Uploaded on Sep 13, 2021
PPT on Nuclear Power.
Nuclear Power
NUCLEAR POWER
INTRODUCTI
ON
Nuclear power is a clean and efficient
way of boiling water to make steam,
which turns turbines to produce
electricity.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
NUCLEAR
POWER
PLANTS
Nuclear power plants use low-
enriched uranium fuel to produce
electricity through a process called
fission the splitting of uranium atoms
in a nuclear reactor.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
HOW IT WORKS?
Uranium fuel consists of small, hard
ceramic pellets that are packaged into
long, vertical tubes. Bundles of this
fuel are inserted into the reactor.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
HOW IT WORKS
CONT.
Each uranium fuel pellet provides up
to five years of heat for power
generation. And because uranium is
one of the world’s most abundant
metals, it can provide fuel for the
world’s commercial nuclear plants for
generations to come.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
BENEFITS
Nuclear power offers many benefits
for the environment as well. Power
plants don’t burn any materials so
they produce no combustion by-
products.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
CLIMATE
CHANGE
Additionally, because they don’t
produce greenhouse gases, nuclear
plants help protect air quality and
mitigate climate change.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
GENERATE
LARGE-SCALE OF
ELECTRICITY
When it comes to efficiency and
reliability, no other electricity source
can match nuclear.
Nuclear power plants can continuously
generate large-scale, around-the-clock
electricity for many months at a time,
without interruption.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
ELECTRICITY
GENERATION
WORLD WIDE
Nuclear energy supplies about 10
percent of the world's electricity and
approximately 20 percent of the
energy in the United States.
A total of 30 countries worldwide are
operating 440 nuclear reactors for
electricity generation.
Source: nuclear.gepower.com
SAFETY
MEASURES
The lessons learned from disaster
included the need to
• Adopt risk-informed regulation
• Strengthen management systems so
that decisions made in the event of a
severe accident are based on safety
and not cost or political repercussions
• Periodically assess new information
on risks posed by natural hazards such
as earthquakes and associated
tsunamis
• Take steps to mitigate the possible
consequences of a station blackout.
Source: britannica.com
RADIOACTIVE-
WASTE
DISPOSAL
Spent nuclear reactor fuel and the
waste stream generated by fuel
reprocessing contain radioactive
materials and must be conditioned for
permanent disposal.
Source: britannica.com
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