Difference between revisions of "Reprocessing"

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Usually the Plutonium will be used for the construction of nuclear bombs or as an addition for the production of so called MOX (mixed oxides) fuel elements.<ref name="umweltruf">"Gundremmingen drittschlimmster Atommüllschieber in die Asse", source: http://www.umweltruf.de/news/111/news0.php3?nummer=28706, July 30, 2009</ref>
 
Usually the Plutonium will be used for the construction of nuclear bombs or as an addition for the production of so called MOX (mixed oxides) fuel elements.<ref name="umweltruf">"Gundremmingen drittschlimmster Atommüllschieber in die Asse", source: http://www.umweltruf.de/news/111/news0.php3?nummer=28706, July 30, 2009</ref>
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== Materials ==
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* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6RaQFjjkAo Recycling Nuclear Fuel = Plutonium Reprocessing] ''- video of a lecture with the Canadian scientist Gordon Edwards in Finland in January 2010''
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<small><small>{{Footnotes}}</small></small>
  
  
 
[[Category: Technology]]
 
[[Category: Technology]]

Revision as of 23:48, 24 April 2010

The term "Reprocessing Unit" is misleading as no waste will be recycled there. Basically Plutonium will be produced in such a facility. For this the spent fuel (originally the fuel consists of Uranium-235 and Uranium-238) will be transformed into three main fractions:

  1. remaining Uranium (ca. 95 %),
  2. Plutonium (ca. 1 %; created not until before operation in the reactor), and
  3. fission products (ca. 4 %; Caesium-137, Strontium-90, Technetium-99, Iodine-129 etc. - all created not until before operation in the reactor).[1]

Usually the Plutonium will be used for the construction of nuclear bombs or as an addition for the production of so called MOX (mixed oxides) fuel elements.[1]


Materials


  1. 1.0 1.1 "Gundremmingen drittschlimmster Atommüllschieber in die Asse", source: http://www.umweltruf.de/news/111/news0.php3?nummer=28706, July 30, 2009