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Nuclear Power

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Title: Nuclear Power


1
Nuclear Power
  • BY
  • Tarek Eldin, Banu Cetin, and Jian Fan

2
Outline
  • Overview Tarek Eldin
  • What is Nuclear Power?
  • Purpose of Nuclear Power
  • Comparison of existing energy sources
  • Risks
  • Fission Banu Cetin
  • What is Fission (Technical)
  • Nuclear Fission Reactors
  • Nuclear Fission Waste Control
  • Fussion Jian Fan
  • What is Fission (Technical)
  • History of Fussion
  • Pros and Cons of Fussion

3
Nuclear Power
  • Majority of Information from
  • American Nuclear Society
  • http//nova.nuc.umr.edu/ans/index.html
  • professional organization devoted to advancing
    science and engineering related to the atomic
    nucleus
  • 13,000 scientists and engineers in the Society's
    membership are active in diverse fields of
    research, teaching, consultation, administration,
    and engineering.

4
Nuclear Power
  • Nuclear Power
  • Power that is generated by a nuclear reaction.
  • Fission
  • The splitting of a heavy nucleus into two roughly
    equal parts.
  • The internal energy that was holding the two
    parts together is the resulting energy.
  • Fusion
  • Similar to Fission--combining instead of
    splitting of nucleus
  • Difference is that fusion yields energy for low
    mass elements while fission releases energy for
    high mass elements.
  • The break between the two regimes falls at the
    element iron (Fe) (26 protons in its nucleus)

5
Nuclear Power
  • How important is it to have more energy?
  • Very important!
  • Anything that limits us actually limits our
    freedom.
  • Energy is in no way different.
  • Imagine the amount of gas becoming so limited
    that government gives individuals a monthly
    allowance.
  • It limits the governments freedom and in turn
    citizens freedom.
  • Do we need Nuclear power to generate electricity?
  • We cant depend on oil and gas forever.
  • Cleanest and least damaging to our environment.
  • We avoid having to depend on other countries.

6
Nuclear Power
  • Cost of Nuclear Power vs Other?
  • Nuclear power versus Coal
  • Cost per kilowatt-Hour is slightly higher for
    Nuclear Power
  • Fraction of a cent
  • Nuclear power versus Oil
  • Cost per kilowatt-Hour is lower for Nuclear
    Power.
  • Shown to have save American consumers 70 Billion
    over the past decade.
  • Savings show how expensive it is to be dependent
    on other countries and import from them.

7
Nuclear Power
  • So why not use nuclear power?
  • Radiation
  • The health effects of very high doses of
    radiation are serious.
  • Somatic increased chance of cancer and life
    shortening
  • Genetic affects the offspring as genes are
    altered.
  • Possible Property Damage
  • April 1986 accident at the Chernobyl plant in the
    Soviet Union
  • Sabotage
  • Insane workers
  • Terrorists
  • Who knows?

8
Nuclear Power
  • Radiation
  • Radiation is everywhere and its natural.
  • Microwaves, cell phones, radio, television,
    X-Rays..etc
  • Natural radiation exists as in sunlight also.
  • 3 types of nuclear radiation(alpha, beta, and
    gamma)
  • All exist in nature.
  • Average exposure is 360 millirems per person in a
    year.
  • More than half our average yearly dose comes from
    Natural Radiation.
  • If you live close to a power plant average dose
    is 5 millirems per person.
  • Nuclear plants contain less radioactivity than
    the releases from comparable coal-fired plants

9
Nuclear Power
  • Property Damage
  • USA
  • First U.S. commercial power reactor serviceable
    in 1957
  • Since then no property damage reported, or injury
    caused in USA.
  • More than 100 nuclear power plants in USA today.
  • Elsewhere
  • Chernobyl plant in the Soviet Union
  • 31 workers and firefighters died
  • 2 explosions (steam and Hydrogen) was the cause
    of death

10
Nuclear Power
  • Chernobyl -- Cant this happen in USA
  • Explosions could have been avoided
  • Steam explosion. If some of cooling water
    converts to steam power is increased. This of
    course causes more steam and more power.
  • Caused a rupture in the cooling system and an
    explosion.
  • American designs reduce power if steam is
    generated.
  • Because of steam explosion the cooling system
    failed
  • Hydrogen formed and .
  • Second explosion
  • They had no containment structure.
  • America and other countries do have a containment
    structure that experiments have shown could have
    eliminated the affects of the second explosion.

11
Nuclear Power
  • Sabotage
  • Can it be avoided?
  • Utilities follow stringent security precautions
    to protect nuclear power plants and equipment
    from malicious damage
  • People working in the plants are carefully
    screened for their integrity and emotional
    stability.
  • Random visitors cannot enter.
  • Business visitors always accompanied by
    employees.
  • But life has proven that anything is possible.

