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Fission uranium bond yield
Fission uranium bond yield














A 6 percent yield is a high yield, and 137Cs is a favored fission product.

fission uranium bond yield

You can see from that table that 137Cs has about a 6.1 percent yield, meaning that for every 100 fission events a bit more than six, on average, yield 137Cs as one fission product. The table below the curve shows some of the expected fission products, arranged from favored fission products to less likely products.īy "favored" I mean those whose fission yields are relatively high. Look at the red curve for the fission of 235U, and you can see the favored mass distribution. The Wikipedia description of the fission process and the fission product yield curve is helpful. You can find this mass distribution on several internet sites. The first peak expectedly will lie between about mass numbers 90 and 100, and the second peak will fall between about mass numbers 130 and 140. The preferred mass distribution of the products is actually bimodal-i.e., if you plot the yields of fission products of given masses versus mass number, you will generate a curve with two peaks. The two major fragments, which we refer to as fission products, may have a wide spectrum of nuclear masses, characterized by the fact that the fission process does not favor an equal mass distribution between the two fragments. When the 235U captures a neutron, the excitation energy associated with the capture is sufficient to cause the compound nucleus, 236U, to break (fission) into two major fragments, usually accompanied by a few neutrons and some gamma radiation.

#Fission uranium bond yield series

The only significance the actinium series that you mention has is that the parent nuclide in the series is 235U, the uranium isotope relied on in thermal fission reactors. Most reactors in the world are fueled with uranium, with 235U being the most common isotope associated with most of the fission events induced by low-energy neutrons, so-called thermal neutrons.

fission uranium bond yield

There are indeed many hundreds of possible different fission products produced as nuclear fuel undergoes the fission process in nuclear reactors.














Fission uranium bond yield