Everything about Thermal Neutron totally explained
The
neutron temperature, also called the
neutron energy, indicates a
free neutron's kinetic energy, usually given in
electron volts. The term
temperature is used, since hot, thermal and cold neutrons are
moderated in a medium with a certain temperature. The neutron energy distribution is then adopted to the
Maxwellian distribution known for thermal motion. Qualitatively, the higher the temperature, the higher is the
kinetic energy of the free neutron. Kinetic energy,
speed and
wavelength of the neutron are related through the
De Broglie relation.
Neutron energy distribution ranges
Moderated and other, non-thermal neutron energy distributions or ranges are listed in the table below:
- Fast neutrons have an energy greater than 1 eV, 0.1 MeV or approximately 1 MeV, depending on the definition.
- Slow neutrons have an energy less than 1 eV.
- Epithermal neutrons have an energy from 0.025 to 1 eV.
- Hot neutrons have an energy of about .2 eV.
- Thermal neutrons have an energy of about 0.025 eV.
- Cold neutrons have an energy from 5x10-5 eV to 0.025 eV.
- Very cold neutrons have an energy from 3x10-7 eV to 5x10-5 eV.
- Ultra cold neutrons have an energy less than 3x10-7 eV.
- Continuum region neutrons have an energy from 0.01 MeV to 25 MeV.
- Resonance region neutrons have an energy from 1 eV to 0.01 MeV.
- Low energy region neutrons have an energy less than 1 eV.
Fast neutrons
A
fast neutron is a free neutron with a kinetic energy level close to 1
MeV (100
TJ/
kg), hence a speed of 14,000
km/
s. They are named
fast neutrons to distinguish them from lower-energy thermal neutrons, and high-energy neutrons produced in cosmic showers or accelerators. Fast neutrons are produced by nuclear processes such as
nuclear fission.
Neutrons from
fusion reactions are usually considerably more energetic than 1 MeV; the extreme case is
deuterium-
tritium fusion which produces 14.1 MeV neutrons (1400 TJ/kg, moving at 52,000 km/s, 17.3% of the
speed of light) that can easily fission
uranium-238 and other non-
fissile actinides.
Fast neutrons can be made into thermal neutrons via a process called moderation. This is done with a
neutron moderator. In reactors, typically
heavy water,
light water, or
graphite are used to moderate neutrons.
Thermal neutrons
A
thermal neutron is a free neutron with a kinetic energy of about 0.025
eV (approx. 4.0e-21
J; 2.4 MJ/kg, hence a speed of 2.2 km/s)
which is the most probable energy at a temperature of 290 K (17 °C or 62°F), the
mode (statistics) of the
Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution for this temperature.
The most probable energy is different from the
mean (statistics) energy, which as in any Maxwell–Boltzmann distribution is 50% greater than the mode.
After a number of collisions with nuclei (
scattering) in a medium (
neutron moderator) at this temperature,
neutrons arrive at about this energy level, provided that they're not absorbed.
Thermal neutrons have a different and often much larger effective
neutron absorption cross-section for a given
nuclide than fast neutrons, and can therefore often be absorbed more easily by an
atomic nucleus, creating a heavier - and often
unstable -
isotope of the
chemical element as a result. (
neutron activation)
Fast reactor and thermal reactor compared
Most
fission reactors are
thermal reactors that use a
neutron moderator to slow down, or
thermalize the neutrons produced by
nuclear fission. This isn't primarily to increase the fission cross section for
fissile nuclei such as
uranium-235 or
plutonium-239; it's because
uranium-238 has a much lower capture cross section for thermal neutrons, allowing more neutrons to cause fission of fissile nuclei and continue the chain reaction, rather than be captured by
238U.
Fast reactors use unmoderated fast neutrons to sustain the reaction. However, this requires a higher concentration of
fissile material at start-up. Once started, the high
neutron flux in the reactor causes the
fertile uranium-238 to capture a neutron and
transmute into
plutonium-239 which in-turn is
fissile. In this way, excepting initial reactor start-up, a fast reactor can be loaded with unenriched fertile
uranium-238,
uranium-234 or
thorium-232 which are transmuted to "breed" more fissile fuel than the reactor consumes. When used in this configuration, the reactor is referred to as a
fast breeder reactor. Due to the increased technical complexity of using a working fluid that doesn't moderate neutrons (inert gas or liquid metal) these reactors are generally reserved for research, production of fissile material for use in
nuclear weapons, or transmutation of existing highly radioactive nuclear waste into less radioactive isotopes for safe disposal; not for commercial power generation.
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