Heat is produced in a nuclear reactor when
neutronsstrike Uranium atoms causing them to fission in a continuous
chain
reaction.
Control elements, which
are made of materials that absorb neutrons, are placed among the fuel assemblies.
When the control elements, or control rods as they are often called, are
pulled out of the core, more neutrons are available and the chain reaction
speeds up, producing more heat. When they are inserted into the core, more
neutrons are absorbed, and the chain reaction slows or stops, reducing
the heat.
Most commercial nuclear reactors use ordinary water to remove
the heat created by the fission process. These are called light water reactors.
The water also serves to slow down, or "moderate" the neutrons. In this
type of reactor, the chain reaction will not occur without the water to
serve as a moderator. In the United States, two different light-water reactor
designs are currently in use, the
Pressurized
Water Reactor (PWR) and the
Boiling
Water Reactor (BWR).