nukeman said:
Does anyone know what makes a US nuclear war head, which is VERY small, have a yield of around 300 to 500 kilotons, while let's say a new country makes a first nuclear bomb, its the size of a truck, and have small yield of like 20+ kilotons?
These warheads are plutonium, not uranium, and they are fusion-boosted.
Simplest A-bomb you can build is a gun-type, where the fuel is split between a "bullet" and "target". The "bullet" is fired into the "target", the combined mass is over the critical limit, and you get an explosion. This is the type of bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima.
Plutonium bombs are implosion-type. That means that a plutonium sphere is enclosed in depleted uranium shell, and then a spherical explosion from outside compresses the whole thing to the point where plutonium crosses critical mass. These designs can go a bit higher with very good detonation, but not significantly so. Nagasaki was bombed with one of these.
Finally, when you want to get a yield in hundreds of kT, what you do is you boost the bomb with tritium. In modern devices, there is a void in the middle of the plutonium sphere filled with Lithium Hydride compound. Specifically, it's Li-6 and H-2, which is why it's more commonly known as Lithium Deuteride. When Li-6 is struck by neutrons from fission in plutonium, it can decompose into Helium and H-3, or Tritium. Tritium fuses with deuterium to produce another Helium nucleus and a neutron, releasing an absurd amount of energy.
If you need to go past half a megaton, however, you need a lot more lithium deuteride than you can store in the plutonium shell. In that case, primary implosion bomb, usually also boosted, is used to "light" the secondary that consists of a large quantity of lithium deuteride enclosed in uranium. This is known as Teller-Ulam device, and that's your typical H-bomb. Ivy Mike was this type of device at 10MT. So was Soviet Tzar Bomb that yielded 50MT. All of the modern warheads in 1MT+ range are smaller versions of this design.