1 / 33

PHYSICS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS

PHYSICS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS. Nuclear Binding Energy. Nuclear Stability. Weapon Types. Fission. “Little Boy”. “Fat Man”. Weapon Size. Nuclear Weapons & States. The Fission Reaction. 200 MeV/240 ≈ 0.8 MeV/nucleon ≈ 1,000,000 X E chemical. Weapon Types. Fusion.

katina
Télécharger la présentation

PHYSICS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PHYSICS OF NUCLEAR WEAPONS

  2. Nuclear Binding Energy

  3. Nuclear Stability

  4. Weapon Types • Fission

  5. “Little Boy”

  6. “Fat Man”

  7. Weapon Size

  8. Nuclear Weapons & States

  9. The Fission Reaction 200 MeV/240 ≈ 0.8 MeV/nucleon ≈ 1,000,000 X Echemical

  10. Weapon Types • Fusion

  11. Two-Stage Thermonuclear

  12. The Fusion Reaction 17.6 MeV/5 ≈ 3.5 MeV/nucleon ≈ 5 X Efission

  13. Comparison of Fission & Fusion

  14. Paths to Fissionable Material

  15. Nuclear Fuel - Uranium • Ore → Yellow Cake → Enriched

  16. Uranium Deposits

  17. Uranium Deposits

  18. UraniumEnrichment Slightly Enriched (SEU): 0.9%-2.0% Used in Heavy-Water Reactors (HWR) Low-Enriched (LEU): 2%-20% 3%-5% used in Light-Water Reactors (LWR) 12%-19.75% used in Research Reactors Highly Enriched (HEU): >20% ≥ 85% used in weapons primaries ≥ 20% ‘weapons-usable’ in implosion designs 40%-80% used in secondary of two-stage ≥ 20% used in fast neutron reactors 50%-90% used in naval reactors 26.5% in commercial fast reactors

  19. CriticalMass

  20. Critical Masses TABLE A-1 Properties of Nuclear-Explosive Nuclides

  21. Comparison of Energy Content • Fission of U-233: 17.8 kt/kg • Fission of U-235: 17.6 kt/kg • Fission of Pu-239: 17.3 kt/kg • Fusion of pure deuterium: 82.2 kt/kg • Fusion of tritium and deuterium (50/50): 80.4 kt/kg • Fusion of lithium-6 deuteride: 64.0 kt/kg • Fusion of lithium-7 deuteride: • Total conversion of matter to energy: 21.47 Mt/kg • Fission of 1.11 g U-235: 1 megawatt-day (thermal) Broader comparison of Energy Densities

  22. Enrichment Process

  23. Uranium • Isotopic Masses and Abundances • 235U Abundance = 0.720% • 238U Abundance = 99.274% • 235U Mass = 235.04393 (UF6, 349.03433) • 238U Mass = 238.05079 (UF6, 352.04119) • m238/m235 = 1.0086 • = 1.0043 → = 1.0043

  24. UF6

  25. Enrichment Methods • Electromagnetic (Calutron) (≤ 15% enrichment)

  26. Enrichment Methods • Gaseous Diffusion

  27. Enrichment Timeline

  28. Enrichment Methods • Thermal Diffusion

  29. Enrichment Methods • Gas Centrifuge

  30. Centrifuges • Materials: Aluminum → Maraging Steel → Carbon Fiber Composite • 100,000 rpm (balanced, magnetic bearings) • STUXNET

  31. Enrichment Methods • LASER Techniques (AVLIS/MLIS)

  32. Method Comparison

  33. Resources • IAEA/INFCIS • The Atomic Archive • World Nuclear Association • Nuclear Chemistry • Federation of American Scientists • Nuclear Pathways • ALSOS Digital Library • Nuclear Safeguards Education Portal • World Information Service on Energy (WISE) Uranium Project

More Related