1 / 12

Nuclear Energy

Nuclear Energy. G4 Radioactive Waste. Radioactive Waste. Nuclear power plants produce radioactive wastes. About 32 metric tons of spent fuel is produced by a typical reactor each year. This waste could be reprocessed into 1.5 tons of extremely radioactive materials.

jalia
Télécharger la présentation

Nuclear Energy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Nuclear Energy G4 Radioactive Waste

  2. Radioactive Waste • Nuclear power plants produce radioactive wastes • About 32 metric tons of spent fuel is produced by a typical reactor each year • This waste could be reprocessed into 1.5 tons of extremely radioactive materials • But such work is a dangerous and would produce waste that is much more hazardous • Nuclear plants also produce large quantities of low-level nuclear wastes during the course of normal operation

  3. Radioactive Waste • Radiation is unhealthy for living things • Cells that are activelydividing, such as skin cells and the blood-cell producing cells in bone marrow, are especially sensitive to radiation • The amount of exposure determines the extent of damage • Large doses can cause severe, immediate effects including skin burns, anemia, and even death • Causes changes in DNA, leading to long-term effects such as cancer and genetic mutations

  4. Radiation Exposure • Radiation exposure is measured in rems • Most Americans receive between 0.2-0.5 rems per year from background radiation • Most background radiation comes from naturally occurring elements in our surroundings. • Earth – rocks, water, carbon-14 (living organisms) • Cosmic – sun, space, other stars • Food – potassium: bananas, potatoes, beans • Medial – dental x-rays, skeletal x-rays, medications

  5. Types of Radioactive Waste • High-Level Waste - wastes that emit large amounts of radiation • Includes used uranium, fuel rods, control rods, and water used to cool and control the chain reactions • The vessel that surrounds the fuel rods is also radioactive • These wastes are very dangerous to handle and may also be poisonous

  6. Types of Radioactive Waste • Medium-Level and Low-Level Waste – are not as radioactive as high-level, although a much larger volume of these wastes is generated • Can be anything from the mine wastes scattered around a uranium mine to the contaminated protective clothes of a power plant worker • Low-Level wastes are also produced by hospitals and laboratories • The damage to people's health is not as obvious as the damage caused by high-level wastes • But they pose a greater risk because they are more common and effects can add up over time

  7. Radioactive Waste Disposal • Radioactive wastes are very difficult to dispose of safely • Low-level wastes can be dangerous for 300 years or more • High-level wastes may be dangerous for tens of thousands of years

  8. Radioactive Waste Disposal • The US government has decided on the following criteria for disposing of nuclear waste safely • Must be sealed in containers that will not corrode for thousands of years • The US has decided on sealing the wastes in thick blocks of glass • The site must be geologically stable • An earthquake or volcano could spill the stored wastes into the environment • Must also be stored deep under the ground • The cost of this disposal method is very high

  9. Radioactive Waste Disposal • Almost all the high-level radioactive wastes in the world have not been disposed of permanently. • They sit in storagetanks outside nuclear power and weapons plants • Many tanks have begun to leak, contaminating groundwater and the environment • These wastes must be permanently removed before the contamination gets worse

  10. Radioactive Waste Disposal • The government predicts that the cleanup of 20 of the most contaminated nuclear weapons sites in the United States could cost $600 billion. • At theHanford nuclear weapons facility in Washington state, large amounts of radioactive wastes have been released into the environment. • The Columbia River has been contaminated several times. • The Hanford was shutdown in 1987. Cleanup at the site has begun

  11. Safety and Cost • Nuclear power plants are very expensive because the required safety measures are very costly • The danger that radioactive contamination creates makes safety at nuclear power plants very important • If the cooling or control systems in a reactor core fail, the chain reaction can no longer be controlled • The core will grow hotter, causing the fuel rods and even the reactor vessel to melt • This is called a meltdown. • A full meltdown would release huge amounts of radiation into the environment.

  12. Section Review • Answer the questions in the section review

More Related