Nuclear Fission and Fusion An energetic discussion.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Nuclear Reactions PS 2.6 – 2.7. Fission vs. Fusion Nuclear Reactions occur within a heavy atom (not between 2 or more atoms) ex. uranium 1. Fission: when.
Advertisements

Activities today Bellwork Fission/fusion Discussion
Nuclear Reactions: AN INTRODUCTION TO FISSION & FUSION Farley Visitors Center.
Chapter 25 Nuclear Chemistry 25.3 Fission and Fusion
The equation E = mc 2 is probably the most recognized symbol of physics. This equation tells us that matter and energy are really two forms of the same.
SPS3 Students will distinguish the characteristics and components of radioactivity.
1 Nuclear Radiation Nuclear Fission and Fusion Copyright © 2005 by Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Benjamin Cummings.
Nuclear Fission and Fusion. Nuclear Fission Nuclear Fission: The splitting of a massive nucleus into two smaller nuclei.
Nuclear Chemistry Bravo – 15,000 kilotons. CA Standards.
Fission and Fusion Graphic: Energy and Mass Nuclear changes occur with small but measurable losses of mass. The lost mass is called.
Nuclear Energy.
Unit 2 – The Atom Nuclear Chemistry Fusion and Fission.
Unit 8 Section 2: Nuclear Reactions
Section 10–4: Fission and Fusion
Where did the energy for this come from? The nucleus.
Alpha, Beta, and Gamma Decay
Unit 2 – The Atom Nuclear Chemistry Fusion and Fission.
Binding Energy Per Nucleon The binding energy per nucleon of a nucleus is the binding energy divided by the total number of nucleons in the nucleus Binding.
 Splitting a large nucleus into two smaller nuclei  Usually begins by bombarding (shooting at) nucleus with a neutron  become unstable  Nucleus split.
Nuclear Fusion D-T Fusion Reactions. Nuclear fusion Nuclear fusion occurs when two light nuclei merge to form a heavier nucleus. The binding energy curve.
Nuclear Energy.
Fission and Fusion of Atomic Nuclei. I. Nuclear Fission Fission - The splitting of the nucleus into fragments (division) Uranium-235 is struck by a neutron.
Half-Life and Nuclear Reactions Review We learned that all radioactive atoms eventually decay into stable isotopes. –We did not talk about how long this.
Rāhoroi, 22 Paenga-whāwhā, 2017Rāhoroi, 22 Paenga-whāwhā, 2017
Nuclear Fusion Nuclear Fusion is a process in which two or more smaller nuclei collide and form a new, larger nucleus. In some fusion reactions, a neutron,
Nuclear Reactions Powering the Sun since 4.6 Billion B.C.
ICP 10/2/12 Finish radioactivity. Warmup 1)Which particles are lightest: protons, neutrons, electrons? 2)Which particles are in the nucleus: protons,
For each atom, in its natural state, the number of electrons and the number of protons is equal. This number may or may not be the same as the number.
Section 10–4: Fission and Fusion Physical Science Coach Kelsoe Pages 308–315.
Three Types of Atomic Nuclear Changes
Nuclear Reactions E = mc2
NUCLEAR ENERGY Nuclear energy originates from the splitting of uranium atoms in a process called fission. This energy is used at the power plant to generate.
Nuclear Power By Jordan Brown, Gynter Kotrri, Kevin Rupasinghe Vinay Jayachandiran.
Neeraj Dhiman. DEFINITION Nuclear physics is the field of physics that studies the building blocks and interactions of atomic nuclei.
Fission vs. Fusion. How Does the Sun Provide Energy? What’s Happening?
Nuclear Fission and Fusion Unit 8 – Part B. Nuclear Balance Delicate balance between attractive strong nuclear forces and repulsive electric forces. In.
FISSION vs. FUSION. Fission The splitting of a nucleus into smaller fragments when bombarded with neutrons. One large nucleus of a particular isotope.
7.2 Nuclear Fission and Fusion. Nuclear Fission Why are some elements radioactive? There is an optimal ratio of neutrons to protons 1 : 1 for smaller.
10.4 Fission vs. Fusion Distinguish between fission and fusion.
Introduction to Nuclear Fission and Fusion
Nuclear Reactions: FISSION & FUSION ã Nuclear reactions deal with interactions between the nuclei of atoms ã Both fission and fusion processes deal with.
Nuclear Reactions Fission and Fusion. FISSION The splitting of an atomic nucleus into 2 smaller particles. Animation.
Chapter 10 Fission and Fusion. Fission The splitting of an atomic nucleus into smaller parts. Huge amounts of energy can be produced from a very small.
The Nucleus: Historical Review and general characteristics: M nucleus ~99.97%M atom  nucleus =3  kg/m 3 M proton  M neutron  1840M electron 1u.
Radioactivity Elements that emit particles and energy from their nucleus are radioactive. Some large atoms are unstable and cannot keep their nucleus together.
Energy Nuclear Fusion, Nuclear Fission, Combustion and Solar Radiation.
Nuclear Fusion and Fission
Fission and Fusion are both nuclear reactions that involve the particles in the nucleus of an atom.
Nuclear Fission and Fusion. Nuclear Reactions Nuclear reactions deal with interactions between the nuclei of atoms Both fission and fusion processes deal.
Fission and Fusion They could be described as “Big Bang” and “Bigger Bang”.
 In nuclear fission, large atoms are split apart to form smaller atoms, releasing energy.  Fission also produces new neutrons when an atom splits. 
Physical Science Chapter 18 Section 4. + Nuclear Fission Nuclear fission is the process of splitting a nucleus into several smaller nuclei Fission means.
Fission and Fusion. Nuclear Reactions Two types of nuclear reactions that release energy.  Fission  Fusion.
25.3 Fission and Fusion > 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 25 Nuclear Chemistry 25.1 Nuclear Radiation.
11.3 Nuclear Fusion and Fission. Nuclear Fission The splitting of the nucleus of a large atom into two or more smaller nuclei. Involves releasing tremendous.
Nuclear Energy.
Fusion and Fission.
Nuclear Reactions Fission and Fusion.
Chapter 5 Energy Resources
E = mc2 If you can’t explain it simply, you haven’t learned it well enough. Einstein.
Section 3: Fission and Fusion
Nuclear Chemistry.
Nuclear Energy Fission vs Fusion.
Fission Vs. Fusion.
Unit 11: Nuclear Chemistry
NUCLEAR CHEMISTRY Unit 1 Notes.
Nuclear Reactions Fission and Fusion.
Nuclear Energy.
Nuclear Energy.
Section 3: Fission and Fusion
Presentation transcript:

