Nuclear Electric Power: Safety, Operation, and Control Aspects
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About this ebook
Assesses the engineering of renewable sources for commercial power generation and discusses the safety, operation, and control aspects of nuclear electric power
From an expert who advised the European Commission and UK government in the aftermath of Three Mile Island and Chernobyl comes a book that contains experienced engineering assessments of the options for replacing the existing, aged, fossil-fired power stations with renewable, gas-fired, or nuclear plants.
From geothermal, solar, and wind to tidal and hydro generation, Nuclear Electric Power: Safety, Operation, and Control Aspects assesses the engineering of renewable sources for commercial power generation and discusses the important aspects of the design, operation, and safety of nuclear stations.
Nuclear Electric Power offers:
- Novel, practical engineering assessments for geothermal, hydro, solar, tidal, and wind generation in terms of the available data on cost, safety, environmental damage, capacity factor reliability, and grid compatibility, with some nuclear comparisons
- Eigenvalues and real frequency response functions to assess the stabilities of reactor power, two-phase channel flow, and a Grid network
- A non-linear control strategy with simulation results for a Design Base Accident scenario
- Original analyses with experimental validation of molten fuel coolant interactions and aircraft impacts on rigid structures
- Analysis of the circumstances that led to the Fukushima disaster
Nuclear Electric Power is an important book for all international nuclear power agencies and those who work within the field.
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Nuclear Electric Power - J. Brian Knowles
Preface
If the industries and lifestyles of economically developed nations are to be preserved, then their aging, high-capacity power stations will soon need replacing. Those industrialized nations with intentions to lower their carbon emissions are proposing nuclear and renewable energy sources to fill the gap. As well as UK nuclear plant proposals, China plans an impressive 40% new-build capacity, with India, Brazil, and South Korea also having construction policies. Even with centuries of coal and shale-gas reserves, the United States has recently granted a construction license for a pressurized water reactor (PWR) near Augusta, Georgia. Nuclear power is again on the global agenda.
Initially renewable sources, especially wind, were greeted with enthusiastic public support because of their perceived potential to decelerate global climate change. Now however, the media and an often vociferous public are challenging the green credentials of all renewables as well as their ability to provide reliable electricity supplies. Experienced engineering assessments are first given herein for the commercial use of geothermal, hydro, solar, tidal and wind power sources in terms of costs per installed MW, capacity factors, hectares per installed MW and their other environmental impacts. These factors, and a frequent lack of compatibility with national power demands, militate against these power sources making reliable major contributions in some well-developed economies. Though recent global discoveries of significant shale and conventional gas deposits suggest prolonging the UK investment in reliable and high thermal efficiency combined cycle gas turbine (CCGT) plants, ratified emission targets would be contravened and there are also political uncertainties. Accordingly, a nuclear component is argued as necessary in the UK Grid system. Reactor physics, reliability and civil engineering costs reveal that water reactors are the most cost-effective. By virtue of higher linear fuel ratings and the emergency cooling option provided by separate steam generators, PWRs are globally more widely favored.
Power station and grid operations require the control of a number of system variables, but this cannot be engineered directly from their full nonlinear dynamics. A linearization technique is briefly described and then applied to successfully establish the stability of reactor power, steam drum-water level, flow in boiling reactor channels and of a Grid network as a whole. The reduction of these multivariable problems to single input-single output (SISO) analyses illustrates the importance of specific engineering insight, which is further confirmed by the subsequently presented nonlinear control strategy for a station blackout accident.
Public apprehensions over nuclear power arise from a perceived concomitant production of weapons material, the long-term storage of waste and its operational safety. Reactor physics and economics are shown herein to completely separate the activities of nuclear power and weapons. Because fission products from a natural fission reactor some 1800 million years ago are still incarcerated in local igneous rock strata, the additional barriers now proposed appear more than sufficient for safe and secure long-term storage. Spokespersons for various non-nuclear organizations frequently seek to reassure us with Lessons have been learned
: yet the same misadventures still reoccur. Readers find here that the global nuclear industry has indeed learned and reacted constructively to the Three Mile Island and Chernobyl incidents with the provision of safety enhancements and operational legislation. With regard to legislation, the number of cancers induced by highly unlikely releases of fission products over a nuclear plant's lifetime must be demonstrably less than the natural incidence by orders of magnitude. Also the most exposed person must not be exposed to an unreasonable radiological hazard. Furthermore, a prerequisite for operation is a hierarchical management structure based on professional expertise, plant experience and mandatory simulator training. Finally, a well-conceived local evacuation plan must pre-exist and the aggregate probability of all fuel-melting incidents must be typically less than 1 in 10 million operating years.
