The Sustainability Of Current Energy Resources Exploitation Flashcards

1
Q

Where does nuclear energy come from?

A

The splitting or joining of atomic nuclei

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2
Q

Is nuclear energy dense?

A

Yes as little matter needed to produce a lot of energy

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3
Q

What are the two types of nuclear energy production?

A

Nuclear fission

Nuclear fusion

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4
Q

What isotopes are typically used for nuclear fission?

A

Uranium or plutonium

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5
Q

What is the difference between fission and fusion?

A

Fission- splitting

Fusion- joining

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6
Q

Does nuclear energy production releases carbon?

A

As no chemical burning occurs it generates base load energy with no carbon output making it better for climate change issue

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7
Q

What is capacity factor?

A

A measure of what percentage of the time a power plant actually produces energy

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8
Q

Does nuclear have a higher capacity factor then renewables?

A

Yes it is much higher

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9
Q

How much is 1 kg of uranium equal to in coal?

A

13 tonnes

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10
Q

How much pure uranium will power your home for a day?

A

3g

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11
Q

What does having a high energy density mean for nuclear?

A

Impacts of transporting fuels is reduced

Flexible in where they can be built

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12
Q

Does nuclear power have a high nuclear output to the environment?

A

Nuclears out put to the environment is less then any other major energy source (coal is the worst)

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13
Q

Are nuclear power plants expensive?

A

Yes as the complex technology makes manufacturing of plants expensive (less developed countries can’t afford it)

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14
Q

Is nuclear energy renewable?

A

Technically non-renewable but it is used at a very slow rate and there is a plentiful supply

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15
Q

What is the problem with the supply of radioactive isotopes?

A

Most deposits are low grade

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16
Q

What does the low grade deposits mean for extraction of nuclear?

A

Extraction expensive making electricity expensive

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17
Q

How do nuclear power plants affect the local habitat?

A

The power plants take up a large amount of space so the habitats in that area have to be cleared

18
Q

How does the mining for radioactive isotopes affect the environment?

A

Will cause habitat damage

And may produce hazardous waste

19
Q

What is embodied energy?

A

the sum of all the energy required to produce any goods or services, considered as if that energy was incorporated or ‘embodied’ in the product itself. (Nuclear stations use a lot)

20
Q

What risks are associated with nuclear power stations?

A

Risk of nuclear failure

Risk of leakage form waste disposal (spent energy)

21
Q

What are some examples of nuclear disasters?

A

Chernobyl

Fukushima power plant

22
Q

What is an example of where people have been against a nuclear power plant?

A

Protests by anti-nuclear activists in New Hampshire in 1977

23
Q

How long will it take for nuclear waste to reduce to background levels?

A

Several hundred years

24
Q

What is the most common way of storing nuclear waste?

A

Geological disposal facility (underground facility)

25
Q

How is nuclear waste kept in geological disposal facilities?

A

Waste in solid glass form
Metal waste container
Clay buffer
Rock

26
Q

What is polymer absorption?

A

Extracting uranium from seawater
The dissolved uranium sticks to certain polymers
Uranium is extracted using acids

27
Q

What is phosphate mining?

A

Uranium is found in phosphate deposits so can be mined at the same time as phosphates

28
Q

What is coal ash?

A

Extracting small amounts of triuranium a uranium compound

0.4 pounds per metric ton

29
Q

Why are they creating plutonium reactors?

A

Most reactors use uranium-235 (only 0.7% of what’s mined)
Uranium 328 (what’s left) isn’t fissile
U-328 can be converted into plutonium- 239 which can be split
Allows more energy to be harnessed

30
Q

What is a thorium reactor?

A

Thorium is not fissile but it can be converted into U-233 that is fissile (splittable)
Thorium rods bred to make uranium 233 with neutron bombardment

31
Q

Why bother with thorium reactors?

A

Thorium is 3x more abundant then uranium
Thorium waste is less radioactive
Less likely to be propagated for nuclear weapons
Slow and expensive (negative)

32
Q

What is nuclear fusion?

A

Two or more atomic nuclei join together to make a new larger nucleus releasing energy

33
Q

What is the one set back form nuclear fusion?

A

Still in experimental phase (far from complete)

35 countries as working in France to make it reality

34
Q

What are the two potential options for fusion?

A

Toroidal reactors

Laser fusion

35
Q

Why is the risk of a melt down non-existent with fusion?

A

As if the specific criteria for the reaction to take place aren’t met then the reaction wont take place

36
Q

What is the name of the large organisation reaserching nuclear fusion?

A

International thermonuclear experimental reactor (ITER)

37
Q

What is the positive of toroidal reactors?

A

Very efficient 500Mw output form 50Mw input

38
Q

What atoms are used in fusion?

A

Two hydrogen atoms combine to form helium the hydrogen is converted into energy

39
Q

What happens during laser fusion?

A

Small pellets of deuterium- tritium (DT) isotopes are introduced into blast chamber where pellets are compressed to high densities by an intense laser

40
Q

What are the positives of laser fusion?

A

Carbon free with practically unlimited fuel supply
No active intervention required (cooling or reprocessing) when shut down
Doesn’t have high nuclear waste

41
Q

Why is laser fusion still in development?

A

High powered lasers are key but present lasers are relatively inefficient converting electrical energy into beam energy