This kind of nuclear reaction occurs in the production of
cobalt-60 (Co) in a
nuclear reactor. Co (half-life about 5.27 years) then decays into
nickel-60, emitting a
beta particle plus
gamma rays. Due to the availability of
cobalt-59 (
natural abundance 100%), this neutron bombarded isotope of
cobalt is a valuable source of
nuclear radiation (namely gamma radiation) for
radiotherapy. : + → In other cases, and depending on the
kinetic energy of the neutron, the capture of a neutron can cause
nuclear fission—the splitting of the atomic nucleus into two smaller nuclei. If the fission requires an input of energy, that comes from the kinetic energy of the neutron. An example of this kind of fission in a light element can occur when the stable isotope of
lithium,
lithium-7, is bombarded with fast neutrons and undergoes the following nuclear reaction: : + → + + +
gamma rays +
kinetic energy In other words, the capture of a neutron by lithium-7 causes it to split into an energetic
helium nucleus (
alpha particle), a hydrogen-3 (
tritium) nucleus and a free neutron. The
Castle Bravo accident, in which the thermonuclear bomb test at
Bikini Atoll in 1954 exploded with 2.5 times the expected yield, was caused by the unexpectedly high probability of this reaction. In the area around a
pressurized water reactor or
boiling water reactor during normal operation, a significant amount of radiation is produced due to the
fast neutron activation of coolant water oxygen via a
(n,p) reaction. The activated oxygen-16 nucleus emits a proton (hydrogen nucleus), and transmutes to nitrogen-16, which has a very short life (7.13 seconds) before decaying back to oxygen-16 (emitting 10.4 MeV beta particles and 6.13 MeV gamma radiations). : + → + (Decays rapidly) : → + + This activation of the coolant water requires extra
biological shielding around the nuclear reactor plant. It is the high energy gamma ray in the second reaction that causes the major concern. This is why water that has recently been inside a nuclear reactor core must be shielded until this radiation subsides. One to two minutes is generally sufficient. In facilities that housed a cyclotron, the
reinforced concrete foundation can become radioactive due to neutron activation. Six important long-lived radioisotopes (Mn,
Fe, Co, Zn, Ba, and Eu) can be found in concrete affected by neutrons. The residual radioactivity is predominantly due to trace elements present, and thus the amount of radioactivity derived from cyclotron activation is minuscule, i.e., pCi/g or
Bq/g. The release limit for facilities with residual radioactivity is 25 mrem/year. An example of Fe production from the activation of iron in
reinforcement bars found in concrete is shown below: : + → ==Occurrence==