A bomb powered by nuclear fission relies on the fissionable properties of elements such as uranium-235 and plutonium-239. Fuel usually must be enriched to 90% before it can be used in a nuclear weapon.
Uranium is a very dense metal used in nuclear energy reactors and in nuclear fission bombs. It occurs naturally in rocks mostly as the isotope U-238 in concentrations of 2-4 parts per million. The radioactive decay of uranium inside the Earth's core at 0.1 watts per ton provides the main source of internal heat in our planet, which causes convection and drift. Because uranium is 18.7 times as dense as water and the heaviest of all naturally-occuring elements, it is also used in the keels of yachts and as counterweights in aircraft control surfaces (rudders and elevators).
The isotope of uranium used in nuclear fission reactions is U-235, which occurs in proportions of 0.7% in nature. After mining of the uranium ore, it is ground up and treated with acid to dissolve the uranium. The uranium is then recovered from the solution.
Alternately, uranium can be mined using a method called in situ leaching (ISL), in which it is dissolved from the matrix in its original position (in situ) and then pumped to the surface.
The end product of these two extraction processes is uranium oxide concentrate (U3O8), commonly known as "yellowcake." This is the raw form in which uranium is sold. It is still not usable as a fissionable energy source.
The next step is to convert the uranium oxide into uranium hexafluoride gas (UF6), referred to in the industry as "hex." This gas allows uranium to be enriched. (Iran's conversion of uranium oxide into UF6 has caused great controversy.)
Enrichment increases the concentration of uranium-235 from the natural level of 0.7% to 3-4% for nuclear energy reactors and 90% for nuclear weapons. Methods of enrichment include:
After enrichment, the concentrated UF6 is converted into UO2 and made into fuel pellets. The ceramic pellets are encased in metal tubes to form uranium fuel rods for nuclear reactors or processed for nuclear weaponry.
Plutonium is a synthetic element made from uranium. The plutonium metal has a silvery appearance and tarnishes yellow when oxidized. The element is chemically reactive. A large piece of plutonium will feel warm due to the energy given off in alpha decay. (It would be dangerous to be near radioactive plutonium at any time.) If the sample is large enough, plutonium can produce enough heat to boil water.
One kilogram of plutonium results in an explosion equivalent to 20,000 tons of chemical explosive. Every year, twenty thousand kilograms of plutonium are produced by nuclear reactors throughout the world. As of 1982, experts estimate that 300,000 kg of plutonium exist worldwide.
Plutonium is a very hazardous radioactive element. Special equipment and handling procedures must be employed when processing plutonium. Handlers must be very careful to prevent the unintentional formation of a critical mass. Liquid plutonium is more likely to go cortical than plutonium in solid state.
Plutonium exists in trace quantities in naturally occurring uranium ore, but for purposes of weapons production it is produces in the laboratory by the bombardment of uranium-238 (natural uranium) with neutrons. The reaction occurs in two steps with two beta decays, as depicted below.
The breeding ratio is the amount of fissile plutonium-239 produced divided by the amount of fissionable fuel (such as U-235) used to produce it. In the liquid-metal, fast-breeder reactor (LMFBR) design, the target breeding ratio is 1.4. Most breeding ratios come out around 1.2.
The doubling time is the time required for a breeder reactor to produce enough material to fuel a second reactor. The doubling times of present design plans are around 10 years, meaning a reactor could use the heat of the reaction to produce energy for 10 years, and at the end of that period have enough fuel to furnish another reactor for 10 years.
Schematic design of a Liquid Metal Fast Breeder Reactor (LMFBR)
"...Nuclear energy is also depletable. Eventually your run out of uranium, unless you do plutonium breeders, and then you've got a whole plutonium economy that has nuclear weapons materials all over the place." - listen
Reverend Robert Moore, Executive Director, Coalition for Peace Action