
Fissile material disposition program: Screening of alternate immobilization candidates for disposition of surplus fissile materials
Author(s) -
L.W. Gray
Publication year - 1996
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/198877
Subject(s) - fissile material , dispose pattern , plutonium , nuclear weapon , enriched uranium , environmental science , nuclear engineering , waste management , engineering , nuclear physics , uranium , physics , neutron
With the end of the Cold War, the world faces for the first time the need to dismantle vast numbers of ``excess`` nuclear weapons and dispose of the fissile materials they contain, together with fissile residues in the weapons production complex left over from the production of these weapons. If recently agreed US and Russian reductions are fully implemented, tens of thousands of nuclear weapons, containing a hundred tons or more of plutonium and hundreds of tonnes* of highly enriched uranium (HEU), will no longer be needed worldwide for military purposes. These two materials are the essential ingredients of nuclear weapons, and limits on access to them are the primary technical barrier to prospective proliferants who might desire to acquire a nuclear weapons capability. Theoretically, several kilograms of plutonium, or several times that amount of HEU, is sufficient to make a nuclear explosive device. Therefore, these materials will continue to be a potential threat to humanity for as long as they exist