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Page Title: Fertile Material
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Fissionable  Material
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Nuclear Physics and Reactor Theory Volume 1 of 2
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Binding  Energy  Per  Nucleon  (BE/A)

NUCLEAR FISSION DOE-HDBK-1019/1-93 Atomic and Nuclear Physics Fertile  Material All of the neutron absorption reactions that do not result in fission lead to the production of new nuclides through the process known as transmutation.  These nuclides can, in turn, be transmuted again or may undergo radioactive decay to produce still different nuclides.  The nuclides that are produced by this process are referred to as transmutation products.  Because several of the fissile nuclides do not exist in nature, they can only be produced by nuclear reactions (transmutation). The target nuclei for such reactions are said to be fertile.  Fertile materials are materials that can undergo transmutation to become fissile materials.  Figure 19 traces the transmutation mechanism by   which   two   fertile   nuclides,   thorium-232   and   uranium-238,   produce   uranium-233   and plutonium-239, respectively. Figure 19    Conversion of Fertile Nuclides to Fissile Nuclides If a reactor contains fertile material in addition to its fissile fuel, some new fuel will be produced as  the  original  fuel  is  burned  up.    This  is  called  conversion.    Reactors  that  are  specifically designed to produce fissionable fuel are called "breeder" reactors.   In such reactors, the amount of fissionable fuel produced is greater than the amount of fuel burnup.   If less fuel is produced than used, the process is called conversion, and the reactor is termed a "converter." NP-01 Page 52 Rev. 0

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