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A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA Russ Cage Presented 3 May 2009 Penguicon (Romulus, MI) Released under the Creative Commons license
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A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Jan 04, 2016

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Russ Cage Presented 3 May 2009 Penguicon (Romulus, MI) ‏. A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA. Released under the Creative Commons license. What are the issues. Energy supplies Transport system National security. Energy supplies. Oil is depleting Coal is heavily polluting - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Russ CagePresented 3 May 2009

Penguicon (Romulus, MI)

Released under the Creative Commons license

Page 2: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

What are the issues

Energy supplies Transport system National security

Page 3: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Energy supplies

Oil is depletingCoal is heavily pollutingConventional gas declining (in USA)All fossil fuels emit CO2

(Short term looks okay. Long term?)

Page 4: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

World oil production: falling off a cliff

Image credit: www.theoildrum.com

Page 5: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Also national security issues

Reliance on oil means vulnerability Potential for blackmail Oil states already practicing “resource

nationalism”, withdrawing from free markets Credit crunch means fewer resources financed,

lower future capacity. Lower capacity means higher prices unless

demand restrained.

Page 6: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Where can we get energy?

Pretty much everything we can get ultimately comes from the strong nuclear force.

0.Fission: liberating binding energy of uranium.

1.Fusion: turning hydrogen into atoms with greater binding energy.

2.Wind, solar: indirect use of solar fusion energy

3.Fossil fuels: indirect and time-delayed solar energy, but concentrated and convenient

Running out of usable fossil fuels, so where next?

Page 7: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Where can't we get energy?

Some sources are not viable going forward.

0.Fusion: 20 years away from commercial viability... for the last 50 years.

1.Fossil fuels: depleting, polluting and a disaster for the climate*.

We are left with solar/wind and fission.

*Climate change is controversial. That today's atmospheric CO2 levels are unprecedented in the last several glacial cycles covering the previous ~1 million years is a fact. So is the acidification of the oceans; oceanic pH has gone from 8.2 to 7.75.

Page 8: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

How about the wind

Enormous potential for wind. Wind can supply several times as much energy as US electric grid handles.

Page 9: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

THE TOP TWENTY STATESfor Wind Energy Potential

as measured by annual energy potential in the billions of kWh, factoring in environmental and land use exclusions for wind class of 3 and higher.

B kWh/Yr B kWh/Yr1. North Dakota 1,210 11. Colorado 4812. Texas 1,190 12. New Mexico 4353. Kansas 1,070 13. Idaho 734. South Dakota 1,030 14. Michigan 655. Montana 1,020 15. New York 626. Nebraska 868 16. Illinois 617. Wyoming 747 17. California 598. Oklahoma 725 18. Wisconsin 589. Minnesota 657 19. Maine 5610. Iowa 551 20. Missouri 52 Source: An Assessment of the Available Windy Land Area and Wind Energy Potential in the Contiguous United States, Pacific Northwest Laboratory, August 1991. PNL-7789

(Total US electric generation is ~4000 billion kWh/year)

Page 10: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

That's all well and good, but...

How do you use electricity to substitute for oil? Move freight off roads to rails. Rail uses 1/3 as

much fuel per ton-mile as semi-trucks. Electric rail uses zero.

Electrify local delivery trucks (e.g. Smith Newton)

New forms of transport.

Page 11: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Image credit: faculty.uwashington.edu

Image credit: www.trendhunter.com

Page 12: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

The devil is in the details

Wind can supply energy, but it blows when it wants to. How does it meet demand?

Cannot overbuild to meet peak demand directly; cost-prohibitive and wasteful.

Current system uses peaking generators

Page 13: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Image credit: world-nuclear.org

Page 14: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

That's the old way

If peaking fuel is unavailable or ruled out by emissions, then what?

Maybe the answer is... hot air?

Compressed Air Energy Storage (CAES) plant planned for Iowa will:

Output 1.33 kWh for each kWh input Burn 1.25 kWh natural gas for each kWh output

(80% gas-to-electric efficiency, compared to 46% for best simple-cycle gas turbines)

Overall efficiency ~50%.

