- Uranium-238
Infobox isotope
background =#fc6
text_color =
image_caption = 10 gram sample
alternate_names =
mass_number =238
symbol =U
num_neutrons =146
num_protons =92
abundance = 99.284%
halflife = 4.46 billion years
error_halflife =
decay_product = Thorium-234
decay_mass = 234
decay_symbol = Th
parent = Plutonium-242
parent_mass =242
parent_symbol =Pu
parent_decay =a
parent2 =Protactinium-238
parent2_mass =238
parent2_symbol =Pa
parent2_decay =b-
mass = 238.0507826
spin =
excess_energy =
error1 =
binding_energy =
error2 =
decay_mode1 =Alpha decay
decay_energy1 = 4.267
decay_mode2 =
decay_energy2 =
decay_mode3 =
decay_energy3 =
decay_mode4 =
decay_energy4 =Uranium-238 (U-238), is the most common isotope of
uranium found in nature. When hit by aneutron , it becomesuranium-239 (U-239), an unstable isotope which decays intoneptunium -239 (Np-239), which then itself decays, with ahalf-life of 2.355 days, intoplutonium-239 (Pu-239).Around 99.284% of
natural uranium [Citation
last = Military / NATO
first =
author-link =
last2 =
first2 =
author2-link =
title = See Page three
date = December 20.
year = 2007
url = http://www.afrri.usuhs.mil/www/outreach/pdf/mcclain_NATO_2005.pdf
accessdate = 14 Nov.] is uranium-238, which has a half-life of 1.41 × 1017second s (4.46 × 109 years, or 4.46 billion years).Depleted uranium consists mainly of the 238 isotope, andenriched uranium has a higher-than-natural quantity of theuranium-235 isotope.Reprocessed uranium is also mainly U-238, but contains significant quantities ofuranium-236 , and in fact all the isotopes of uranium betweenuranium-232 and uranium-238 except uranium-237. [Citation
last =
first =
author-link = Nuclear France: Materials and sites
last2 =
first2 =
author2-link =
title = Uranium from reprocessing
date =
year =
url = http://www.francenuc.org/en_mat/uranium4_e.htm
accessdate = 14 Nov.]Nuclear energy applications
In a fission
nuclear reactor , uranium-238 can be used to breed plutonium-239, which itself can be used in a nuclear weapon or as a reactor fuel source. In fact, in a typical nuclear reactor, up to a third of the generated power does come from the fission of plutonium-239, which is not supplied as a fuel to the reactor, but transmuted from uranium-238.Breeder reactors
Breeder reactors use the waste Plutonium-239 from fissile reactors as a fuel source.Uranium-238 is not usable directly as
nuclear fuel ; however, it can be used as a source material for creating the elementplutonium .Breeder reactor s carry out such a process of transmutation to convert fertile isotopes such as uranium-238 into fissile plutonium. It has been estimated that there is anywhere from 10,000 to five billion years worth of uranium-238 for use in these power plants [http://www-formal.stanford.edu/jmc/progress/cohen.html] . Breeder technology has been used in several reactors [http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf08.html] .As of December 2005, the only breeder reactor producing power is the 600-megawatt
BN-600 reactor at theBeloyarsk Nuclear Power Station inRussia . Russia has planned to build another unit, BN-800, at the Beloyarsk nuclear power plant. Also,Japan 'sMonju breeder reactor is planned for a re-start, having been shut down since 1995, and bothChina andIndia have announced intentions to build breeder reactors.The breeder reactor as its name implies creates even larger quantities of plutonium-239 than the fission nuclear reactor.
