| For
such a reaction to occur, the reacting nuclei need to
have enough kinetic energy to overcome the repulsive
electrostatic barrier between any two of them. For this
to happen in laboratory experiments, the reacting particles
need to be heated to very high temperatures, more than
the temperature at the core of the sun. At such high
temperatures, matter remains in plasma state, a collection
of charged particles.
A
Deuterium and a Tritium nucleus fuse to produce a Helium
nucleus and a neutron. The reaction produces 17.6 MeV
of energy, out of which the Helium carries 3.5 MeV and
the neutron 14.1 MeV. In a plasma undergoing fusion,
the reactions can be self sustained, as part of the
kinetic energy of the resulting charged Helium can be
used to maintain the very high temperatures required
to sustain the fusion reactions.
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