Page 15: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Image credit: newenergynews.blogspot.com

Page 16: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Image credit: newenergynews.blogspot.com

Page 17: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

It's those details again

CAES may achieve 80% fuel-to-electric efficiency, but it still burns natural gas. What can we use instead?

How about... nuclear?

Page 18: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Image credit: David LeBlanc

Page 19: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Compressedair in

Exhaust

Page 20: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

What can this do?

Making some assumptions: For transport, attempt to replace most diesel

fuel (~27 billion gallons/year), all gasoline (~140 billion gallons year). Diesel efficiency assumed to be 40%, gasoline efficiency 20%.

For stationary uses, replace all residential and commercial natural gas consumption with heat pumps for heat and hot water. Heat pump CoP assumed to be 4.0 (EER of 13.6).

Eliminate all fossil fuel for electric generation.

Page 21: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Assumptions, cot'd

2/3 of road freight is diverted to rail, and rail is 100% electrified.

75% of remaining road freight fuel is replaced by batteries.

Page 22: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA
Page 23: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA
Page 24: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA
Page 25: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

That “other capacity”... what is it?

Obvious candidate: thorium Net generation demand of ~3000 billion

kWh/year at year 30 Average production of 342 GW at year 30

Page 26: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Could we build that much?

Meeting 342 GW target would require 684 units of 500 MWe average power.

Construction rate would be ~23 units/year or ~2/month.

Page 27: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Remember LeBlanc's design...Modified Geometry 2 Fluid Reactor*

“Tube-Within-Shell”*Patent Pending

Expands power producing volume while maintaining thesmall inner core needed for a simple 2 Fluid design

Page 28: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Features of design Tube assemblies are simple. Building 2/month

is a relatively small manufacturing effort. Core salt tubes fit on flatbed trucks. Can be

factory-built and inspected; no on-site fabrication of core components required.

Factory fabrication of major components allows rapid construction of powerplants.

Page 29: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

What about pesky details?

Peaking power is manageable. 342 GWe at 48% thermal efficiency using

supercritical CO2 turbines requires 712 GW heat.

712 GW heat at 80% CAES efficiency yields 570 GW electric in peaking mode.

Hydro and other schedulable resources will still be there.

Page 30: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Could we build them?

Assuming ½ inch walls (1.27 cm) and 6 meter length using Hastelloy-N, each reactor requires ~5 tons Ni (lesser amounts Cr+Mo). This comes to 120 tons/year

120 tons/year is trivial fraction of ~1.5 million tons world production.

Page 31: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Could we start them?

Assuming 1500 kg starting fissile inventory per GWe, starting 12 GW/year needs 18 tons.

USA has upwards of 47,000 tons of spent LWR fuel in storage. This assays at ~0.8% Pu.

If 90% can be recovered, ~340 tons of Pu will suffice to start first 19 years of production.

Remaining 11 years of 30-year production run can be started with next 19 years of Pu from spent LWR fuel plus bred U-233 or enriched U-235 if required.

Page 32: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Could we fuel them?

Th-U cycle requires ~0.8 ton Th per Gwe-year. 342 GW average would need ~270 tons/year.

Where could we find this?

Page 33: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

How about in the trash? USA buried ~3200 tons thorium nitrate in

Nevada as “useless”. That's 12 years of fuel after the 30-year build-out. Dig it up again.

Image credit: thoriumenergy.blogspot.com

Page 34: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

If nuclear's so good... why use wind?

Different strengths. Wind can be added on very short notice. Wind

farms can go from site selection to completion in 18 months.

Nuclear requires longer planning cycle. Unlikely that planning, permits, construction can be done in less than 5 years even with factory construction and expedited procedures.

Extensive use of CAES allows wind to supply total energy requirements while nuclear reheat addresses peak demand.

Page 35: A nuclear-wind energy system for the USA

Conclusions There is no problem in principle with the

replacement of transport fuel with electricity. There is no problem in principle with

replacement of fossil fuels in stationary applications with electricity either.

There appears to be no substantive barrier to generation of most electric requirements with nuclear+wind.

Technologies for doing this have been allowed to molder on the shelf, and a decade+ of fuel was simply thrown away. Mostly we need to stop wasting it!