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Electric Power Generation and the Environment

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

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Electric Power Generation and the Environment

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

  2. 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

  3. Faraday’s Law • Moving a magnet through a wire loop produces an electric current. • Called “electromagnetic” induction.

  4. Generator • A generator converts mechanical energy into electrical energy

  5. North America At Night

  6. Earth At Night

  7. U.S. Sources Today (2002) Source: EIA - Updated 11/03

  8. Future Energy Need

  9. Sources Tomorrow ? (2025)

  10. Energy Policy Goals • Increase energy supply • Optimize available resources • Develop new technology • Limiting environmental impact

  11. A Question Of Balance

  12. 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 Pros & Cons

  13. NUCLEAR high energy density no air pollution reliable fuel supply but what about safety, security, and waste? Pros & Cons

  14. 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

  15. No Air Pollution

  16. 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

  17. 103 Nuclear Power Reactors

  18. But What About… Safety, Security, and Waste? Designed, Constructed, and Operated for Safety Robust Security Used Fuel Storage at Yucca Mountain

  19. Safety By Design: Low “Enrichment” • Fission “chain reaction”: E = m * c2 • U-235 atoms fission. 5% in fuel, 95% in bombs.

  20. 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

  21. Safety By Design: Reactor Vessel Typical values: • Weight: 400 tons • Thickness: 8 inches Fuel Assemblies (Core)

  22. Safety By Design: PWR Containment Initial Construction Completed Concrete Dome

  23. Multiple Layers of Protection

  24. Nuclear Plant Security Areas Owner Controlled Area Protected Area Vital Area

  25. Active Vehicle Barrier System

  26. Intrusion Detection • CCTV on poles • Delay Fence • Intrusion Detection • Perimeter checks • Roving Patrols

  27. Defensive Fighting Position

  28. Fuel Assemblies Cool In Pools

  29. Temporary Dry Storage On Site

  30. Yucca Mountain Site

  31. Careers in Nuclear • Design • Next Generation Power Plants • Equipment Reliability • Transportation Casks • Engineering • Electrical and Mechanical • Instrumentation and Control • Nuclear

  32. Careers in Nuclear • Health Physics • Environmental • Operations • Regulations • Chemistry • Corrosion Protection

  33. Websites • Nuclear Regulatory Commission • www.nrc.gov • Nuclear Energy Institute • www.nei.org • Health Physics Society • www.hps.org

  34. Thanks …for your interest and patience !

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