home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- GENERAL REACTOR DESIGN
-
- Nuclear Reactors are powered by fission. Fission was first discovered by Hahn
- and Strassmann in Germany by bombarding the uranium nucleaus with neutrons. It
- would follow that if there were neutrons among the products of fission, then
- they could produce additional fissions and a chain-reaction might result.
- Fermi, the leading nuclear physicist of the time decided to look into the
- matter. It was found (by Bohr & Wheeler) that U235 produced fission more
- readily than U238. The hard part in getting the pile to work is what is
- called the reproductive factor. A chain reaction can only occur if the number
- of neutrons emmited in fission is greater than one. If the number was one,
- then no chain reaction would occur. If two were emitted, then a geometric
- progression could be created that would lead to a "chain-reaction". Now this
- is complicated by the fact that when the neutrons leave the nucleus, they are
- moving very fast. In order to promote fission, it is necessary to have slow
- moving neutrons. So we get back to the hard part: It is necessary to have a
- reproductive factor that after slowing, is greater than one. Obviously, the
- larger the reproductive factor, the larger the reaction (very large
- reproduction factors will cause a rather large boom). To complicate matters,
- the "free path" of the neutron, or the average distance it travels before
- being absorbed by the nucleus, is long and if you can't keep the neutron from
- escaping the uranium, then no reaction. To overcome the problem, a lattice of
- uranium cells could be "piled" on top of one another in order to promote the
- reaction. (Hence: Chain-Reacting Pile) The pile consists of slugs of pure
- Uranium arranged in a space lattice embedded in a matrix of graphite. The
- slugs could be referred to as "fuel rods". The Graphite is used to slow the
- nuetrons down, and something like boron steel (control rods) is capable of
- being inserted to help control the neutron flux. Boron steel & cadmium both
- absorb neutrons.
-
- The amount of energy that any neutron gets in the reaction is a matter of
- chance, and a due to technical problems, the game of slowing down and catching
- neutrons can be very tricky. If the neutron is moving too fast to be captured
- by the uranium nucleus, then it just bounces off in what is known as an
- "inelastic collision". In this event essentially no speed is lost. But if
- the neutron strikes a material of small atomic weight, such as carbon
- (graphite), then an "elastic colision" occurs where the graphite particle
- absorbs energy, and the neutron slows down. It takes about 15 collisions with
- carbon to slow the neutron down by a factor of 10. This would mean that about
- 110 such collisions are needed in order to bring a 1,000,000-volt neutron down
- to "thermal energy" or about 1/40 of a volt.
-
- The "collision cross section" for cadmium is about 10E-24 centimeters, or one
- barn. This is very large in atomic terms and makes hitting the cadmium as
- easy as "hitting a barn". The collision cross section for carbon is only
- about one five thousandths of a barn. Now the De Broglie wavelength of a
- particle gets bigger as its speed gets smaller, so as the neutron gets
- smaller, it sort of spreads out and has a greater chance of hitting the
- nuclei. (or one might say that its capture cross section gets larger as its
- velocity decreases. Of course nuetrons can get lost, be absorbed by the
- carbon, or mutate the uranium into another isotope (resonance absorbsion). The
- losses must be taken into consideration when calculating the reproductive
- factor. The proportions of carbon and uranium must be precisely controlled in
- order to get a chain reaction.
-
- If you have a homogenous mixture, then on the average every second nuclei will
- be a uranium one and the neutrons will never slow down enough and be lost due
- to reasonance absorbtion. To get around this, a "lumpy" mixture is used in
- the pile. A neutron has to get through a lump of carbon (slowing it down) and
- if one doesn't hit enough carbon, it will mutate only the outer layer of the
- U235 lump, leaving the rest O.K.
-
- Anyway, take a lattice cell (cube) of 8.25 inches per side. (composed of U
- metal and UO2 imbedded in graphite. Pile them in approximately a flattened
- rotational ellipsoid with a polar radius of 121 inches, and an equatorial
- radius of 153 inches. Support the bugger with a wooden frame, (oh, you'll need
- about six tons for this, a small pile. Larger piles yield larger reproduction
- factors.) and you have it. You should have a reproduction factor of about
- 1.067. Each metal lump should weigh about six lbs. (available from
- Westinghouse, Metal Hydrides, and Ames) Lumps of about seven or eight pounds
- would give a better reprodution factor, but would increase the amount of U
- metal needed. Each lump UO2 should weigh about 4.71 lbs. Diferent piles can
- be mixed together, but put your best materials near the middle. Layer the
- graphite bearing Uranium alternating it with graphite. Ordinary wood working
- machines can be used to to shape & smooth the graphite to specs. (Graphite can
- be obtained from Nat'l Carbon, Speer Graphite, U.S. Graphite, I would suggest
- about 14 tons, or 40,000 bricks) In order to press the uranium dioxide lumps,
- any good hydrolic press will do. Make sure that the die is made from a good
- quality tool steel, hardened and polished. Stearic acid can be used as a
- lubricant (0.5% diluted in acetone) with ethylene glycol added as a wetting
- agent. You'll need about 150 to 175lbs of pressure. As long as you are
- careful you can use different forms of uranium and graphite and still get a
- good pile. I'd suggest surrounding the entire thing with a neutron absorbing
- material such as cadmium. Once you get it up, pull out all of the control rods
- but one (one is all you need on a small pile anyway). Remove the last one
- slowly till it is about halfway out. check your neutron detectors and pull it
- out slowly (a geometric reaction starts slow, buts will pick up speed), until
- you get the output that you wish.
-
-