Faulty plant siting is argued as the reason for fuel melting at Fukushima and not the nuclear technology itself. If these reactors like others had been built on the sheltered West Coast, their emergency power supplies would not have been swamped by the tsunami and safe neutronic shut-downs after the Richter-scale 9 quake would have been sustained.
To quantify the expectation of thyroid cancers from fission product releases, international research following TMI-2 switched from intact plant performance to the phenomenology and consequences of fuel melting (i.e., Severe Accidents) after the unlikely failure of the multiple emergency core cooling systems. This book examines in detail the physics, likelihood and plant consequences of thermally driven explosive interactions between molten core debris and reactor coolant (MFCIs). Because such events or disintegrating plant items, or an aircraft crash are potential threats to a reactor vessel and its containment building, the described replica scale
experiments and finite element calculations were undertaken at Winfrith. Finally, the operation and simulation of containment sprays in preventing an over-pressurization are outlined in relation to the TOSQAN experiments.
This book has been written with two objectives in mind. The first is to show that the safety of nuclear power plants has been thoroughly researched, so that the computed numbers of induced cancers from plant operations are indeed orders of magnitude less than the natural statistical incidence, and still far less than deaths from road traffic accidents or tobacco smoking. With secure waste storage also assured, voiced opposition to nuclear power on health grounds appears irrational. After 1993 the manpower in the UK nuclear industry contracted markedly leaving a younger minority to focus on decommissioning and waste classification. The presented information with other material was then placed in the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority (UKAEA) archives so it is now difficult to access. Accordingly this compilation under one cover is the second objective. Its value as part of a comprehensive series of texts remains as strong as when originally conceived by the UKAEA. Specifically, an appreciation helps foster a productive interface between diversely educated new entrants and their experienced in situ industrial colleagues.
Though the author contributed to the original research work herein, it was only as a member of various international teams. This friendly collaboration with UKAEA, French, German and Russian colleagues greatly enriched his life with humor and scientific understanding. Gratitude is also extended to the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority of the United Kingdom for their permission to reproduce, within this book alone, copyrighted UKAEA research material. In addition thanks are due to Alan Neilson, Paula Miller, and Professor Derek Wilson, who have particularly helped to hatch
this book. Finally, please note that the opinions expressed are the author's own which might not concur with those of the now-disbanded UKAEA or its successors in title.
Brian Knowles
River House’, Caters Place, Dorchester
Glossary
Principal Nomenclature
The diverse range of subjects with the preferred use of conventional symbolism makes multiple connotations inevitable, but local definitions prevent ambiguity. All vector variables are embolded.
Chapter 1
Energy Sources, Grid Compatibility, Economics, and the Environment
1.1 Background
If the industries and accustomed lifestyles of the economically well-developed nations are to be preserved, their aging high-capacity ( 100 MW) electric power plants will soon require replacement with reliable units having lower carbon emissions and environmental impacts. Legally binding national targets [1] on carbon emissions were set out by the European Union in 2008 to mitigate their now unequivocal effect on global climate change. In 2009, the UK's Department of Energy and Climate Change [1] announced ambitious plans for a 34% reduction in carbon emissions by 2020. The principal renewable energy sources of Geothermal, Hydro-, Solar, Tidal and Wind are now being investigated worldwide with regard to their contribution towards a greener planet.
Their economics and those for conventional electricity generation are usually compared in terms of a Levelized Cost which is the sum of those for capital investment, operation, maintenance and decommissioning using Net Present-day Values. Because some proposed systems are less well-developed for commercial application (i.e., riskier) than others, or are long term in the sense of capitally intensive before any income accrues, the now necessary investment of private equity demands a matching cash return [52]. Also in this respect the electric power output from any generator has a degree of intermittency measured by
(1.1)
equationThese aspects are included as discounted cash flows in a Capital Asset Pricing Model that assesses the commercial viability of a project with respect to its capital repayment period.
