Electric Power Generation and the Environment

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Electric Power Generation and the Environment Health Physics Society Power Reactor Section

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Electric Power Generation and the Environment. Health Physics Society Power Reactor Section. History Of Electricity. Static Electricity – Ancient Greeks Franklin Invents Lightning Rods - 1752 Faraday Discovers Electromagnetic Induction – early 1800’s - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Electric Power Generation and the Environment

Page 1: Electric Power Generation and the Environment

Electric Power Generation and the

Environment

Health Physics SocietyPower Reactor Section

Page 2: Electric Power Generation and the Environment

History Of Electricity Static Electricity – Ancient Greeks

Franklin Invents Lightning Rods - 1752

Faraday Discovers Electromagnetic Induction – early 1800’s

Edison Invents the Light Bulb and Generating Stations in NYC – 1882

Tesla Invents Alternating Current Motor for Westinghouse - 1888

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Faraday’s Law Moving a magnet

through a wire loop produces an electric current.

Called “electromagnetic” induction.

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Generator

A generator converts mechanical energy into electrical energy

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North America At Night

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Earth At Night

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U.S. Sources Today

Gas17.9%

Oil2.3%

Nuclear20.4%

Hydro6.9%

Renewable2.2%

Coal50.3%

Source: EIA - Updated 11/03

(2002)

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3,831.0

5,787.0

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

7,000

2002 2025Growth in Electricity Demand

Bill

ion

kWh

Future Energy Need

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Sources Tomorrow

(2025)

?

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Energy Policy Goals

Increase energy supply

Optimize available resources

Develop new technology

Limiting environmental impact

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A Question Of Balance

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Pros & Cons COAL

HYDRO

NATURAL GAS

SOLAR & WIND

cheap and abundant but source of greenhouse gases

clean but seasonal and no new

sources

cleaner than coal but limited supply

renewable but expensive, low energy

density, and intermittent

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Pros & Cons

NUCLEAR

high energy density

no air pollution

reliable fuel supply but what about safety, security,

and waste?

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High Energy Density Each person in the United States uses either:

4 tons of coal or a few ounces of uranium

1 pellet = 150 gallons gasoline 1780 pounds coal 16,000 ft3 natural gas 2.5 tons wood

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No Air Pollution

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

76% 22% 1.4% 0.7% 0.1%Nuclear Hydro Geothermal Wind Solar

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Global Nuclear Power 442 Nuclear Plants Worldwide

25% in the United States

Strong growth internationally, China is the fastest growing maket

Source: International Atomic Energy Agency

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103 Nuclear Power Reactors

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But What About… Safety, Security, and

Waste?

Designed, Constructed, and Operated for Safety

Robust Security

Used Fuel Storage at Yucca Mountain

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Safety By Design: Low “Enrichment”

Fission “chain reaction”: E = m * c2

U-235 atoms fission. 5% in fuel, 95% in bombs.

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Safety By Design: Fuel Rods

The uranium fuel is made of solid ceramic pellets.

The fuel pellets are sealed inside zirconium alloy rods that are about 13’ long.

~236 rods in each assembly

~200 assemblies in the reactor core

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Safety By Design: Reactor Vessel

Typical values:

Weight: 400 tons

Thickness: 8 inches

Fuel Assemblies (Core)

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Safety By Design: PWR Containment

Initial Construction

Completed Concrete Dome

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Multiple Layers of Protection

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Nuclear Plant Security Areas

Vital Area

Owner Controlled

Area

Protected Area

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Active Vehicle Barrier System

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Intrusion Detection• CCTV on poles

• Delay Fence

• Intrusion Detection

• Perimeter checks

• Roving Patrols

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Defensive Fighting Position

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Fuel Assemblies Cool In Pools

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Temporary Dry Storage On Site

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Yucca Mountain Site

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Careers in Nuclear Design

Next Generation Power Plants Equipment Reliability Transportation Casks

Engineering Electrical and Mechanical Instrumentation and Control Nuclear

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Careers in Nuclear Health Physics

Environmental Operations Regulations

Chemistry Corrosion Protection

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Websites Nuclear Regulatory Commission

www.nrc.gov

Nuclear Energy Institute www.nei.org

Health Physics Society www.hps.org

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Thanks…for your interest and patience !