Nuclear power Flashcards
What is a nuclear reactor?
Part of a power station fuelled by uranium that transfers nuclear energy to heat energy
What is nuclear fission?
The collision of two nuclei to make one larger nucleus, often with a large transfer of energy from mass to radiation
What happens inside a nuclear reactor?
Inside a nuclear reactor, atoms of uranium or plutonium undergo nuclear fission. This releases a great amount of energy in the form of heat. The heat is used to turn water to steam as in other thermal power plants. The steam drives turbines.
Fuel used inside nuclear reactors?
Uranium or plutonium
What is radioactive waste?
By-product of nuclear reactors that contains a high concentration of radioactive atoms
How is radioactive waste stored?
To store it safely it is usually encased in glass and buried deep underground, away from any water sources.
For nuclear power
- Large amounts of electricity can be generated for each kg of fuel used
- The fuel is readily available and, unlike fossil fuels, it wont run out for thousands of years
- No polluting gases such as carbon dioxide are produced, so there is no contribution to global warming or acid rain
Against nuclear power
- High cost for building power plant and taking it down, meaning electricity generated can be very expensive
- Nuclear fuel has to reprocessed before it can be used
- Slow start up time
- Very expensive to process
- Stored waste could be targeted in future terrorist attacks
- Risk of accidents that could release waste to environment