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  2. Uranium-235 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium-235

    Uranium-235 (235 U or U-235) is an isotope of uranium making up about 0.72% of natural uranium. Unlike the predominant isotope uranium-238, it is fissile, i.e., it can sustain a nuclear chain reaction. It is the only fissile isotope that exists in nature as a primordial nuclide. Uranium-235 has a half-life of 703.8 million years.

  3. Nuclear fission - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fission

    When a uranium nucleus fissions into two daughter nuclei fragments, about 0.1 percent of the mass of the uranium nucleus [15] appears as the fission energy of ~200 MeV. For uranium-235 (total mean fission energy 202.79 MeV [16]), typically ~169 MeV appears as the kinetic energy of the daughter nuclei, which fly apart at about 3% of the speed of ...

  4. Fission products (by element) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fission_products_(by_element)

    Fission product yields by mass for thermal neutron fission of U-235 and Pu-239 (the two typical of current nuclear power reactors) and U-233 (used in the thorium cycle). This page discusses each of the main elements in the mixture of fission products produced by nuclear fission of the common nuclear fuels uranium and plutonium.

  5. Breeder reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Breeder_reactor

    The largest component is the remaining uranium which is around 98.25% uranium-238, 1.1% uranium-235, and 0.65% uranium-236. The U-236 comes from the non-fission capture reaction where U-235 absorbs a neutron but releases only a high energy gamma ray instead of undergoing fission.

  6. Nuclear reactor physics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_reactor_physics

    To improve and enable a chain reaction, natural or low enrichment uranium-fueled reactors must include a neutron moderator that interacts with newly produced fast neutrons from fission events to reduce their kinetic energy from several MeV to thermal energies of less than one eV, making them more likely to induce fission. This is because 235 U ...

  7. Nuclear chain reaction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_chain_reaction

    Since nuclear chain reactions may only require natural materials (such as water and uranium, if the uranium has sufficient amounts of 235 U), it was possible to have these chain reactions occur in the distant past when uranium-235 concentrations were higher than today, and where there was the right combination of materials within the Earth's crust.

  8. Nuclear reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_reactor

    BWRs are characterized by boiling water around the fuel rods in the lower portion of a primary reactor pressure vessel. A boiling water reactor uses 235 U, enriched as uranium dioxide, as its fuel. The fuel is assembled into rods housed in a steel vessel that is submerged in water. The nuclear fission causes the water to boil, generating steam.

  9. Natural nuclear fission reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_nuclear_fission...

    The fission reaction cycles continued for hundreds of thousands of years and ended when the ever-decreasing fissile materials, coupled with the build-up of neutron poisons, no longer could sustain a chain reaction. Fission of uranium normally produces five known isotopes of the fission-product gas xenon; all five have been found trapped in the ...