12
Nuclear Power
  • How do Risks Compare to Risks we face already
  • Less than we face today
  • airplane crashes and explosions are 100,000 times
    more likely to kill 10 people that the operation
    of 100 nuclear plants would be.
  • 2,000 times more likely that 10 persons will be
    killed by an earthquake
  • 60,000 times more likely that 1,000 persons will
    be killed by hurricane
  • Greatest Risk we take aside from illness is
    getting into our cars.

13
FISSIONby Banu Cetin
14
WHAT IS FISSION?
  • Fission is a nuclear process in which a heavy
    nucleus splits into two smaller nuclei.
  • Starting a fission reaction is accomplished by
    bombarding fissionable nuclei with neutrons. This
    causes the nuclei to fly apart, splitting into
    two fission products and emitting two or three
    neutrons of their own
  • Fission reactions can produce any combination of
    lighter nuclei.
  • A great amount of energy is released.

15
WHY FISSION OCCURS
  • Fission occurs because of the electrostatic
    repulsion created by the large number of
    positively charged protons contained in a heavy
    nucleus.
  • Two smaller nuclei have less internal
    electrostatic repulsion than one larger nucleus.
    So, once the larger nucleus can overcome the
    strong nuclear force which holds it together, it
    can FISSION.

16
WHY FISSION OCCURS
  • Fission can be seen as a tug-of-war between the
    strong attractive nuclear force and the repulsive
    electrostatic force. In fission reactions,
    electrostatic repulsion wins.

17
THE NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE
  • The set of activities required for producing
    nuclear power, from the mining and processing of
    uranium to its use in reactors and final
    disposal, is known as the nuclear fuel cycle.
  • The mining of uranium is similar to the mining of
    many other ores but miners must also be
    protected against radioactive dust and radon, a
    radioactive gas.

18
NUCLEAR REACTORS
  • Fissionable material is placed in the "core" of a
    reactor. The rate of the fission chain reaction
    is controlled and "moderated", and the heat
    generated is converted into electricity.
  • Control and moderation refer, respectively, to
    the manipulation of both the number and velocity
    of the neutrons present in the core.
  • Control rods made of boron or other neutron
    absorbing materials control the number of
    neutrons present.
  • Raising and lowering the control rods in the core
    can speed up or slow down the rate of the chain
    reaction.

19
NUCLEAR REACTORS
  • 4 types of
  • nuclear reactors.
  • The majority
  • -boiling water
  • -pressurized water

20
SAFETY of NUCLEAR POWER REACTORS
  • There have been two major reactor accidents in
    the history of civil nuclear power - Three Mile
    Island and Chernobyl. One was contained and the
    other had no provision for containment.
  • These are the only major accidents to have
    occurred in over 10 000 cumulative reactor-years
    of commercial operation in 32 countries.

21
ENVIRONMENTAL and SAFETY CONCERNS
  • Fission reactors are very complicated devices,
    capable of causing a great deal of harm both to
    humans and to the environment.
  • With any nuclear reactor, there is the
    possibility of a malfunction which could cause
    the chain reaction in the core to run out of
    control, resulting in very high temperatures and
    a core "meltdown".
  • Meltdowns that breach reactor containment vessels
    could potentially release huge amounts of
    radiation into the surrounding environment, as
    seen by the accident at Chernobyl in 1986.
  • Following a major accident, along with the
    initial radiation exposure, the land and water
    covering a large area around an accident site
    could become contaminated, and unfit for human
    habitation for thousands of years.

22
NUCLEAR WASTE STORAGE
  • One of the greatest problems with nuclear energy
    is the waste produced. The waste is generally
    radioactive, and thus toxic
  • Fuel Rod Storage Pool

23
NUCLEAR WASTE STORAGE
  • Storage Tunnels
  • Dry cask Storage Containers

24
ECONOMY
  • Nuclear power has not fulfilled its early promise
    as a cheap, clean and unlimited source of
    electricity.
  • Public concern over potential accidents,
    "acceptable" emissions of radiation, disposal of
    radioactive waste and the possibility of weapons
    proliferation have resulted in opposition to the
    construction of new power plants.
  • At the present time , worldwide use of
    electricity is so inefficient that its cheaper
    to save energy through efficiency improvements
    than its to build new nuclear power plants to
    supply more electricity.

25
Fusion
  • Jian Fan

26
What is Fusion
  • Two ways to release nuclear energy splitting and
    combining

27
Example of Fusion
  • The energy radiated by stars, including the Sun,
    arises from such fusion reactions deep in their
    interiors.

