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More efficient nuclear energy? |
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| Jul28-12, 09:16 PM | #1 |
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More efficient nuclear energy?
Isn't there any better/more efficient methods of generating electricity from fission/fusion than basically using the heat to boil water to spin a turbine? I know that that there are different generations of nuclear reactor designs (with each more efficient than the last) that get better and better at extracting the heat from the reaction. But at the end of the day, for pretty much every design I've seen, you still use that to boil a liquid, which spins a turbine. It seems too much like just a coal plant in that regard. Or am I being too critical, and that the current paradigm is already very efficient at turning the nuclear energy into electrical energy?
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| Jul29-12, 06:05 AM | #2 |
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Currently, there is no better and reliable way to produce electricity than boiling a liquid and driving a rotating turbine - with nuclear energy or otherwise. The higher the temperature, the more efficient the energy conversion, however, higher temperatures usually come at the expense of material performance with erosion/corrosion and/or creep being the limiting factors. In the case of nuclear systems, containment of fission products becomes an issue as temperatures increase.
The steam Rankine cycle has been the traditional method of producing electricity with large scale systems (100s of MWe to 1+ GWe) for decades. Older nuclear plants had efficiencies of about 32-33%, but modern ones have efficienies approaching 37% - mostly due to more efficient turbine (blading and seals) design. Nuclear plants are considered wet steam plants because they do not use superheated steam - because of safety concerns, and well as plant performance issues. Fossil fired plants can use superheat, and some plants achieve efficiencies in the range of 34-38%. Plant employing supercritical or ultrasupercritical thermodynamics cycles may achieve conversion efficiencies of up to 44%. http://asmedl.org/ebooks/asme/asme_p...942/801942_ch1 http://www.stormeng.com/pdf/COALGEN-...esentation.pdf http://www.nationalcoalcouncil.org/D...chnologies.pdf Some plants may use combined cycles, e.g., Brayton gas-fired cycle (based on an aero-derivative gas turbine) and steam Rankine cycle (heated by the exhaust of the gas turbine), and efficienies approach 60%. Nuclear Brayton systems have been problematic, and combined cycles plants would also be problemetic from the standpoint of heat exchanger preformance - the heat exchanger would have to maintain close to 100% reliability in keeping the Brayton system and steam system separated. In fusion, the current plan is to use the thermal energy to drive conventional steam cycles. Ideally, MHD or direct conversion could be used, but appropriate configurations in conjunction with plant design has proved elusive. In fact, viable fusion conversion systems have proved elusive as well. In direct conversion, the ions and electrons are separated in a magnetic field and they provide a direct current to the load. Theoretically, efficiency could approach 80+%. However, there are practical engineering challenges. Thermionic concepts have been considered, but they too are complicated and much less reliable - as well as expensive. http://gcep.stanford.edu/research/fa...ete_solar.html |
| Jul29-12, 10:55 PM | #3 |
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| Jul30-12, 04:40 AM | #4 |
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More efficient nuclear energy?Certainly, there were advanced HTGRs planned for the US about 40 years ago. They were rated at 42% efficiency. None were constructed. Fort St. Vrain did operate, but they had significant operational problems, and the plant was shutdown in 1992 after 15 years of operation. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_St...rating_Station (there is incorrect information in the article) The other US HTGR, Peach Bottom 1, operated from 1966 to 1974. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peach_B...rating_Station Similarly, the US does not have an LMFBR in commercial operation. |
| Jul30-12, 05:04 PM | #5 |
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How does the direct conversion differ from that of an MHD generator, and what are the problems in implementing them? And is it possible to implement them in fusion reactors? Because I find the notion of using those more appealing than the current paradigm.
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| Jul30-12, 10:08 PM | #6 |
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MHD is an entirely different approach to produce electricity, the heat of a gas ionizes a carrier material, usually cesium. The negative and positive ions are then collected by electrodes within a powerful magnetic field, creating nearly direct heat to electricity conversion. The material requirements however are severe and the approach has never been used commercially afaik. Both of these concepts would require major development to bring into being and it is likely that both would need so much support technology that the wonderful simplicity of the core idea gets lost in a welter of expensive and unreliable ancillary essentials. |
| Jul31-12, 05:04 PM | #7 |
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*Particularly relevant is the early closing of NJ's Oyster nuclear reactor on the Atlantic coast. It's directly water cooled from the local bay, but NJ officials complained Oyster was doing too much harm to sea life drawn from the massive water intakes, demanding Oyster switch to evaporative cooling towers. Oyster's operator has said no thanks and will close prematurely. |
| Jul31-12, 06:45 PM | #8 |
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Thermodynamic efficiency is important, and does of course have an aesthetic appeal, but if you are in the electricity generation business, it is the optimum combination of efficiency, fuel cost, and capital cost that's of interest. If you are a consumer of the electricity, it may be the optimum combination of those factors along with others (e.g., minimum emissions, fish kill, etc.) that you find more aesthetic.
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| Jul31-12, 07:56 PM | #9 |
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CRBRP's design efficiency was 35.9%, what is from page 24 of THEMAL ANALYSIS OF LMFBR. |
| Jul31-12, 10:09 PM | #10 |
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So it sounds like the improvement in the reactors is more of an incremental thing based on the current way of doing things. Since that even if a viable, efficient method for direct conversion or MHD was developed tomorrow, it would take years or maybe even decades to get a commercial reactor out of it given all the testing that would need to be done.
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| Jul31-12, 11:47 PM | #11 |
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A number of PWRs have had to replace the original steam generators because the Inconel 600 tubing failed prematurely, lasting less than 30 years rather than the planned 40 years. Other plants have implemented Zn-injection and/or reduced primary circuit temperature in order to extend the life of current steam generators. Some early examples - ftp://ftp.eia.doe.gov/features/steamgen.pdf Advanced energy conversion techniques such as direct conversion or MHD require something different than current LWR technology. Some Gen-IV systems are designed for higher temperatures, SCWR or LMR or MSR. But those are only designs, and all have significant challenges with respect to materials performance (e.g., corrosion, erosion and creep) at high temperature. |
| Aug1-12, 04:30 AM | #12 |
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What's the point in trying to push them to limits of what materials can withstand and then be haunted by problems of material degradation? It's not a spacecraft where every pound matters, right? |
| Aug1-12, 08:46 AM | #13 |
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Lower flow rate would not work in the core since heat transfer would suffer. Enthalpy rise and coolant temperature are critical factors in nuclear fuel performance in LWRs. Total flow rate and enthalpy of the steam determine the power available to the HP and LP turbine set. In the case of PWRs, primary water chemistry has been optimized over that last 3 decades. Now pH is above 7.0 to the extent possible, and 7.4 is a typical target for much of the cycle. Some plants add Zn to the coolant to mitigate corrosion of SG tubing and control crud deposition (and activation) in the core. |
| Aug1-12, 11:55 AM | #14 |
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| Aug1-12, 12:57 PM | #15 |
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| Aug1-12, 01:37 PM | #16 |
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| Aug1-12, 07:00 PM | #17 |
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amen to last 3 posts
in real world , efficiency = energy out / energy in ; in surreal world , efficiency = revenue / expenses ; see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkRIbUT6u7Q |
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