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Paperback Post Shutdown Decay Heat Removal in Fast Reactors Book

ISBN: 1916706789

ISBN13: 9781916706781

Post Shutdown Decay Heat Removal in Fast Reactors

In a nuclear reactor, most of the nuclear fission energy appears as heat, which is

generally utilized to produce steam for the generation of electricity. The final step is

similar to that used in fossil-fueled power plant. Coming to the basics of nuclear

energy, the mass of a nucleus is always less than the mass of the constituent nucleons.

The difference is known as mass defect. The energy equivalent of the mass defect is

called the binding energy of the nucleus. This is the energy required to break apart the

nucleus into its constituent nucleons. The theory of relativity explains the relation

between the mass defect and the binding energy as E = m х 931.3 where E is in MeV

and m is the mass in atomic mass units. The binding energy per nucleon is relatively

low for nuclei of small mass number but increases, with increasing mass number to a

broad maximum at about 8 MeV in the mass region of roughly 50 to 75; subsequently

the binding energy per nucleon decreases steadily. The nucleus of lower binding

energy per nucleon is less stable and is converted into others of higher binding

energy, i.e., more stable accompanied by a release of energy. Hence, the energy can

be obtained by combination (or fusion) of the light nuclei or by splitting (or fission) of

heavy nuclei.

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