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Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy
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Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Jan 29, 2016

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Page 1: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Chapter 12Nuclear Energy

Page 2: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Overview of Chapter 12*

• Introduction to Nuclear Power– Atoms and radioactivity

• Nuclear Fission• Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy– Cost of Nuclear Power

• Safety Issues at Power Plants– Three Mile Island & Chornobyl– Nuclear Weapons

• Radioactive Waste• Future of Nuclear Power

Page 3: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

How do we make Electricity?• Need fuel source – – to boil water– to make steam– to turn a turbine– to convert mechanical energy into electrical energy

• Fuel sources = fossil fuels, nuclear

• Exceptions– solar – converts solar energy into electrical energy– wind – turns turbine itself

Page 4: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

How Burning Coal Produces Electricity

Page 5: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

How Nuclear Fission ProducesElectricity

Page 6: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

How much energy is produced?

• Nuclear power is an extremely rich energy source.

• One gram of Uranium-235 delivers as much energy as 3.5 metric tons of coal!!!

• One in every 5 houses in the U.S. is supplied with nuclear energy.– So what percentage of US

electricity comes from nuclear?

Page 7: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.
Page 8: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Pollution: nuclear vs. coalPollution Type Nuclear Power

PlantCoal Fired Power Plant

CO2

SOx & NOx

Mercury

Particulates

Thermal

Page 9: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Pollution: nuclear vs. coalPollution Type Nuclear Power

PlantCoal Fired Power Plant

CO2 No YesSOx & NOx No YesMercury No YesParticulates No YesThermal Yes No

Page 10: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Where are Nuclear Power Plants located?

Energy Information Administration

Page 11: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Where are Nuclear Power Plants located?

http://insideclimatenews.org/news/20130924/first-us-nuclear-power-closures-15-years-signal-wider-problems-industry

Page 12: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Introduction to Nuclear Energy• Nuclear energy– Energy released by nuclear fission or fusion

• Nuclear fission– Splitting of an atomic nucleus into two smaller

fragments, accompanied by the release of a large amount of energy

– Process used by nuclear power plants• Nuclear fusion– Joining of two lightweight atomic nuclei into a

single, heavier nucleus, accompanied by the release of a large amount of energy

– Process that powers the sun

Page 13: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Atoms and Radioactivity

• Nucleus – Comprised of protons (+)

and neutrons (neutral)

• Electrons (-) orbit around nucleus

• Neutral atoms– Same # of protons and

electrons

Page 14: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Atoms and Radioactivity

• Atomic mass– Sum of the protons and neutrons in an atom

• Atomic number– Number of protons per atom– Each element has its own atomic number

• Isotope (Greek for “at the same place”)

– Different forms of the same element• have same number of protons• have different number of neutrons

– Some isotopes are radioactive

Page 15: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Examples of Isotope• Carbon– Carbon-12: 6 protons & 6 neutrons (stable)– Carbon-14: 6 protons & 8 neutrons (radioactive)

• Uranium– Uranium-235: 92 protons & 143 neutrons (radioactive)

– Uranium-238: 92 protons & 146 neutrons (radioactive)

Page 16: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Elements which contain at least one stable isotope;Radioactive elements: the most stable isotope is very long-lived, with half-life of over four million years;Radioactive elements: the most stable isotope has half-life between 800 and 34,000 years;

Radioactive elements: the most stable isotope has half-life between one day and 103 years;Highly radioactive elements: the most stable isotope has half-life between one minute and one day;Extremely radioactive elements: the most stable isotope has half-life less than a minute. Very little is known about these elements due to their extreme instability and radioactivity.

Page 17: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Radioactive IsotopeRadioactive IsotopeRadioactive Decay– Emission of energetic particles or rays from

unstable atomic nuclei• Alpha Decay– Loss of 2 protons and 2 neutrons– Lose four mass units – Lose two atomic numbers – so move to the left 2

spaces on the periodic table• Beta Decay– Loss of electron from a neutron– Gain one atomic number - so move right 1 space

on the periodic table– Gain no mass units

Page 18: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Half-life• TIME it takes for half of a radioactive element’s atoms to decay,

or change, into a more stable element.• range from a fraction of a second to billions of years – 4.5

billion for uranium 238. • the longer the half-life, the less intense the radiation• each isotope decays based on its own half-life• example: Uranium (U-235) decays over time to Lead (Pb-207)

• Parent Material = original radioactive material• Daughter Product = new, stable material

Page 19: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Radioactive Isotope Half-lives

Page 20: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Calculating Half LivesDRAW PICTURE FIRSTHalf-life l Starting Point ex: 200g of X 1 l 100g 2 l 50g 3 l 25g

Half-life l Starting Point ex: what percent…? 1 l 50% 2 l 25% 3 l 12.5%

Page 21: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Half Life Calculations

1. How many half-lives will pass by the time a 100g sample of Au-198 to decay to 6.25g?

2. How many half-lives will pass by the time a 60g sample of Co-60 decays to 7.5g?

3. How many half-lives does it take a 180g sample of Au-198 to decay to 1/8 its original mass?

Page 22: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

4. If a 700g sample of I-131 undergoes 4 half-lives, how much material remains?

5. What is the half-life of a radioisotope if 1/16 of it remains after 4 days?

6. If 5 half-lives pass, what percent remains of the original radioisotope?

Page 23: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

7. What is the half-life of a radioactive isotope if a 500g sample decays to 62.5g in 24.3 hours?

8. How many years would it take for a 1g sample of Krypton-85 with a half-life of 10.4 years to decay to about 31.25mg?

Page 24: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Released Question from ExamUranium-235 has a half-life of 710 million years. If it is determined that a certain amount of stored U-235 will be considered safe only when its radioactivity has dropped to 0.10 percent of the original level, approximately how much time must the U-235 be stored securely to be safe?

A. 7.1 x 106 yearsB. 7.1 x 107 yearsC. 7.1 x 108 yearsD. 7.1 x 109 yearsE. 7.1 x 1010 years

Page 25: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

STOP HERE

Page 26: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Nuclear Fuel Cycle

processes involved in:•producing the fuel used in nuclear reactors and•disposing of radioactive (nuclear) wastes

Page 27: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy• Pros– Less of an immediate environmental impact

compared to fossil fuels

Page 28: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy

• Pros (continued)– Carbon-free source of electricity- no greenhouse

gases emitted– May be able to generate H-fuel

• Cons– Generates radioactive waste– Many steps require fossil fuels (mining and

disposal)– Expensive

Page 29: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Cost of Electricity from Nuclear Energy

• Cost is very high• Expensive to build nuclear power plants– Long cost-recovery time

• Fixing technical and safety issues in existing plants is expensive

• 20% of US electricity is from Nuclear Energy– Affordable due to government subsidies

Page 30: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Radioactive Waste• Low-level radioactive waste-

– Radioactive solids, liquids, or gasses that give off small amounts of ionizing radiation

• High-level radioactive waste- – Radioactive solids, liquids, or gasses that give off large amounts

of ionizing radiation

Page 31: Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy. Overview of Chapter 12* Introduction to Nuclear Power – Atoms and radioactivity Nuclear Fission Pros and Cons of Nuclear Energy.

Radioactive Wastes

• Long term solution to waste– Deep geologic burial –Yucca Mountain– As of 2004, site must meet EPA million year

standard (compared to previous 10,000 year standard)

– Possibilities:• Above ground mausoleums• Arctic ice sheets• Beneath ocean floor