How Nuclear Power Works

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1. How does a nuclear power plant work?

The only purpose of a nuclear power plant is to produce electricity. To produce


electricity, a power plant needs a source of heat to boil water which becomes steam. The
steam then turns a turbine, the turbine turns an electrical generator, and the generator
produces electricity. In fossil fuel plants the source of heat is burning coal, oil, or gas. In
a nuclear plant the source of heat is a nuclear reactor. Although the basic process is
simple, making it work is rather complicated.
First, lets look at the process that the nuclear fuel produces heat. The fuel for a nuclear
reactor is uranium, but not just any uranium. Most uranium atoms (99.3%) consist of a
nucleus with 146 uncharged neutrons and 92 positively charged protons; adding the
number of neutrons and protons, these atoms have a total of 238 neutrons and protons.
We call this number the atomic number, and refer to this nucleus as uranium-238, or just
U-238. However, not all uranium atoms have 146 neutrons; 0.7% have 143, so this is
called U-235. Even though both U-238 and U-235 are uranium, they have different
characteristics. The most important difference is that U-235 spontaneously splits, or
fissions, producing two smaller nuclei (called fission products) plus two to five neutrons.
The fission products and the neutrons have energy, which is the source of heat. To have
U-235 fission efficiently, the uranium fuel in a reactor is enriched; the uranium has gone
through a process to increase the content of U-235 from 0.7% to 3 to 4%.
On aspect of the fission products that was a major factor in the TMI accident, is that the
fission products are radioactive. A radioactive nucleus changes (decays) to another
nucleus by emitting a particle; for fission products, this is a beta particle, which is just a
high speed electron. In addition, when a fission product decays, the nucleus will emit one
or more gamma rays. Collectively, the beta particle and gamma rays are called radiation
and this radiation has energy. Because the radiation has energy, it is also a source of heat
in a nuclear reactor. In fact, radioactive decay of fission products produces about 7% of
the heat in a nuclear reactor that has been operating for several months.
The rate of U-235 spontaneous fission is very slow; too slow to be of any use in a nuclear
reactor. However, U-235 can fission if a neutron hits it. Therefore, if a single U-235
nucleus fissions, the emitted neutrons can induce a fission in two or more U-235 nuclei,
which each in turn can produce two or more, etc. If enough U-235 nuclei are close
together, the process can increase rapidly, producing a lot of energy in a short time. This
is the basics behind a nuclear weapon. However, to produce a large explosion, the
uranium needs to be enriched to more than 50 percent U-235. Because the fuel in a
reactor is only three to four percent U-235, the reactor cannot explode like a nuclear
bomb.
Ideally, the fission process in a reactor should reach a constant rate so the reactor can
maintain a constant high temperature. To maintain the desired temperature, the rate of
fission must be constant. However, each fission produces several neutrons, so only one of
these neutrons should induce one fission; nor more, no less. To maintain this constant rate
of fission, the reactor must have some mechanism to absorb the other neutrons before

they hit another U-235 nucleus. In a reactor, this absorbing material is in the control rods.
Fully inserting the control rods into a reactor will cause the fission process to come to a
complete stop. By varying the level of the control rods, the operators can set any desired
rate of energy production. Thus, the control rods act as a gas pedal for the reactor;
inserting them slows the fission process, and removing them allows the fission process to
increase.
Now, how does all the heat generated in the reactor become electricity? Refer to the TMI
Unit Two schematic for the following discussion. An animated description can be found
at the Nuclear Regulatory Web Site: http://www.nrc.gov/reactors.html.

Drawing from Metropolitan Edison Co. A Report to the Met-Ed Community May 30, 1979

The reactor vessel contains the core (i.e., the uranium fuel) and water. The reactor at TMI
is a Pressure Water Reactor (PWR) which means that the water in the reactor vessel is
under high pressure (about 2,000 pounds per square inch (psi)) and high temperature
(about 600F). At this temperature and pressure, water does not boil, so the reactor is
completely filled with water. Because water is not compressible, maintaining a desired
pressure is difficult if the entire system were solid water. Therefore, a pressurizer is in the
system that contains a mixture of air and steam. By adding or removing air, the operators
can maintain the desired pressure. The pressurizer has a valve that automatically opens in
an emergency if the pressure gets too high. This is the valve that malfunctioned during
the accident and was the cause of the accident.
The heated water in the reactor flows to a steam generator (actually the system has two
steam generators; the other one is not shown). This is just a large tank with pipes flowing

through it. The water from the reactor flows through these pipes; these pipes are
surrounded by water in the tank. The water in the tank is at a lower pressure, so when the
water from the reactor flows through the pipes, it heats the tank water close to 600F, but
at this lower pressure, this water boils, forming steam. The steam goes to the turbine
causing that to rotate which then turns a generator, thus producing electricity.
On the exit side of the turbine is a condenser. To get the maximum energy out of the
steam, the second law of thermodynamics requires that the entering and exiting steam
have a maximum temperature difference. This condenser cools the steam (by contact with
external piping) and sends it to the environment. In some cases the environment is the
water of a lake or river. At the TMI plant, this waste heat is sent to the atmosphere via
cooling towers (not shown in the schematic). Therefore, the water vapor from the cooling
towers is just that, water vapor; it does not contain any radioactivity. Note that a PWR
contains three separate water loops: the first is the water in the reactor that moves heat
from the reactor to the steam generator, the second is the turbine water that moves the
heat from the steam generator to the turbine, and the third loop is the condenser water
which moves heat from the turbine to the environment. Nuclear plants are about 35 to
40% efficient; i.e., 35 to 40% of the heat generated in the reactor ends up as electricity;
the rest goes to the environment. Most fossil fuel plants are 40 to 45% efficient.
The condensate pump sends the water from the turbine back to the steam generator where
it is heated again. Ideally, the water in all three loops should not contain radioactivity.
The uranium fuel is clad in zirconium cylinders (called fuel pellets - about the size of the
end of a little finger) that should not leak. However, some pellets do leak and fission
products escape into the reactor water loop. To prevent further leakage via water leaks,
the plant has a purification system that constantly removes most of the radioactivity in the
reactor water.
Before we discuss the accident in the next section, note the pumps in the different
systems. Each played an important part in the accident. The coolant pump keeps the
water circulating in the reactor to keep that cool. The feed pump keeps the water
circulating in the turbine system, which is critical for removing heat from the reactor
water. The emergency feed pump is a back-up to the feed pump when that pump fails.

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