As well as satisfactory economics and environmental impact, a replacement commercial generator in a Grid system must provide its centrally scheduled contribution to the variable but largely predictable power demands on the network. Figure 1.1 illustrates such variable diurnal and seasonal demands in the United Kingdom. It is often claimed in the popular media that a particular wind or solar installation can provide a specific fraction of the UK's electrical energy demand (GWh), or service so many households. Often these energy statistics are based on unachievable continuous operation at maximum output and an inadequate instantaneous power of around 1½ kW per household.¹ As explained in Section 3.3 it is crucial to maintain a close match between instantaneous power generated and that consumed: as otherwise area blackouts are inevitable. Moreover, because these renewables fail to deliver their quotas under not improbable weather conditions, additional capital expenditure is necessary in the form of reliable backup stations. Assessments of the economics, reliability, Grid compatibility and environmental impacts of commercially sized generating sources now follow.
Figure 1.1 Typical Electrical Power Demands in the United Kingdom
1.2 Geothermal Energy
Geothermal energy stems from impacts that occurred during the accretive formation of our planet, the radioactive decay of its constituents and incident sunlight. Its radioactive component is estimated [2] as about 30 TW, which is about half the total and twice the present global electricity demand. However, commercial access is achievable only at relatively few locations along the boundaries of tectonic plates and where the geology is porous or fractured. Though hot springs and geysers occur naturally, commercial extraction for district heating, horticulture or electric power involves deep drilling into bedrock with one hole to extract hot water and another thermally distant to inject its necessary replenishment. There are presently no commercial geothermal generation sites in the United Kingdom, but a 4½ km deep 10 MW station near Truro is under active consideration.
The Second Law of Thermodynamics [3] by Lord Kelvin asserts that a heat engine must involve a heat source at a temperature and a cooler heat sink at a temperature . In 1824, Carnot proved that the maximum efficiency by which heat could be converted into mechanical work is
(1.2) equation
Given a relatively hot geothermal source of 200°C and a condensing temperature of 40°C, the above efficiency bound evaluates as 34%, but intrinsic thermodynamic irreversibilities [3] allow practical values [2] of only between 10 and 23%. Because the majority of geothermal sources have temperatures below 175°C they are economic only for district and industrial space heating or as tourist spectacles in areas of outstanding beauty (e.g., Yosemite National Park, USA). Exploitation of the higher temperature sources for electric power is engineered by means of a Binary Cycle system, in which extracted hot water vaporizes butane or pentane in a heat exchanger to drive a turbo-alternator. Replenishment water for the geothermal source is provided by the colder outlet, and district or industrial space heating is derived from recompression of the hydrocarbon. The largest geothermal electricity units are located in the United States and the Philippines with totals of 3 and 2 MW, respectively, but these countries with others intend further developments.
According to the US Department of Energy an 11 MW geothermal unit of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company had from 1960 an operational life of 30 years, which matches those for some fossil and nuclear power stations. Because geothermal generation involves drilling deep into bedrock with only a 25 to 80% chance of success, development is both risky and capital intensive and so it incurs a high discount rate. Moreover, despite zero fuel charges, low thermal conversion efficiencies reduce the rate of return on invested capital, which further increases interest rate repayments. That said, nations with substantial geothermal resources are less dependent on others for their electricity which is an important political and economic advantage. Construction costs for a recent 4.5 MW unit in Nevada, the United States were $3.2M per installed MW.
Geothermal water contains toxic salts of mercury, boron, arsenic and antimony. Their impact on a portable water supply is minimized by replenishments at similar depths to the take-off points. These sources deep inside the earth's crust also contain hydrogen sulfide, ammonia and methane, which contribute to acid rain and global warming. Otherwise with an equivalent carbon emission of just 122 kg per MWh, geothermal generation's footprint
is small compared with fossil-fired production. However, the extraction process fractures rock strata that has caused subsidence around Wairakei, NZ, and at Basel CH small Richter-scale 3.4 earth tremors led to suspension of the project after just 6 days.
Geothermal energy for domestic and small-scale industrial space heating can be provided without an environmental impact by heat pumps [3,15]. An early 1920's example is the public swimming pool at Zürich CH which used the River Limmat as its heat source. Finally, some recently built UK homes have heat pumps whose input is accessed from coils buried in their gardens.
1.3 Hydroelectricity
Some 715 GW of hydroelectric power are already installed worldwide, and in 2006, it supplied 20% of the global electricity demand and