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Making Helium-3


Cryptonix

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Hello, Im just trying to invent how to make Helium-3 from O2.

This is my first prototype of nuclear reaction:

 

16O8---Nr--->12O5---t 1/2--->12C6---Nr--->8C2---t 1/2--->6Be2---Nr--->5Be1---t 1/2--->4Li1---t 1/2--->3He1

 

Up index - isotope number

Down index - neutron number

Nr - neutron radiation (detaches neutrons from core)

t 1/2 - Half-Time

 

Opinions ?

Edited by Cryptonix
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Yes,

You also need to realise that, in general, it's impossible to write down a set of equations and say that they will happen just because you want them to.

 

It's just about possible to spall off neutrons but it's a rare event compared to capture.

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I got new idea:

 

2H2O---electrolysis--->O2 + 2H2---Nr--->4H3---t 1/2--->3H2---t 1/2--->3He1

 

Up left index - isotope number

Up right index - neutron number

Nr - neutron radiation (1H will capture three neutrons from neutron radiation and make 4H3).

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Sorry, I seem not to have made myself clear. the word "realise" doesn't only mean "to make real", it also means to understand".

 

You still need to understand that, in general, it's impossible to write down a set of equations and say that they will happen just because you want them to

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Usual Hydrogen to deuterium to tritium via neutron capture does work, but deuterium's section for neutron capture is very small.

3H converts to 3He spontaneously, yes.

 

3H is normally produced from lithium:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tritium#Production

 

And: why should someone want to produce 3He by a nuclear reaction? It's a naturally occurring nuclide, and it separates spontaneously from 4He at 2K. Just cool enough, get one layer on top of the other, how easy.

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The terrestrial proportion of 3He is 1.37ppm

http://www.webelements.com/helium/isotopes.html

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium

so for a significant thickness, the container's top would better be very narrow.

 

That's a tiny proportion, but producing 3He is seriously difficult, especially because it swallows neutrons passing by - these neutrons used to produce it. It also takes patience, since the decay of 3H is typically on the route.

 

Some people suggest to consume 3He in fusion reactors instead of the unavailable 3H, but:

- Tokamaks are nowhere near using 3He, which is hugely more difficult than 3H

- 3He could regenerate 3H in blankets there, but it needs one neutron per tritium just as lithium does, and only one neutron is created per consumed tritium... Neutron multipliers may work some day, but maybe not, and these would pollute as much as a uranium reactor does. Yuk.

- These same people add: no 3He on Earth, but let's extract it from Moon's regolith, where it is hypothesized to be... Two impossibilities and a hypothesis, engineering works better on stronger bases.

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Then it's only a matter of wording. By "decay" one usually understands "through radioactivity".

 

Humans have some means to act on nuclides, typically by particle bombardment, which is less inefficient than X-rays. It is done at research labs, for instance to produce energetic neutrons in big amounts from a proton beam and investigate the effect of neutrons in materials. Or in particle colliders, usually for other purposes.

 

Though, the faint probability to hit a nucleus, and the big chances to have accelerated a particle for no result, mean that nuclide reactions provoqued that way are not usable on commercial scale - if this is your intention. For instance, a 100MeV proton beam on a target of natural lithium makes neutrons, triton, alphas and the like. At big energy and money expenses for very little produced amounts, and technology won't improves that radically.

 

Up to now, the only action from humans on nuclei on a big scale is through neutrons. They require no minimum energy to meet a nucleus and are produced abundently by uranium and plutonium fission. So to say all the man-made nuclides (in significant amounts) result from neutron irradiation at nuclear reactors.

 

If someone could find a way, sensible economically, to produce some radio-nuclides without the special nuclear reactors, that would be extremely useful. Some nuclides are wanted by medicine and are produced by 3 to 6 reactors worldwide; some of these reactors are dangerous ruins, and when one stops, worldwide supply is short. The day-lived nuclides must be transported across the planet to the hospitals before decaying. Not satisfactory at all.

 

One other nice task, as soon as someone finds how to command radioactivity, would be to exploit the decay energy of 40K. Abundent in the Oceans, no radioactive waste... Except that no-one has found a way.

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