Plutonium is a by-product of the fission process in nuclear reactors, due to neutron capture by uranium-238 in particular. When operating, a typical nuclear reactor contains within its uranium fuel load about 325 kilograms of plutonium, with plutonium-239 being the most common isotope. In a power reactor, much of the energy from the fission process is due to the plutonium, complementing that from the uranium-235.

The main isotopes of plutonium are:

  • Pu-238, (half-life 88 years)
  • Pu-239, fissile (half-life 24 000 yrs)
  • Pu-240, fertile (half-life 6 500 yrs)
  • Pu-241, fissile (half-life 14 years)
  • Pu-242, (half-life 37 600 yrs)