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WHAT
IS A FAST REACTOR?
Nuclear reactors produce energy by a process called fission.
Fission occurs when an atom of fissile material is struck
by a neutron, becomes unstable and splits, producing fission
fragments and high-energy neutrons. In an operating reactor,
one of these neutrons will strike another fissile atom to
maintain a steady chain reaction. Fission also releases heat,
which is used to produce steam to spin an electrical generator.
Reactors
can be classified according to the energy of the neutrons
that cause fission. Present day commercial power reactors
are called "thermal" reactors because the neutrons
have been slowed to thermal energy using a "moderator"
- usually water. By contrast, a "fast" reactor uses
neutrons of much higher energy to cause fission. A fast reactor
does not have a moderator.
The only
fissile material found in nature is uranium-235, which makes
up less than 1 percent of natural uranium. While some fissile
plutonium is produced in a thermal reactor, it is not enough
to replace the uranium-235 used. In a fast reactor, however,
enough plutonium can be produced to more than make up for
the uranium-235 used. In addition, many of the long-lived
actinides that can not be fissioned in a thermal reactor can
be burned in a fast reactor, so the fast reactor is capable
of destroying the major source of long-lived radiotoxicity
in spent fuel. Thus, the fast reactor can create new fuel
and destroy long-lived nuclear waste while it produces electricity.
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