Nuclear Power Plant Safety Systems and Reactor Pressure Vessel

Because a nuclear explosion in a nuclear power plant is impossible due to the low fuel enrichment, the worst conceivable accident is a severe loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA), leading to a core meltdown. Although the nuclear fission and fusion process would be immediately stopped by a control rod insertion, the radioactive fission products would continue to generate decay heat in the fuel. Thus, a LOCA producing core uncovering could cause the fuel to melt. In the most extreme case, a molten mass would fall to the bottom of the reactor, melting through the reactor pressure vessel and the underlying concrete, and eventually coming to rest about 6.1 m (20 ft) underground. (more…)

How Nuclear Power Plants Generate Nuclear Energy from Uranium

nuclear-power-plant
In the United States, Department of Energy has determined that nuclear power accounts for about 21% of the total electricity generated in the United States, an amount comparable to all the electricity used in California, Texas, and New York. In 2002, there were 65 nuclear power plants throughout the United States, located mostly on the East Coast and in the Midwest. (more…)