- #3,991
Dmytry
- 510
- 1
I don't think it'd matter noticeably that it'd take away neutrons, if the coating is very thin (e.g. a few micrometers), but a significant fraction of it would still turn into mercury, so you'd get some sort of gold-mercury amalgam. I really don't know if it would even remain there at all. Plus the mercury tends to have corrosive effect. edit: plus, perhaps, electrochemical corrosion as well, if any of gold flakes off.NUCENG said:Zirconium is near the bottom of the list at 0.184 barns ( a measure of the cross section for thermal neutron capture. Basically zirconium is transparent to neutrons. Thus it makes an excellent cladding material for efficient use of fuel. Gold is about 3 orders of magnitude higher at 98.7 barns. As Dmytry said it would take away from the neutrons available to the fuel. That would require increasing the fuel load or enrichment to get the same power production.
Boron is used for control rods and in chemical shutdowns because its cross section is 767 barns.