Uranium 235 or Plutonium 239: Which is Better for Atomic Bombs?

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Uranium-235 (U-235) and Plutonium-239 (Pu-239) are both viable materials for atomic bombs, each with distinct advantages and challenges. Pu-239 can be produced from nuclear reactor waste and is easier to chemically reprocess, but its bomb design requires precise implosion techniques due to contamination with Pu-240, which complicates the chain reaction. U-234, a minor isotope in natural uranium, is not suitable for bomb-making due to its low abundance and poor fission properties. The discussion highlights the complexities of bomb design, particularly the need for uniform explosive balance in plutonium bombs. Ultimately, U-235 is favored for its effectiveness in nuclear weapons.
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pros and cons of using uranium 235 or plutonium 239 in an atomic bomb?
 
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Plutonium bombs have the advantage that Pu-239 is available because it is made in the waste product of nuclear reactors and can easily be chemically reprocessed. However, the plutonium bomb design and construction is extremely difficult and precise. Plutonium is often contaminated by Pu-240, which is very reactive and decays before the chain reaction goes to completion. So to prevent this from happening, plutonium bombs use implosion. Explosives are detonated on all sides of a mass of Pu to compress it into a small "blob" where the three neutrons emitted can hit other Pu-239 atoms quickly and continue the chain reaction. But the explosions must be entirely balanced and uniform to implode the Pu properly and successfully detonate a Plutonium bomb.
 
oops i meant to say uranium 234 and plutonium 239. also what is the costs of each.
 
brandy said:
oops i meant to say uranium 234

:rolleyes: what are you supposed to do with U-234 ?
 
vanesch said:
:rolleyes: what are you supposed to do with U-234 ?


put it in an atomic bomb?
what do u mean?
 
brandy said:
put it in an atomic bomb?
what do u mean?

U 234 doesn't go bang - it's a relatively innocuous alpha emitter.
 
Not to mention the fact that U-234 is 0.0055% of natural uranium. This means take 1000 kg of pure uranium, and only 55 grams of it is U-234. You're better off making a bomb out of the U235 you have. Plus it has a horrible fission cross section http://wwwndc.tokai-sc.jaea.go.jp/cgi-bin/Tab80WWW.cgi?/data/JENDL/JENDL-3.3prc/intern/U234.intern .
 
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yes i meant to say u-235.
 
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brandy said:
yes i meant to say u-235.

Which is what you said initially...:wink:
 
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