Heat Transfer & Thermodynamics in Nuclear Reactors
Heat Transfer & Thermodynamics in Nuclear Reactors
Heat Transfer & Thermodynamics in Nuclear Reactors
Nuclear Reactors
Dr. Ugur GUVEN
Laws of Thermodynamics
The first law, also known as Law of
Conservation of Energy, states that
energy can not be created or
destroyed; it can only be
redistributed or changed from one
form to another.
The second law of thermodynamics
says that the entropy of any isolated
system not in
thermal equilibrium almost always
increases.
The third law of thermodynamics
states that the entropy of a system
approaches a constant value as
the temperature approaches zero.
Thermodynamic Principles
Nuclear Reactors work with the same
objective of creating work through heat
The amount of heat that is harnessed can be
transformed to work through various
thermodynamic processes.
The percentage of conversion from heat to
work determined the thermodynamic
efficiency of the reactor
Carnot Cycle
Carnot Cycle
This is why commercial nuclear power plants (or any thermal
power plant for that matter) are placed near environmental
lakes and large water sources, so that the waste heat can be
dissipated without a large increase in the environmental
temperature TL. Obviously, TL will be higher in summer times
or in hot geographical locations causing the efficiency of the
heat cycle to be lowered.
But, for the majority parts of the world, TL will be changing
within a reasonable frame of 20o C to 35o C. to Thus, for all
intents and purposes you cant change the efficiency of the
nuclear reactor with TL and so the only variable that you can
really play with is the TH or the high temperature of the heat
reservoir. Hence, increasing the heat will always increase the
efficiency of an ideal Carnot cycle for which most power
plants are modeled after.
Heat Transfer
Conduction or diffusion: The transfer of energy
between objects that are in physical contact.
Convection: The transfer of energy between an
object and its environment, due to fluid motion.
Radiation: The transfer of energy to or from a body
by means of the emission or absorption of
electromagnetic radiation.
Advection: The transfer of energy from one
location to another as a side effect of physically
moving an object containing that energy. (like
putting a bottle of iced water in a room)
4k
4k
Problem 1
Heat Transfer in Fuel Rods
Calculate the temperature difference for a reactor
fuel rod with radius of 0.5 cm at a point where the
power density is q=200 W/cm^3. Take conductivity
of U02 as k=0.062 W/cm.C
q1
R2q
To Ts
4k
4k
P cM (Tcout Tcin )
Problem 2
If the mass flow rate of a nuclear reactor with
3000 MW power is 19,800 kg/sec and if water
enters at 300 degrees Celsius calculate the
temperature at which the water leaves. Take
specific heat of 6.06 x 10^3 J/kg-C
P cM (Tcout Tcin )
With the equation above:
19,800 = (3000 x 10^6)/((6.66 x 10^3)(300-T))
T(out) = 325 C
Problem 3
Convert the volume flow rate in the previous
problem to liters per minute. Take specific
gravity of 0.687
V=(19800 kg/s)/(687 kg/m^3) = 28.8 m^3/s
Since 1 min = 60 sec
V= 28.8 x 60 = 1728 m^3 / min
1 m^3 = 1000 liters
V= 1,728,000 liters per minute
Waste Power
A nuclear plant operating at electrical power
1000 MWe with an efficiency of 33% would
have a thermal power of
1000 / 0.33 = 3030 MWt
Thus, it must reject a waste power of
P= 2030 MWt
This waste power is lost as internal energy and
as waste heat. It is transferred to coolant and
then to coolant towers for discharge into
atmosphere and / or to the body of water.
Cooling Towers
Waste heat is extracted to the atmosphere by
cooling towers in nuclear reactors. Usually,
water vapor is given out.