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Date: 30-3-2017
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Resonance Escape Probability, (p)
After increasing in number as a result of some fast fissions, the neutrons continue to diffuse through the reactor. As the neutrons move they collide with nuclei of fuel and non-fuel material and moderator in the reactor losing part of their energy in each collision and slowing down. While they are slowing down through the resonance region of uranium-238, which extends from about 6 eV to 200 eV, there is a chance that some neutrons will be captured. The probability that a neutron will not be absorbed by a resonance peak is called the resonance escape probability. The resonance escape probability (p) is defined as the ratio of the number of neutrons that reach thermal energies to the number of fast neutrons that start to slow down. This ratio is shown below.
The value of the resonance escape probability is determined largely by the fuel-moderator arrangement and the amount of enrichment of uranium-235 (if any is used). To undergo resonance absorption, a neutron must pass close enough to a uranium-238 nucleus to be absorbed while slowing down. In a homogeneous reactor the neutron does its slowing down in the region of the fuel nuclei, and this condition is easily met. This means that a neutron has a high probability of being absorbed by uranium-238 while slowing down; therefore, its escape probability is lower. In a heterogeneous reactor, however, the neutron slows down in the moderator where there are no atoms of uranium-238 present. Therefore, it has a low probability of undergoing resonance absorption, and its escape probability is higher.
The value of the resonance escape probability is not significantly affected by pressure or poison concentration. In water moderated, low uranium-235 enrichment reactors, raising the temperature of the fuel will raise the resonance absorption in uranium-238 due to the doppler effect (an apparent broadening of the normally narrow resonance peaks due to thermal motion of nuclei). The increase in resonance absorption lowers the resonance escape probability, and the fuel temperature coefficient for resonance escape is negative (explained in detail later). The temperature coefficient of resonance escape probability for the moderator temperature is also negative. As water temperature increases, water density decreases. The decrease in water density allows more resonance energy neutrons to enter the fuel and be absorbed. The value of the resonance escape probability is always slightly less than one (normally 0.95 to 0.99).
The product of the fast fission factor and the resonance escape probability (εp) is the ratio of the number of fast neutrons that survive slowing down (thermalization) compared to the number of fast neutrons originally starting the generation.
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علامات بسيطة في جسدك قد تنذر بمرض "قاتل"
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أول صور ثلاثية الأبعاد للغدة الزعترية البشرية
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وفد كلية الزراعة في جامعة كربلاء يشيد بمشروع الحزام الأخضر
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