Nuclear magnetic resonance Deuterium oxide is used in
nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy when using water as a solvent if the
nuclide of interest is hydrogen. This is because the signal from light-water (HO) solvent molecules would overwhelm the signal from the molecule of interest dissolved in it. Deuterium has a different
magnetic moment and therefore does not contribute to the
H-NMR signal at the hydrogen-1 resonance frequency. For some experiments, it may be desirable to identify the labile hydrogens on a compound, that is hydrogens that can easily exchange away as H ions on some positions in a molecule. With addition of DO, sometimes referred to as a
DO shake, labile hydrogens exchange between the compound of interest and the solvent, leading to replacement of those specific H atoms in the compound with H. These positions in the molecule then do not appear in the H-NMR spectrum.
Organic chemistry Deuterium oxide is often used as the source of deuterium for preparing specifically labelled
isotopologues of organic compounds. For example, C-H bonds adjacent to ketonic carbonyl groups can be replaced by C-D bonds, using acid or base catalysis.
Trimethylsulfoxonium iodide, made from
dimethyl sulfoxide and
methyl iodide can be recrystallized from deuterium oxide, and then dissociated to regenerate methyl iodide and dimethyl sulfoxide, both deuterium labelled. In cases where specific double labelling by deuterium and tritium is contemplated, the researcher must be aware that deuterium oxide, depending upon age and origin, can contain some tritium.
Infrared spectroscopy Deuterium oxide is often used instead of water when collecting
FTIR spectra of proteins in solution. HO creates a strong band that overlaps with the
amide I region of proteins. The band from DO is shifted away from the amide I region.
Neutron moderator Heavy water is used in certain types of
nuclear reactors, where it acts as a
neutron moderator to slow down neutrons so that they are more likely to react with the
fissile uranium-235 than with
uranium-238, which captures neutrons without fissioning. The CANDU reactor uses this design. Light water also acts as a moderator, but because light water absorbs more
neutrons than heavy water, reactors using light water for a reactor moderator must use
enriched uranium rather than natural uranium, otherwise
criticality is impossible. A significant fraction of outdated power reactors, such as the
RBMK reactors in the USSR, were constructed using normal water for cooling but
graphite as a moderator. However, the danger of graphite in power reactors (graphite fires in part led to the
Chernobyl disaster) has led to the discontinuation of graphite in standard reactor designs. The breeding and extraction of plutonium can be a relatively rapid and cheap route to building a
nuclear weapon, as chemical separation of plutonium from fuel is easier than
isotopic separation of U-235 from natural uranium. Among current and past
nuclear weapons states, Israel, India, and North Korea first used plutonium from heavy water moderated reactors burning
natural uranium, while China, South Africa and Pakistan first built weapons using
highly enriched uranium. The
Nazi nuclear program, operating with more modest means than the contemporaneous Manhattan Project and hampered by many leading scientists having been driven into exile (many of them ending up working for the Manhattan Project), as well as continuous infighting, wrongly dismissed graphite as a moderator due to not recognizing the effect of impurities. Given that
isotope separation of uranium was deemed too big a hurdle, this left heavy water as a potential moderator. Other problems were the ideological aversion regarding what propaganda dismissed as "
Jewish physics" and the mistrust between those who had been enthusiastic Nazis even before 1933 and those who were
Mitläufer or trying to keep a low profile. In part due to allied sabotage and commando raids on
Norsk Hydro (then the world's largest producer of heavy water) as well as the aforementioned infighting, the German nuclear program never managed to assemble enough uranium and heavy water in one place to achieve
criticality despite possessing enough of both by the end of the war. In the U.S., however, the first experimental atomic reactor (1942), as well as the
Manhattan Project Hanford production reactors that produced the plutonium for the
Trinity test and
Fat Man bombs, all used pure carbon (graphite) neutron moderators combined with normal water cooling pipes. They functioned with neither enriched uranium nor heavy water. Russian and British plutonium production also used graphite-moderated reactors. There is no evidence that civilian heavy water power reactors—such as the CANDU or
Atucha designs—have been used to produce military fissile materials. In nations that do not already possess nuclear weapons, nuclear material at these facilities is under
IAEA safeguards to discourage any diversion. Due to its potential for use in
nuclear weapons programs, the possession or import/export of large industrial quantities of heavy water are subject to government control in several countries. Suppliers of heavy water and heavy water production technology typically apply
IAEA (International Atomic Energy Agency) administered safeguards and material accounting to heavy water. (In Australia, the
Nuclear Non-Proliferation (Safeguards) Act 1987.) In the U.S. and Canada, non-industrial quantities of heavy water (i.e., in the gram to kg range) are routinely available without special license through chemical supply dealers and commercial companies such as the world's former major producer
Ontario Hydro.
