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fissiele

Fissile, also referred to as fissile material in nuclear science, describes nuclides that can undergo fission and sustain a chain reaction when absorbing a neutron, especially a slow or thermal neutron. Fissile isotopes release multiple neutrons per fission, enabling a self-sustaining process under appropriate conditions such as a moderated reactor core or a critical assembly.

Common fissile isotopes include Uranium-235, Uranium-233, and Plutonium-239, along with Plutonium-241. U-235 occurs naturally in uranium

To use fissile material in reactors or weapons, the isotope concentration is controlled. Natural uranium can

In nuclear power, fissile fuel forms a core where moderated neutrons maintain the chain reaction; safety concerns

Fissile materials are central to energy production and national security, and ongoing research aims to improve

ore
at
about
0.7%
abundance,
while
U-233
is
bred
from
thorium;
Pu-239
and
Pu-241
are
produced
in
reactors
from
U-238.
Fissile
materials
differ
from
fertile
materials;
fertile
like
U-238
or
Th-232
require
conversion
in
a
reactor
to
become
fissile.
be
used
after
enrichment
to
increase
U-235;
low-enriched
uranium
(<5%
U-235)
is
common
for
commercial
reactors,
while
highly
enriched
uranium
(>20%
U-235,
including
weapons-grade
levels)
is
subject
to
strict
controls.
include
criticality
risks
and
radiological
hazards.
Handling
and
transport
require
licensed
facilities
and
safeguards;
international
regimes
such
as
the
IAEA
regulate
nonproliferation
and
verification.
reactor
safety,
fuel
economics,
and
proliferation
resistance.