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4PH1

Fission & Fusion

Radioactivity & Particles · 3 question types

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4PH1 Topics

Properties of Radiation8%
Radioactivity, Uses & Dangers7%
Fission & Fusion6%
  1. Nuclear Energy
  2. Nuclear Fission
  3. Chain Reactions
  4. Nuclear Reactors
  5. Nuclear Fusion
  6. The Conditions for Fusion
  7. Fission vs Fusion Compared

Frequency legend

High (≥14%)
Above avg (10 to 13%)
Average (<10%)

Exam Frequency Analysis

Past paper frequency (2018 to 2024)

This topic accounts for approximately 6% of your exam marks.

stable
Low
Stable6%

Chain reactions, conditions for fusion and energy release compared between fission and fusion.

What "nuclear energy" means

  • An atomic nucleus contains an enormous amount of stored energy, held in place by the strong nuclear force that binds protons and neutrons together
  • Any time the arrangement of nucleons in a nucleus changes (by splitting it apart, joining nuclei together, or letting a nucleus decay), some of that stored energy is released
  • The three ways to release energy from the nucleus are:
    • Nuclear fission: one large unstable nucleus splits into two smaller nuclei
    • Nuclear fusion: two light nuclei join to form one heavier nucleus
    • Radioactive decay: an unstable nucleus emits an alpha, beta or gamma particle and changes into another nucleus (covered in topics 19 and 20)
  • The amounts of energy involved per reaction are millions of times larger than for chemical reactions (combustion, batteries, food). Burning a single hydrogen atom in oxygen releases about 10⁻¹⁸ J; fusing a single hydrogen atom releases roughly 4 million times more

Where nuclear energy is used

  • Fission is the basis of every working nuclear power station on Earth, and of nuclear weapons
  • Fusion is what powers the Sun and all other stars. Fusion is also being developed as a future energy source on Earth, but no commercial fusion power station exists yet
  • Radioactive decay is used in medical tracers, smoke detectors, thickness gauging, and (on a planetary scale) to keep the Earth's interior hot enough to drive plate tectonics

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Nuclear Fission