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Nuclear Power and Reactor Scale. |
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| Feb21-05, 08:44 PM | #1 |
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Nuclear Power and Reactor Scale.
Most commercial nuclear fission reactors are large, on the 1000MW order of magnitude.
Some of the early experimental reactors were small, and the reactors in nuclear submarines are relatively small. I understand that the Navy even has one very small (crew of 7 people, 400 tons v. 7,000-9,000 for nuclear attack submarines) nuclear submarine that also moves very slowly 4 knots, which does searchs of the ocean floor (e.g. for wreckage). See here: http://www.chinfo.navy.mil/navpalib/.../ship-nr1.html A couple of commercial ships of a freighter size were once nuclear, but have been converted back to conventional fuel. I've also heard about self-contained small nuclear reactors that they're talking about trying in an Alaskan village (on a pebble bed concept, IIRC). See http://www.adn.com/front/story/4214182p-4226215c.html What are the practical limits that impact the scale of a nuclear fission reactor? For example, what prevents someone from developing a nuclear powered airplane? |
| Feb21-05, 09:17 PM | #2 |
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http://www.google.com/search?q=toshiba+4s+sodium http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Know_Nukes/message/12046 -- > >No they wouldn't. Multiple separate rad shields > >on separate reactors would be needed, and each > >would have to be for real: decimetres of dense hydrogen > >plus decimetres of dense heavy metal, all blocking every > >ray path. Eight-pi shielding, or 12-pi, counting > >the multiplicity of reactors. A nuclear aircraft > >would be a thousand-tonne aircraft, maybe 2,000. > I misread the original post. You expect to fly a reactor!!! Zero or two or four, I think; not just one. One did fly ~50 years ago, once, as a passenger. The shield weighed 60,000 pounds IIRC; that's not for real. I think nuclear aircraft may fly if some worthwhile job is found that only aircraft of 2,000 tonnes or more can do, because airport and flight path neighbours will be more comfortable with them than with conventionally powered aircraft that big, i.e. with ~1,000 tonnes of kerosene or lH2, 50 to 100 terajoules of potential BLEVE, on board. Wouldn't you be? -- In short, nuclear aircraft would certainly be safer than chemical aircraft, but they might have to be very large. |
| Feb22-05, 02:24 AM | #3 |
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Right now the largest practical light water reactor (LWR) in commercial operation is the French N4 series. Civaux-1 is one of four of the new N4 nuclear reactor series. The other three being: Chooz B-1, Chooz B-2 and Civaux-2, each with a capacity of 1516 MWe (gross), 1450 MWe (net), with a thermal capacity of approximately 4270MWth. The core consists of 205 assemblies with an active fuel length of 4.27 m (14 ft).
Some background - http://www.memagazine.org/backissues...r/reactor.html and http://www.worldenergy.org/wec-geis/...ess/3_2_03.asp There is also the EPR (European Pressurized Reactor) Project. The EPR is a four-loop reactor designed for a thermal output of 4250 MWth and an electrical output capacity of 1500 MWe. Its core comprises 241 fuel assemblies, each containing 264 fuel rods and 81 control rods. Apparently the Russians are planning a VVER-1500 (1500 MWe) design as well. Nuclear powered aircraft would seem to be impractical from a thrust to weight ratio. The major impediment is the shielding. |
| Feb22-05, 09:47 AM | #4 |
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Nuclear Power and Reactor Scale.The reactor core can be quite small, physically - but still put out a lot of power. The limit to how much power you get out of a reactor has more to do with how effectively you can cool it, rather than any limit as to how much the core can generate. The core of the research reactor at M.I.T. is about 15 inches in diameter and produces 5 Mwt: http://web.mit.edu/nrl/www/reactor/reactor.htm http://web.mit.edu/nrl/www/reactor/core_description.htm The core of the now shutdown University of Michigan reactor was a 2-foot cube from which they extracted 2 Mwt. However, that core was essentially the core of a submarine reactor - and the 2 Mwt limit was only because that's how much heat the cooling system for the University of Michigan's reactor could extract. Put a cooling system with more capacity on it - and you can power a submarine. http://www-ners.engin.umich.edu/research/index.shtml Although you could devise a reactor that could output the power of a few jet engines - the shielding necessary would make the plane too heavy. So a reactor-powered plane isn't practical. Dr. Gregory Greenman Physicist |
| Feb23-05, 01:37 AM | #5 |
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I'm not sure about this, but I've heard some pacemakers where powered by small amounts of plutonium
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| Feb23-05, 07:59 AM | #6 |
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Plutonium-238 (non-fissile isotope) has been used to power scientific equipment in spacecraft and implanted heart pacemakers.