Neutrino detector The
Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) in
Sudbury,
Ontario uses 1,000 tonnes of heavy water on loan from
Atomic Energy of Canada Limited. The
neutrino detector is underground in a mine, to shield it from
muons produced by
cosmic rays. SNO was built to answer the question of whether or not electron-type
neutrinos produced by fusion in the
Sun (the only type the Sun should be producing directly, according to theory) might be able to turn into other types of neutrinos on the way to Earth. SNO detects the
Cherenkov radiation in the water from high-energy electrons produced from
electron-type neutrinos as they undergo
charged current (CC) interactions with
neutrons in
deuterium, turning them into protons and electrons (however, only the electrons are fast enough to produce Cherenkov radiation for detection). SNO also detects neutrino electron scattering (ES) events, where the neutrino transfers energy to the electron, which then proceeds to generate Cherenkov radiation distinguishable from that produced by CC events. The first of these two reactions is produced only by electron-type neutrinos, while the second can be caused by all of the neutrino flavors. The use of deuterium is critical to the SNO function, because all three "flavours" (types) of neutrinos may be detected in a third type of reaction as well, neutrino-disintegration, in which a neutrino of any type (electron,
muon, or
tau) scatters from a deuterium nucleus (
deuteron), transferring enough energy to break up the loosely bound deuteron into a free
neutron and
proton via a neutral current (NC) interaction. This event is detected when the free neutron is absorbed by
35Cl− present from
NaCl deliberately dissolved in the heavy water, causing emission of characteristic capture gamma rays. Thus, in this experiment, heavy water not only provides the transparent medium necessary to produce and visualize Cherenkov radiation, but it also provides deuterium to detect exotic mu type (μ) and tau (τ) neutrinos, as well as a non-absorbent moderator medium to preserve free neutrons from this reaction, until they can be absorbed by an easily detected
neutron-activated isotope.
Metabolic rate and water turnover testing in physiology and biology Heavy water is employed as part of a mixture with HO for a common and safe test of mean metabolic rate in humans and animals undergoing their normal activities.The elimination rate of deuterium alone is a measure of body water turnover. This is highly variable between individuals and depends on environmental conditions as well as subject size, sex, age and physical activity.
Tritium production Tritium is the active substance in
self-powered lighting and controlled nuclear fusion, its other uses including
autoradiography and
radioactive labeling. It is also used in
nuclear weapon design for
boosted fission weapons and
initiators. Tritium undergoes
beta decay into
helium-3, which is a stable, but rare, isotope of helium that is itself highly sought after. Some tritium is created in
heavy water moderated reactors when deuterium captures a neutron. This reaction has a small
cross-section (probability of a single neutron-capture event) and produces only small amounts of tritium, although enough to justify cleaning tritium from the moderator every few years to reduce the environmental risk of tritium escape. Given that helium-3 is a
neutron poison with orders of magnitude higher capture cross section than any component of heavy or tritiated water, its accumulation in a heavy water neutron moderator or
target for tritium production must be kept to a minimum. Producing a lot of tritium in this way would require reactors with very high neutron fluxes, or with a very high proportion of heavy water to
nuclear fuel and very low
neutron absorption by other reactor material. The tritium would then have to be recovered by
isotope separation from a much larger quantity of deuterium, unlike production from
lithium-6 (the present method), where only chemical separation is needed. Deuterium's absorption cross section for
thermal neutrons is 0.52 milli
barn (5.2 × 10 m; 1 barn = 10 m), while those of
oxygen-16 and
oxygen-17 are 0.19 and 240 millibarn, respectively. O makes up 0.038% of natural
oxygen, making the overall cross section 0.28 millibarns. Therefore, in DO with natural oxygen, 21% of
neutron captures are on oxygen, rising higher as O builds up from neutron capture on O. Also, O may emit an
alpha particle on neutron capture, producing radioactive
carbon-14. ==See also==