The term
fissile is distinct from
fissionable. A
nuclide that can undergo
nuclear fission (even with a low probability) after capturing a neutron of high or low energy is referred to as
fissionable. A fissionable nuclide that can undergo fission with a high probability after capturing a low-energy
thermal neutron is referred to as
fissile. Fissionable materials include those (such as
uranium-238) for which fission can be induced only by high-energy neutrons. As a result, fissile materials (such as
uranium-235) are a
subset of fissionable materials. Uranium-235 fissions with low-energy thermal neutrons because the
binding energy resulting from the absorption of a neutron is greater than the threshold required for fission; therefore uranium-235 is fissile. By contrast, the binding energy released by uranium-238 absorbing a thermal neutron is less than the critical energy, so the neutron must possess additional energy for fission to be possible. Consequently, uranium-238 is fissionable but not fissile. An alternative definition defines fissile nuclides as those nuclides that can be made to undergo nuclear fission (i.e., are fissionable) and also produce neutrons from such fission that can sustain a nuclear chain reaction in the correct setting. Under this definition, the only nuclides that are fissionable but not fissile are those nuclides that can be made to undergo nuclear fission but produce insufficient neutrons, in either energy or number, to sustain a
nuclear chain reaction. As such, while all fissile isotopes are fissionable, not all fissionable isotopes are fissile. In the
arms control context, particularly in proposals for a
Fissile Material Cutoff Treaty, the term
fissile is often used to describe materials that can be used in the fission primary of a nuclear weapon. These are materials that sustain an explosive
fast neutron nuclear fission chain reaction. Under all definitions above, uranium-238 () is fissionable, but not fissile. Neutrons produced by fission of have lower
energies than the original neutron (they behave as in an
inelastic scattering), usually below 1
MeV (i.e., a speed of about 14,000
km/s), the fission threshold to cause subsequent fission of , so fission of does not sustain a
nuclear chain reaction. Fast fission of in the secondary stage of a thermonuclear weapon, due to the production of high-energy neutrons from
nuclear fusion, contributes greatly to the
yield and to
fallout of such weapons. Fast fission of tampers has also been evident in pure fission weapons. The fast fission of also makes a significant contribution to the power output of some
fast-neutron reactors. == Fissile nuclides ==