General | |
---|---|
Symbol | 238U |
Names | uranium-238, 238U, U-238 |
Protons (Z) | 92 |
Neutrons (N) | 146 |
Nuclide data | |
Natural abundance | 99.2745% |
Half-life (t1/2) | 4.468×109 years |
Isotope mass | 238.05078826 Da |
Spin | 0 |
Parent isotopes | 242Pu (α) 238Pa (β−) |
Decay products | 234Th |
Decay modes | |
Decay mode | Decay energy (MeV) |
alpha decay | 4.267 |
Isotopes of uranium Complete table of nuclides |
Uranium-238 (238
U
or U-238) is the most common isotope of uranium found in nature, with a relative abundance of 99%. Unlike uranium-235, it is non-fissile, which means it cannot sustain a chain reaction in a thermal-neutron reactor. However, it is fissionable by fast neutrons, and is fertile, meaning it can be transmuted to fissile plutonium-239. 238U cannot support a chain reaction because inelastic scattering reduces neutron energy below the range where fast fission of one or more next-generation nuclei is probable. Doppler broadening of 238U's neutron absorption resonances, increasing absorption as fuel temperature increases, is also an essential negative feedback mechanism for reactor control.
Around 99.284% of natural uranium's mass is uranium-238, which has a half-life of 1.41×1017 seconds (4.468×109 years, or 4.468 billion years).[1] Due to its natural abundance and half-life relative to other radioactive elements, 238U produces ~40% of the radioactive heat produced within the Earth.[2] The 238U decay chain contributes six electron anti-neutrinos per 238U nucleus (one per beta decay), resulting in a large detectable geoneutrino signal when decays occur within the Earth.[3] The decay of 238U to daughter isotopes is extensively used in radiometric dating, particularly for material older than approximately 1 million years.
Depleted uranium has an even higher concentration of the 238U isotope, and even low-enriched uranium (LEU), while having a higher proportion of the uranium-235 isotope (in comparison to depleted uranium), is still mostly 238U. Reprocessed uranium is also mainly 238U, with about as much uranium-235 as natural uranium, a comparable proportion of uranium-236, and much smaller amounts of other isotopes of uranium such as uranium-234, uranium-233, and uranium-232.[4]