The
Clean And Environmentally Safe Advanced Reactor (CAESAR), a nuclear reactor concept that would use steam as a moderator to controldelayed neutron s, will potentially be able to burn uranium-238 as fuel once the reactor is started with LEU fuel. This design is still in the early stages of development.Radiation shielding
Uranium-238 is also used as a radiation shield — its
alpha radiation is easily stopped by the non-radioactive casing of the shielding and the uranium's highatomic weight and high number ofelectron s is highly effective in absorbinggamma ray s andx-ray s. However, it is not as effective as ordinary water for stoppingfast neutron s. Both metallic depleted uranium and depleteduranium dioxide are being used as materials for radiation shielding. Uranium is about five times better as a gamma ray shield thanlead , so a shield with the same effectivity can be packed into a thinner layer.DUCRETE , a concrete made with uranium dioxide aggregate instead of gravel, is being investigated as a material fordry cask storage systems to storeradioactive waste .Downblending
The opposite of enriching is downblending. Surplus highly-enriched uranium can be downblended with depleted uranium or natural uranium to turn it into low enriched uranium suitable for use in commercial
nuclear fuel .Uranium-238 from depleted uranium and natural uranium is also used with recycled plutonium from weapons stockpiles for making
mixed oxide fuel (MOX) which is now being redirected to become reactor fuel. This dilution, also called downblending, means that any nation or group that acquired the finished fuel would have to repeat the very expensive and complex enrichment and separation processes before assembling a weapon.Nuclear weapons
Most modern
nuclear weapon s utilize uranium-238 as a "tamper" material (seenuclear weapon design ). A tamper which surrounds a fissile core works to reflect neutrons and addinertia to the compression of theplutonium charge. As such, it increases the efficiency of the weapon and reduces the amount of critical mass required. In the case of a thermonuclear weapon uranium-238can be used to encase the fusion fuel, the high flux of very energeticneutron s from the resulting fusion reaction causes the uranium-238 to fission and addsenergy to the yield of the weapon. Such weapons are referred to as "fission-fusion-fission " weapons after the three consecutive stages of theexplosion .The larger portion of the total explosive yield in this design comes from the final fission stage fueled by uranium-238, producing enormous amounts of radioactive
fission product s. For example, 77% of the 10.4 megaton yield of theIvy Mike thermonuclear test in 1952 came fromfast fission of the depleted uranium tamper. Because depleted uranium has no critical mass, it can be added to thermonuclear bombs in almost unlimited quantity. The 1961 Soviet test ofTsar Bomba produced "only" 50 megatons, over 90% from fusion, because the uranium-238 final stage was replaced with lead. Had uranium-238 been used, the yield could have been as much as 100 megatons, and would have produced fallout equivalent to one third of the global total at that time.Radioactivity and decay
Uranium-238's decay product
uranium-234 has ahalf-life of 246,000 years and so is useful for determining the age ofsediment s that are between 100,000 years and 1,200,000 years in age. [Citation
last = Encyclopædia Britannica
first =
author-link = Encyclopædia Britannica
last2 =
first2 =
author2-link =
title = uranium-234–uranium-238 dating
date = 14 Nov.
year = 2007
url = http://school.eb.com/eb/article-9074426
accessdate = 14 Nov.]The
mean lifetime of uranium-238 is 1.41 × 1017 seconds divided by 0.693 (or multiplied by 1.443), i.e. ca. 2 × 1017 seconds, so 1 mole of uranium-238 emits 3 × 106 alpha particles per second, producing the same number of thorium-234 (Th-234)atom s. In a closed system an equilibrium would be reached, with all amounts except lead-206 and uranium-238 in fixed ratios, in slowly decreasing amounts. The amount of Pb-206 will increase accordingly while U-238 decreases; all steps in the decay chain have this same rate of 3 × 106 decayed particles per second per mole uranium-238.Thorium-234 has a mean lifetime of 3 × 106 seconds, so there is equilibrium if 1 mole of uranium-238 contains 9 × 1012 atoms of thorium-234, which is 1.5 × 10-11 mole (the ratio of the two half-lives). Similarly, in an equilibrium in a closed system the amount of each decay product, except the end product lead, is proportional to its half-life.
As already touched upon above, when starting with pure uranium-238, within a human timescale the equilibrium applies for the first three steps in the decay chain only. Thus, per mole of uranium-238, 3 × 106 times per second one alpha and two beta particles and gamma ray are produced, together 6.7 MeV, a rate of 3 µW. Extrapolated over 2 × 1017 seconds this is 600 GJ, the total energy released in the first three steps in the decay chain
Isotope|element=Uranium
lighter=Uranium-237
heavier=Uranium-239
before=Plutonium-242 (α)
Protactinium-238 "'(β-)
after=Thorium-234 "'(α)References
External links
* [http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov/cgi-bin/sis/search/r?dbs+hsdb:@term+@na+@rel+uranium,+radioactive NLM Hazardous Substances Databank – Uranium, Radioactive]
* [http://www.nucleonica.net:81/wiki/index.php/Help:MCRD#U238 Simulation of U238 using the Monte Carlo method]ee also
*
Depleted uranium
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