Nuclear power
The main nuclear fuels are uranium and plutonium.
In a nuclear power station, nuclear energy is converted to heat energy:
- heat is used to change water into steam in the boiler;
- the steam drives the turbineRevolving machine with blades that are turned by wind, water or steam. Turbines in a power station turn the generators. (heat \(\rightarrow\)kinetic energyEnergy which an object possesses by being in motion. );
- this drives the generator to produce electricity (kinetic energy \(\rightarrow\) electrical energy.)
Nuclear and geothermalEnergy from the heat of the Earth. energy are the only energy resources that do not come from the Sun.
Advantages
- Unlike fossil fuels, nuclear fuels do not emit greenhouse gases The gases responsible for global warming and climate change - carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide and CFCs (chlorofluorocarbons). such as carbon dioxide.
- Nuclear fuels do not emit gasses such as sulphur dioxide which cause acid rainRain that contains dissolved acidic gases such as nitrogen oxides and sulfur dioxide..
- 1 kg of nuclear fuel produces millions of times more energy than 1 kg of coal.
Disadvantages
- Like fossil fuels, nuclear fuels used for nuclear fissionThe splitting of a large nucleus to produce two smaller ones. , such as uranium ore, are non-renewable energy resources since supplies will not last forever.
- Although modern reactor designs are extremely safe, if there is an accident, large amounts of radioactive material could be released into the environment.
- Nuclear waste remains radioactive and is hazardous to health for thousands of years, so it must be stored safely.
- decommissionTo deactivate or remove in a safe manner. a nuclear power plant is extremely expensive.