A chain reaction in nuclear fission is a self-sustaining process where the splitting of one atomic nucleus triggers further fissions.
Here’s how it works:
- Fission event
- A neutron strikes a heavy nucleus (like uranium-235 or plutonium-239).
- The nucleus splits into two smaller nuclei (fission fragments), releasing energy and more neutrons (usually 2–3).
- Released neutrons
- These neutrons can collide with other nearby nuclei.
- More fissions
- If each fission causes (on average) at least one more fission, the reaction continues.
- Outcomes
- Controlled chain reaction: In a nuclear reactor, control rods and moderators keep the reaction steady, producing heat for electricity.
- Uncontrolled chain reaction: In a nuclear bomb, the reaction grows explosively, releasing enormous energy in a fraction of a second.
The key factor is the neutron economy:
- If each fission produces fewer than one further fission → reaction dies out.
- If exactly one → steady, controlled reaction.
- If more than one → reaction grows rapidly (exponential increase).