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#1277 | |
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Bamboozled!
"๐บ๐๐ท๐ท๐ญ"
May 2003
Down not across
2·5,393 Posts |
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Intrinsically sub-critical and fail-safe. Plenty of ground-water here to take away heat which wasn't otherwise used to warm my home 9 months of the year and allow me to grow tender plants (including food) in my garden. |
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#1278 | |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2·3·1,693 Posts |
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#1279 |
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2×1,877 Posts |
One problem in moving nuclear plants away from dense population areas is that all the water cooling opportunities are in the same places that populations accumulate.
Small and medium reactors might have smaller cooling problems (har har) but multiplying installations increases the number of sites to secure. They might have more opportunities to use supercritical CO2 instead of steam - and that is interesting but I still want to see better spent fuel infrastructure. I follow an interest group called Thorium Now and it's nice to dream about modernizing and innovating the power plants. There is a guy talking about mixing molten salt with supercritical CO2 to make power on demand with a really small turbine. Of course solar concentrators can also keep a bunch of molten salt on hand. Last fiddled with by only_human on 2016-07-20 at 17:19 |
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#1280 |
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2×1,877 Posts |
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#1281 | |
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2×3×1,693 Posts |
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#1282 | |
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Romulan Interpreter
Jun 2011
Thailand
26×151 Posts |
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Last fiddled with by LaurV on 2016-08-06 at 02:27 |
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#1283 | ||
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"Kieren"
Jul 2011
In My Own Galaxy!
2·3·1,693 Posts |
I expect some dispute with the conclusions presented in this article. To me, the connections are obvious.
http://www.progressive.org/news/2016...global-warming Quote:
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#1284 |
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Aug 2006
175B16 Posts |
Of course 100% of the heat is eventually added to the environment, it's just a question of how much we can use along the way. Would someone who cares more than I do compare the heat generated by a MW/hr from fossil fuels (100% of the heat, plus the marginal warming effect of the CO2) vs a MW/hr from nuclear (100% of the heat)? Probably someone has computed this information, somewhere on the Internet, but I haven't seen it.
Maybe coal is very efficient in turning its heat into electricity, enough so to offset its carbon. Maybe the conversion efficiencies are similar but carbon dioxide warming is very significant. Of course this (intentionally) leaves out other factors like fly ash, mercury, SO2/NOx, low- and high-level reactor waste, and Fukushima-type incidents. Last fiddled with by CRGreathouse on 2016-09-23 at 16:26 |
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#1285 | |
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Bamboozled!
"๐บ๐๐ท๐ท๐ญ"
May 2003
Down not across
2A2216 Posts |
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#1286 |
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Aug 2006
3·1,993 Posts |
Right. Fundamentally, I would expect both to have a similar efficiency because they should both be Carnot engines, which don't care how the heat was generated. But I'm game to learn how the real world interacts here. If anything I'd expect the nuclear reactor to operate at higher efficiency because of the larger thermal gradient.
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#1287 | |
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Bamboozled!
"๐บ๐๐ท๐ท๐ญ"
May 2003
Down not across
2·5,393 Posts |
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