thermal neutron, any free neutron (one that is not bound within an atomic nucleus) that has an average energy of motion (kinetic energy) corresponding to the average energy of the particles of the ambient materials. Relatively slow and of low energy, thermal neutrons exhibit properties, such as large cross sections in fission, that make them desirable in certain chain-reaction applications. Furthermore, the long de Broglie wavelengths of thermal neutrons make them valuable for certain applications of neutron optics. Thermal neutrons are produced by slowing down more energetic neutrons in a substance called a moderator after they have been ejected from atomic nuclei during nuclear reactions such as fission.
Quantitatively, the thermal energy per particle is about 0.025 electron volt—an amount of energy that corresponds to a neutron speed of about 2,000 metres per second and a neutron wavelength of about 2 × 10-10 metre (or about two angstroms). Because the wavelength of thermal neutrons corresponds to the natural spacings between atoms in crystalline solids, beams of thermal neutrons are ideal for investigating the structure of crystals, particularly for locating positions of hydrogen atoms, which are not well located by X-ray diffraction techniques. Also, thermal neutrons are required for inducing nuclear fission in naturally occurring uranium-235 and in artificially produced plutonium-239 and uranium-233.