The article contains sections titled: 1. Introduction 2. Uranium Production, Conversion, and Enrichment 2.1. Occurrence and Classification of Deposits 2.2. Production 2.3. Output and Demand 2.4. Conversion 2.5. Enrichment 3. Fabrication of Fuel Elements 3.1. Fuel Assemblies for Light‐Water Reactors 3.1.1. Functions of Fuel Assemblies 3.1.2. Raw Material for Nuclear Fuel 3.1.3. Conversion Processes 3.1.4. Production of Uranium Dioxide Sintered Pellets 3.1.5. Production of Fuel Rods and Fuel Assemblies 3.2. Fuel Elements for High‐Temperature Reactors 3.2.1. General Aspects 3.2.2. Production 3.3. Fuel Assemblies made from Reprocessed Plutonium 3.3.1. Availability of Plutonium 3.3.2. Utilization Strategies 3.3.3. Requirement for Mixed‐Oxide Thermal Fuel Assemblies 3.3.4. Requirement for Fast Breeder Fuel Assemblies 3.3.5. Problems in Handling Plutonium 3.3.6. Fabrication of Mixed‐Oxide Fuel Assemblies 3.3.7. Radiation Protection and Safety Aspects 4. Chemical Reprocessing of Nuclear Fuels 4.1. Reprocessing of LWR Fuel Elements 4.1.1. General Scheme 4.1.2. Fuel Composition and Purification Requirements 4.1.3. Mechanical Head‐End 4.1.4. Fuel Dissolution 4.1.5. Feed Clarification and Make‐up 4.1.6. PUREX Process: Chemistry 4.1.7. PUREX Process: Flow Sheet 4.1.8. PUREX Process: Product Purification 4.1.9. PUREX Process: Extraction Equipment 4.1.10. Off‐Gas Purification 4.1.11. Nuclear Safety 4.2. Research and Development 4.2.1. Developments in LWR Fuel Reprocessing 4.2.2. Reprocessing of Fast Breeder Reactor Fuels 5. Radioactive Waste Management 5.1. Classification of Radioactive Waste 5.1.1. Generic Classification 5.1.2. Waste Classification for Disposal 5.1.3. Catalog of Waste Types 5.2. Conditioning of Radioactive Waste 5.2.1. Heat‐Generating Radioactive Waste 5.2.2. Non‐Heat‐Generating Radioactive Waste 5.3. Origin and Amount of Radioactive Waste 5.3.1. Origin of Radioactive Waste 5.3.2. Present Amount of Unconditioned and Conditioned Radioactive Waste 5.3.3. Future Amounts of Radioactive Waste 5.4. Disposal of Radioactive Waste 5.4.1. Principles of Waste Disposal 5.4.2. Underground Laboratories 5.4.3. Near‐Surface Repositories 5.4.4. Underground Repositories 6. Safety Aspects in the Design of Reprocessing and Waste Treatment Plants 6.1. Objectives of Protection 6.2. Safety Through Multiple Barrier Enclosure 6.3. Safety Measures for Protection of Employees 6.4. Malfunction and Safety Analysis 6.5. Environmental Protection and Radiological Exposure 6.6. Radioactive Residual Substances and Waste 6.7. Decommissioning and Dismantling 6.8. International Coordination of Safety Regulations Power reactors serve to supply energy. The heat created in commercial power reactors is used for the production of electrical energy. The economic motivation for building nuclear power plants is the high energy content of the nuclear fuel uranium and its low cost. The first large‐scale nuclear power plant went on‐line at Calder Hall (United Kingdom) in 1956. At the beginning of 2005, 441 nuclear power plant units with a total output of 385 854 MWe were in operation worldwide. Since that time worldwide 103 prototype or commercial units have been shut down. In 2005 22 new nuclear power plants with a capacity of 26 102 MWe were under construction. In this chapter a survey of the important technical and economic parameters of commercial nuclear power reactors is given. Reactors are classified according to characteristics like neutron energy, fuel, enrichment, fissile material, moderator, coolant, and operational cycle. Numbers and electric capacity of nuclear power plants in operation worldwide are shown. Beside these technical and economic aspects of power reactors their influence on human life and nature by radiation burdens and radiation damage are outlined. Radiological quantities and units are introduced. Radiation protection from nuclear sources and radiation safety rules in Germany, Europe, and the world complete the survey.
No abstract
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.