See also Nuclear Batteries |
| Feb23-05, 09:29 AM | #7 |
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Those aren't nuclear reactors. They are called RTGs for Radioisotope Thermal Generators. Whereas nuclear reactors derive their energy from the fissioning of fissile materials like U-235 and Pu-239; RTGs get their energy from the heat produced by radioactive decay of some radioisotope, most notably Pu-238, as Astronuc states. In an RTG, you let the radioisotope generate heat due to its radioactive decay, and you then convert the heat to electricity - a thermocouple is one way of doing that. The requirements for the "fuels" of reactors and RTG are different. The reactor requires a fuel like U-235 and/or Pu-239 which is fissile. The fuel doesn't have to be radioactive - in fact U-235 has a pretty low level of radioactivity. For the RTG, being fissile is immaterial - you want something that is quite radioactive so it produces a lot of heat. That's Pu-238. So nuclear reactors and RTGs are two very, very different animals. The RTGs are what power pacemakers. Dr. Gregory Greenman Physicist |
| Mar4-05, 11:30 PM | #8 |
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Nasa did some experimentation with using a reactor as a rocket engine... to my understanding the tests were successful as to whether it would work or not. I don't think it was practical for actual use because of the radiation it spewed out in the process... and what we send up tends to come back down again, sometimes unexpectantly. It could probably be used in deep space for power generation for an ion rocket engine... but it would need to be assembled there and kept a long way from
the rest of the science package or crew. |
| Mar5-05, 07:36 AM | #9 |
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When did they test this? And how would you use a reactor as a rocket engine in the first place?
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| Mar5-05, 11:17 AM | #10 |
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-- Nuclear rockets have, in one way or another, been studied for the past fifty years. -- The above link has more detail on nuclear rockets. Here is another one: http://www.lascruces.com/~mrpbar/rocket.html There are may nuclear propulsion designs. One I am interested in is the vapor core (also known as gas core) reactor with MHD generator. Vapor (or gas) core means the fission fuel is normally in a vapor state instead of a solid or liquid state. This technology in a nuclear rocket might be very efficient since it allows the reactor to operate at a high temperature and because heat engine efficienvy tends to rise with rising temperature (per Carnot's law). Here is a link to a general description of a vapor core reactor with MHD generator: http://www.inspi.ufl.edu/research/gcr/ |
| Mar7-05, 09:40 AM | #11 |
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Do a Google search on "NERVA" - Nuclear Engine for Rocket Vehicle Applications. Here's some of what I found: http://grin.hq.nasa.gov/ABSTRACTS/GPN-2002-000144.html [This one has some good drawings of the NERVA engine when you click on the "Image Information" section. ] http://www.aemann.pwp.blueyonder.co....a/reactor.html http://www.fas.org/nuke/space/c04rover.htm Dr. Gregory Greenman Physicist |
| Mar8-05, 01:01 AM | #12 |
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There is also MITEE, which is a rather recent design study on nuclear thermal propulsion. It can be found at this site:
http://www.newworlds.com/mitee.html The weight of there main reactor design using U-235 is about 70 kg. What's more surprising is the whole engine weighs just 140 kg, puts out 14000 N of thrust, and has a specific impulse of 1000 seconds (over twice that of liquid oxygen/liquid hydrogen). They also have some other reactor designs using more exotic nuclear materials like U-233 and Am-242m, which shrink the reactor down to 40 kg and 25 kg, respectively. I too have wondered if a reactor could some how be miniaturized, small enough to power something like a car, boat, or small airplane. Maybe using a closed cycle with a small gas turbine for power generation? I had the idea looking over this site: http://www.microjeteng.com/shaft.html It's a miniature turbo shaft engine. You would need a lot of radiation shielding though, wouldn't you? ![]() The real question is, how far can you miniaturize it? Like, could you make one the size of a desktop computer power supply, or a laptop battery?
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| Mar8-05, 07:09 AM | #13 |
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Shielding is certainly an issue with any fissile system.
Miniturization will be limited by critical mass at whatever enrichment one chooses. The pits in nuclear weapons are about as small as it gets. Am242 would allow a slightly small CM than Pu239. The key issues in a mini-reactor for vehicle transportation are: Control of the mini-reactor. Heat transfer. Shielding. Disposition of fission products. |
| Mar8-05, 07:48 AM | #14 |
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What if it's hijacked? Nuclear reactors and subs are able to be reasonably isolated and kept secure from the general populace. Aircraft are not. |
| Mar8-05, 09:33 AM | #15 |
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Nuclear propulsion would not be used in aircraft - nuclear propulsion is for SPACECRAFT!!! I believe that falls in the "reasonably isolated" category - even more so than subs. As far as crashing - NOBODY intends a nuclear propulsion system to be used at takeoff. The nuclear powered spacecraft would be lifted to Earth orbit via regular chemical rockets. Since the reactor won't have been started yet - the fuel will be no more radioactive than it was when first dug out of the ground. Therefore, a crash due to failure of the chemical rockets during boost phase would have minimal consequences. After the rocket is in orbit - and the nuclear engines are fired up - the rocket is not coming back down - it already has orbital velocity - and unless one were to use the nuclear engine as a retro-rocket - and nobody would ever do that - the craft is not coming back to Earth. Dr. Gregory Greenman Physicist |
| Mar8-05, 12:03 PM | #16 |
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I was wondering about that. Thanks for asking and clearing that up enigma and Morbius.
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| Mar8-05, 12:05 PM | #17 |
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