28
Fusion vs. Fission
  • Difficult to maintain the nuclei repel each
    other
  • Limited elements the forces of repulsion are so
    effective in keeping nuclei apart, reactions
    useful for controlled fusion seem largely limited
    to deuterium and tritium
  • No radioactive products

29
Basic difficult issues in Fusion
  • Need very high temperature condition to heat the
    gas
  • The hot gases tend to expand and escape from the
    enclosing structure. Need to confine a sufficient
    quantity of the reacting nuclei for a long enough
    time to permit the release of more energy than is
    needed to heat and confine the gas.
  • Hard to obtain the capture of this energy and its
    conversion to electricity.

30
History of nuclear fusion research I
  • In the early 1930s Nuclear fusion was first
    achieved on earth by bombarding a target
    containing deuterium, the mass-2 isotope of
    hydrogen, with high-energy deuterons in a
    cyclotron
  • Problem To accelerate the deuteron beam a great
    deal of energy is required, most of which
    appeared as heat in the target. As a result, no
    net useful energy was produced.

31

History of nuclear fusion research II
  • In the 1950s the first large-scale but
    uncontrolled release of fusion energy was
    demonstrated in the tests of thermonuclear
    weapons by the United States, the USSR, the
    United Kingdom, and France.
  • Problem This was such a brief an uncontrolled
    release that it could not be used for the
    production of electric power.

32
History of nuclear fusion research III
  • In the early 1960s One device, called Tokamak,
    originally suggested in the USSR by Lgor Tamm and
    Andrey Sakharov, began to give encouraging
    results.

33

History of nuclear fusion research IV
  • In the early 1980s Based on the successful
    operation of small tokamaks at several
    laboratories, two large devices were built , one
    at Princeton University in the United States and
    one in the USSR.

34

History of nuclear fusion research V
  • In the early 1990s some progress was made. In
    1991, for the first time ever, a significant
    amount of energy-about 1.7 million watts-was
    produced from controlled nuclear fusion at the
    Joint European Torus (JET) Laboratory in England.
    In December 1993, researchers at Princeton
    University used the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor
    to produce a controlled fusion reaction that
    output 5.6 million watts of power.
  • Problem both the JET and the Tokamak Fusion Test
    Reactor consumed more energy than they produced
    during their operation.

35
What is the good nuclear fusion reactor in the
future
  • In any useful fusion device, the energy output
    must exceed the energy required to confine and
    heat the plasma.
  • Progress in fusion research has been promising,
    but the development of practical systems for
    creating a stable fusion reaction that produces
    more power than it consumes will probably take
    decades to realize.

36
Advantages of Fusion Energy
  • Economy
  • Provides a limitless source of fuel deuterium is
    from the ocean
  • Would replace increasingly scarce fossil fuels
    and lower the cost of electricity
  • would provide a relatively inexpensive
    alternative energy source for electric-power
    generation and thereby help conserve the world's
    dwindling supply of oil, natural gas, and coal
  • Creates incentive to the utility industryin the
    United States, no new reactors had been ordered
    since 1978. European countries have begun or
    planned to phase out nuclear power completely

37

Advantages of Fusion Energy
  • Environment
  • Limited possibility of a reactor accident, as the
    amount of fuel in the system is very small.
  • Waste products much less radioactive and simpler
    to handle than those from fission systems
  • Reduction in air pollution and strip mining than
    plants that burn fossil fuels

38
Advantages of Fusion Energy
  • Besides generating power, a fusion reactor might
    desalinate seawater. Approximately two-thirds of
    the world's land surface is uninhabited, with
    one-half of this area being arid. The use of both
    giant fission and fusion reactors in the
    large-scale evaporation of seawater could make
    irrigation of such areas economically feasible.

39
Disadvantages of Fusion Energy
  • The research is expensive
  • Possible high construction and operation costs

40
Ethic Questions
  • The public in general looked favorably on this
    new energy source, hoping for the transition of
    nuclear power from wartime to peaceful uses.
  • Reality is always against common goods While
    fusion reactor is still in research phase, Weapon
    based on thermonuclear fusion already realized.
    the hydrogen bomb, the "super bomb," is a
    thousand times more destructive than the atomic
    fission variety.

41
Unknown Areas
  • What are the effects of low-level radiation over
    long periods?
  • How can nuclear power's waste products, which
    will remain dangerous for centuries, be
    permanently isolated from the environment?
  • Is electricity from nuclear power plants less
    costly, equally costly, or more costly than
    electricity from coal-fired plants?
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