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What is Deuterium?
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  • Written By: Michael Anissimov
  • Edited By: Bronwyn Harris
  • Last Modified Date: 01 March 2012
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    2003-2012
    Conjecture Corporation
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Deuterium is an isotope of the chemical element hydrogen. Unlike normal hydrogen, which has one proton, deuterium has one proton and one neutron. Deuterium is non-radioactive, and is found in small quantities wherever hydrogen is present. Deuterium is primarily used in nuclear fusion, as a moderator for fission reactors, and in nuclear magnetic resonance imaging.

Deuterium, for the most part, is chemically identical to regular hydrogen. It can substitute for hydrogen in chemical bonds, and most organisms can be successfully grown on high levels of deuterium. Deuterium oxide, called “heavy water,” does show some strange effects due to deuterium's extra mass; it is thicker than regular water, and an ice cube of heavy water will sink. Organisms which consume small amounts of heavy water are generally unaffected, but the extra mass of deuterium causes a slight change in its bonding properties, and this can disrupt the biochemistry of a cell if too much heavy water is used.

Deuterium is extracted from seawater, where it is found at a concentration of around 300 ppm. Deuterium is very dilute, and so the extraction process is energy-intensive and expensive; a single pound (0.4 kilograms) of deuterium can cost hundreds of United States dollars (USD). Due to its atomic mass, deuterium is a better neutron moderator than ordinary hydrogen, and deuterium oxide is used in some nuclear fission reactors, such as the CANDU design. Deuterium is also used in making nuclear bombs, and during WWII, the Allies bombed Germany's main deuterium plant to stop it from acquiring atomic weapons.

Most of the easy-to-achieve fusion reactions use deuterium as an ingredient, including deuterium-tritium, the current focus of artificial fusion research. Most of the deuterium created inside a star is quickly fused again, and so the vast majority of the hydrogen in the universe either remains hydrogen, or is fused into heavier elements such as helium and carbon. Brown dwarfs, which never have a high enough core temperature to fuse ordinary hydrogen, can remain stable for a few million years by fusing their deuterium.

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anon163371
Post 4

Don't think Deuterium is used in foods. We're not sterile (Deuterium can sterilize if consumed in large masses).

anon146582
Post 3

Is deuterium being used in food products?

anon145829
Post 2

So, does deuterium sink to the bottom of the ocean then? Is the water at the bottom or some midpoint of the ocean particularly deuterium rich?

jabuka
Post 1

When deuterium is combined with water, instead of creating H2O it forms D2O. Heavy water slows down growth of plants.

Snow for instance contains less heavy water then regular water does. As a result, in cold climates where there is a lot of snow, and therefore less of heavy water molecules, plants grow much faster during their growing season.

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