Nuclear Fission and Fusion An energetic discussion

A little bit on the atom…         Negative electrons Positive protons Neutral neutrons Nucleus

Conservation of Energy/Mass Energy cannot be created or destroyed – it can only change form. KE can become PE or vice versa. E = mc 2 Mass is really a form of energy

Another look at E = mc 2 E = energy (J) m = mass (kg) c = speed of light (3 x 10 8 m/s) Mass is really just another form of energy!

How much energy in a buck? A dollar bill has a mass of 1 gram. G: m = kg; c = 3 x 10 8 m/s; E = ? ER: E = mc 2 C: E = (0.001 kg)(3 x 10 8 m/s) 2 E = 9 x J = 90,000,000,000,000 J E = 12 kilotons of TNT-equivalent

Fiss vs. Fuse Fiss = break down Start with a larger atom and finish with two or more smaller atoms Fuse = build up Start with two smaller atoms and finish with one larger atom

Nuclear Fission Break down of the nucleus or splitting an atom Uranium 235 is hit with a neutron to become Uranium 236 Uranium 236 splits apart to become two smaller atoms and 2 or 3 neutrons The mass of the products is less than the mass of the Uranium 236. The mass that was “lost” became energy.

Uranium 235 Fission

Using one fiss to cause another… A neutron from one fission event hits another Uranium 235 atom Releases more neutrons Enough Uranium 235 atoms = sustained chain reaction Critical mass = 52 kg for U 235

A Chain Reaction

How fission can be used? GOOD –A controlled chain reaction in a reactor used in nuclear power plants to produce electricity. EVIL –An uncontrolled chain reaction is used to create incredibly powerful weapons – the atomic bombs dropped on Japan.

Nuclear Fusion Build up of nucleus or fusing of two nuclei to form one large nucleus Occurs at exceptionally high temperatures – over 100 million degrees Laboratory Experiments –Deuterium and tritium accelerated –Collide to form one new atom with a larger helium nucleus and a neutron is released –Mass of helium and neutron less than mass of deuterium and tritium –Mass that was “lost” became energy

The Sun Proton-proton chain reaction Two hydrogen atoms (protons) fuse together to create deuteron A third hydrogen atom collides with deuteron to create a helium isotope Helium isotopes fuse to make beryllium which breaks down Two protons are released and it starts again.

How fusion can be used? GOOD –A controlled reaction in a reactor used to produce cleaner, inexpensive electricity??? EVIL –A fission bomb starts a fusion chain reaction to create an incredibly powerful weapon – thermonuclear weapons (H-bombs), MUCH more destructive than atomic bombs.

A-bomb vs. H-bomb Atomic bomb (Hiroshima) –Killed over 66,000 people instantly –13 kilotons of TNT-equivalent –2 exploded in warfare Hydrogen bomb –10 megatons (million-tons) of TNT-equivalent –NEVER exploded in warfare –Is it the bomb too big to ever be used???

Sources Fission and Fusion Animations: Fission graphic: astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nucene/u235chn.htmlhttp://hyperphysics.phy- astr.gsu.edu/hbase/nucene/u235chn.html