Calculating Nuclear Fusion Energy

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on calculating the energy released from the fusion of tritium and deuterium, with an expected value of approximately 17.58 MeV. The initial calculation yielded a result of about 18.1 MeV due to using the atomic mass of tritium instead of the nucleus mass. After clarification, the user corrected the mass values and sought confirmation on the expected energy release. Various sources were referenced to support the calculations and findings. The conversation highlights the importance of using accurate mass values in nuclear fusion energy calculations.
frazzle96
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Hi,

I'm doing some coursework on nuclear fusion, and am trying to calculate the energy released by fusing a tritium and a deuterium atom together. I used the equation:

( Σ mass (reactants) - Σ mass (products) ) x 931.5 MeV/amu = Binding energy.

and Deuterium + Tritium = Helium + neutron

I know the value should be about 17.58 MeV, however when I did it it came out as about 18.1.

The values I used are Triton: 3.0160492u , Deuteron: 2.0135532u , Helium nucleus: 4.0015061u and a neutron: 1.0086649u.

Thanks in advance

Frazer
 
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This is not advanced physics. Moving thread.

Anyway, what source is telling you that the answer should be 17.58 MeV?
 
Sorry, posted it in the wrong place and couldn't figure out how to delete it, turns out I was using the tritium atomic mass rather than the mass of the nucleus so sorted now.

And these sources:

http://www.kutl.kyushu-u.ac.jp/seminar/MicroWorld3_E/3Part3_E/3P34_E/nuclear_fusion_E.htm

https://www.euronuclear.org/info/encyclopedia/f/fusion.htm

http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked...ion-reactions-for-controlled-power-generation

etc.
 
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