While I was working on the ways to improve the breeding efficiency of depleted Uranium (U 238), I discovered the "İbrahim Shatter Effect". The system bypasses the limitations of traditional binary fission by using electromagnetic field manipulation and high-energy kinetic triggers to induce a nuclear shatter.
1. Theoretical Foundation: The Triple-Action Shatter
Traditional fission is a passive process where a nucleus splits into two fragments. The İbrahim Shatter Effect is an active process defined by three simultaneous physical stressors:
External Electrostatic Tension: A thin (100 micron) wire made of Uranium 238 is field ionized with a potential of +130 kV. In the meanwhile, Deuterium atoms are also ionized at the very same potential. These two (U+D) positive ions would than accelerate toward a molten lead Bismuth bath at -130 kV potential. Just below the surface of this molten metal lies a mesh made of Titanium-Tritium atoms. Without the shielding of an electron cloud, the 92 protons of Uranium are subjected to intense external polarization, “stretching” the nucleus into an unstable prolate shape.
Internal Thermal Excitation: Accelerated Deuterium when collide with Tritium at the Titanium mesh fusions and turns into Helium and a neutron with an energy of 14.1 MeV. When this neutron hits an ionized Uranium atom, the resulting impact would be 14.1 MeV + 12 MeV (kinetic energy of Uranium) = 26 MeV which would be dumped into the nucleus. This raises the Nuclear Temperature to a level where the Strong Nuclear Force undergoes a phase transition, losing its liquid surface tension.
Coulombic Overpower: As the Strong Force weakens due to thermal expansion, the internal repulsion of the 92 protons (Coulomb force) becomes the dominant vector. Under the additional pull of the external 130 kV field, the nucleus undergoes a high-order multifragmentation.
2. Experimental Unit: “İbrahim Shatter-Column”
The system is implemented in modular 5 cm Sapphire units to ensure fast vacuum recovery and precise beam control.
Vessel: 5 cm x 10 cm H Sapphire (Al2O3) tube.
Ion Source: 100μm Depleted Uranium (U-238) wire, piezo-fed.
Beam Focus: 100 nm spot size achieved via permanent magnet quadrupole lenses.
Target: A flowing Lead-Bismuth Eutectic (LBE) river, maintaining a constant −130 kV potential.
Catalyst: A Titanium-Tritium (Ti-T) mesh positioned at the beam interface to provide 14.1 MeV trigger neutrons via D–T fusion.
3. Reaction Yields and Energy Balance
The İbrahim Effect moves the nucleus into the Exothermic Multifragmentation regime, shattering it into 10–12 medium-mass fragments (e.g., Mg, Ca, Ne) and a massive neutron spray.
4. Operational Specifications (Single Module)
Pulse Cycle: 10 seconds Active / 90 seconds Standby (10% Duty Cycle).
Peak Current: 100 μA.
Avg. Power Consumption: 1.3 Watts.
Avg. Thermal Peak: 9.6 kW (Dissipated into the LBE river).
Wire Consumption: 1.42 meters/day (0.213 grams).
Daily Breeding Yield: 21.4 mg of Pu 239.
5. High-Energy Neutron Moderation
The neutrons are born at ≈ 2 MeV (Fast). The LBE River acts as an inelastic scatterer, slowing the neutrons to the 6.6 eV resonance peak of the sinking U 238 sludge. This creates a Self-Breeding environment within the liquid metal flow.
6. Industrial Scale-Up: The Honeycomb Grid
To achieve an output of 1 kg per day, an array of modules is deployed:
Unit Count: 46,700 Sapphire Modules.
Footprint: 25 m x 20 m.
Safety Status: Sub-critical. The process is a Loom, not a Pile. If power is cut, the electric tension and neutron trigger vanish, stopping all reactions within nanoseconds.
Total Plant Power: 60.7 kW (Input) vs. 448 MW (Thermal Potential). 45 MW Heat removed from the Bi-Pb river (can be used for district heating).
Plant Energy Gain Per Day: Plant consumes 60.7 kW x 24 = 1,457 kWh per day. Total energy value of 1kg Pu239 is ≈ 22,000,000 kWh. Energy Gain is ≈ 15,100
Conclusion
The İbrahim Shatter Effect utilizes electromagnetic field-assisted fission to maximize neutron economy. By stripping the atom of its electrons (U 92+) and applying external tension, it forces the nucleus to boil and shatter, turning low-value depleted Uranium into high-value fuel with an energy return ratio exceeding 15,000:1. Because the process is sub-critical and pulse-dependent, it is inherently meltdown-proof. Furthermore, the 'Shatter-Column' can be tuned to incinerate existing long-lived nuclear waste, turning a global liability into a clean energy asset.










