain, since it constitutes a small percentage of the hydrogen in water and can be separated by electrolysis, in contrast to the complex and expensive methods required to extract uranium-235 from its sources. In 2005 a six-member consortium (China, the European Union, Japan, Russia, South Korea, and the United States) agreed to build an experimental fusion reactor at Cadarache in S France that would use the "magnetic bottle" approach.
Bibliography
See H. Foreman, ed., Nuclear Power and the Public (1970); R. C. Lewis, Nuclear Power Rebellion: Citizen vs. the Atomic Industrial Establishment (1972); C. K. Ebinger, International Politics of Nuclear Energy (1978); S. Glasstone, Sourcebook on Atomic Energy (1979); G. S. Bauer and A. McDonald, ed., Nuclear Technologies in a Sustainable Energy System (1983); G. H. Clarfield and W. W. Wiecek, Nuclear America (1984).
Author not available, NUCLEAR ENERGY.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
|
NUCLEAR ENERGY : OPINIONS CLASH AT PRAGUE NUCLEAR FORUM.
Europe Energy; 5/28/2008; 459 words
; The second meeting of the two-day European Nuclear Energy Forum (ENEF) ended in Prague, on 23 May, with an impressive show of political and industry support for nuclear energy. However, critical voices were also to be heard. Following enlargement of the EU in 2004 and 2007, a majority of member
Read more
|
|
NEI: Survey Reveals Gap in Public's Awareness of Nuclear Energy's Role in Reducing Greenhouse Gases
U.S. Newswire; 4/23/2007; 733 words
; ... nearest existing nuclear plant site. The Nuclear Energy Institute is the nuclear energy industry's policy organization. This news release and additional information about nuclear energy are available at http://www.nei.org. SOURCE Nuclear Energy Institute
Read more
|
|
Fed: Review to consider nuclear energy for Australia: Howard
AAP General News (Australia); 6/4/2006; 805 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 06-04-2006 Fed: Review to consider nuclear energy for Australia: Howard By Prime Minister John Howard Too often politicians ...
Read more
|
|
Fed: Greenpeace releases nuclear energy report
AAP General News (Australia); 11/19/2006; 326 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 11-19-2006 Fed: Greenpeace releases nuclear energy report By Peter Veness CANBERRA, Nov 19 AAP - Greenpeace has gone ...
Read more
|
|
DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY HOSTS FIRST STEERING COMMITTEE MEETING ON U.S. - JAPAN JOINT NUCLEAR ENERGY ACTION PLAN
Regulatory Intelligence Data; 6/22/2007; INDSTRY GROUP 99; 448 words
; INDSTRY GROUP 99 Regulatory Intelligence Data 06-22-2007 WASHINGTON, DC - U.S. Department of Energy Assistant Secretary for Nuclear Energy, Dennis R. Spurgeon, today hosted Director-General of Japan's Agency of Natural Resources and Energy, Harufumi Mochizuki, to discuss bilateral nuclear energy
Read more
|
|
UNITED STATES AND JAPAN SIGN JOINT NUCLEAR ENERGY ACTION PLAN TO PROMOTE NUCLEAR ENERGY COOPERATION
Regulatory Intelligence Data; 4/25/2007; INDSTRY GROUP 99; 635 words
; WASHINGTON, DC - United States Department of Energy Secretary Samuel W. Bodman and Japan's Ministers Akira Amari, Bunmei Ibuki, and Taro Aso, this week presented to U.S. President George W. Bush and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the United States-Japan Joint Nuclear Energy Action Plan. The
Read more
|
|
NSW: Howard has "no hang-ups" about nuclear energy
AAP General News (Australia); 2/24/2006; 179 words
; AAP General News (Australia) 02-24-2006 NSW: Howard has "no hang-ups" about nuclear energy SYDNEY, Feb 24 AAP - Prime Minister John Howard has reignited ...
Read more
|
|
Surprise! Nuclear energy is green
Daily Breeze; 4/18/2005; Nicholas D. Kristof; 653 words
; If there was one thing that used to be crystal clear to any environmentalist, it was that nuclear energy was the deadliest threat this planet faced. That's why Dick Gregory pledged at a huge anti- nuke demonstration in 1979 that he would eat no solid food until all nuclear plants in the United
Read more
|
|
Nuclear Energy Institute Launches Revamped Web Site
U.S. Newswire; 7/27/2007; 342 words
; ... site as the leading online destination for news and information about the American nuclear ... resurgence demands up-to-date, comprehensive news and information," said Scott Peterson ... the nuclear energy industry." The online News & Events ( http://www.nei.org/newsandevents ...
Read more
|
|
Nuclear Industry Leaders Identify Challenges on Road to U.S. Nuclear Energy Renaissance
U.S. Newswire; 5/24/2007; 1076 words
; ... in the next 100 years," he noted. --- The Nuclear Energy Institute is the nuclear energy industry's policy organization. This news release and additional information about nuclear energy are available at http://www.nei.org SOURCE Nuclear Energy Institute
Read more
|
Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
|
nuclear energy
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
... by the process of nuclear fission . Nuclear energy is also released as a result of nuclear fusion . The release of nuclear energy can be controlled or uncontrolled. Nuclear ... radioactivity . nuclear energy nuclear energy nuclear energy
Read more
|
|
Nuclear Weapons
Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
... processes of fission and fusion to release nuclear energy. An individual nuclear device may have an explosive force ... This splitting of nuclei is termed nuclear fission. The energy released through nuclear fission was ... high-speed collisions, a process called nuclear fusion ... .
Read more
|
|
Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), United States
Encyclopedia of Espionage, Intelligence, and Security
... United States Established by the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is an ... established by Congress with the Atomic Energy Act of 1946, regulated nuclear energy. The Atomic Energy Act of 1954, which ... established as the Department of ...
Read more
|
|
Nuclear Propulsion
Space Sciences
Nuclear Propulsion Nuclear energy remains an attractive potential means ... provide sustained thrust with greater energy. Many believe nuclear-powered spacecraft can and should be ... one of the two methods of generating nuclear energy: fission and fusion. Fission Propulsion ...
Read more
|
|
Nuclear Strategy and Diplomacy
Encyclopedia of American Foreign Policy
... December 1993. With Russia, nuclear matters were more complicated ... threat of uncontrolled nuclear arsenals in the former ... Nonproliferation Treaty nuclear club at all costs. The ... International Atomic Energy Agency inspections of nuclear waste sites. Agency ... planning to launch a ...
Read more
|