I have a question about fusion

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bill nye scienceguy!
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So here it is:

What is the energy released when one mole of deterium(?) undergoes complete fusion? Oh, here's the equation:

H + H = He

i don't know how to post but its 2,1 for both hydrogen isotopes and then 4,2 for the helium duh i know but i don't want confusion.

cheers ro><ors!


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Fusion can't go that way because there is nowhere for the energy to go.
The most common fusion process is
^2 H + ^3 H \rightarrow ^4 He + n.
That is deutron + tritium --> helium + neutron.
If you want, I can calculate one mole of d on one mole of t.
 
U mean 2 nuclei of deuterium can't fuse into an alpha particle...? What laws of physics forbid that?

Daniel.
 
Billnye: The mass difference between d+t and He + n is 17.59 MeV.
Multiplying this by Avagadro's number (for one mole), and converting to Joules,
I get (Check my arithmetic.) 1.7 X 10^12 Joules released.
I guess that would be written as 1.7 tJ. That's more than I make in a year.
 
dextercioby: You can't conserve both energy and momentum in d+d--> He.
 
d + d --> 3He + n + 3.25 MeV (~50%)

d + d --> t + p + 4.0 MeV (~50%)
 

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