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  • On a December afternoon in Chicago during the middle of World War II,

  • scientists cracked open the nucleus at the center of the uranium atom

  • and turned nuclear mass into energy over and over again.

  • They did this by creating for the first time

  • a chain reaction inside a new engineering marvel:

  • the nuclear reactor.

  • Since then, the ability to mine great amounts of energy from uranium nuclei

  • has led some to bill nuclear power

  • as a plentiful utopian source of electricity.

  • A modern nuclear reactor generates enough electricity from one kilogram of fuel

  • to power an average American household for nearly 34 years.

  • But rather than dominate the global electricity market,

  • nuclear power has declined from an all-time high of 18% in 1996

  • to 11% today.

  • And it's expected to drop further in the coming decades.

  • What happened to the great promise of this technology?

  • It turns out nuclear power faces many hurdles,

  • including high construction costs

  • and public opposition.

  • And behind these problems lie a series of unique engineering challenges.

  • Nuclear power relies on the fission of uranium nuclei

  • and a controlled chain reaction

  • that reproduces this splitting in many more nuclei.

  • The atomic nucleus is densely packed with protons and neutrons

  • bound by a powerful nuclear force.

  • Most uranium atoms have a total of 238 protons and neutrons,

  • but roughly one in every 140 lacks three neutrons,

  • and this lighter isotope is less tightly bound.

  • Compared to its more abundant cousin,

  • a strike by a neutron easily splits the U-235 nuclei

  • into lighter, radioactive elements called fission products,

  • in addition to two to three neutrons,

  • gamma rays,

  • and a few neutrinos.

  • During fission, some nuclear mass transforms into energy.

  • A fraction of the newfound energy powers the fast-moving neutrons,

  • and if some of them strike uranium nuclei,

  • fission results in a second larger generation of neutrons.

  • If this second generation of neutrons strike more uranium nuclei,

  • more fission results in an even larger third generation, and so on.

  • But inside a nuclear reactor,

  • this spiraling chain reaction is tamed using control rods

  • made of elements that capture excess neutrons and keep their number in check.

  • With a controlled chain reaction,

  • a reactor draws power steadily and stably for years.

  • The neutron-led chain reaction is a potent process driving nuclear power,

  • but there's a catch that can result

  • in unique demands on the production of its fuel.

  • It turns out, most of the neutrons emitted from fission have too much kinetic energy

  • to be captured by uranium nuclei.

  • The fission rate is too low and the chain reaction fizzles out.

  • The first nuclear reactor built in Chicago used graphite as a moderator

  • to scatter and slow down neutrons just enough

  • to increase their capture by uranium and raise the rate of fission.

  • Modern reactors commonly use purified water as a moderator,

  • but the scattered neutrons are still a little too fast.

  • To compensate and keep up the chain reaction,

  • the concentration of U-235 is enriched

  • to four to seven times its natural abundance.

  • Today, enrichment is often done by passing a gaseous uranium compound

  • through centrifuges

  • to separate lighter U-235 from heavier U-238.

  • But the same process can be continued to highly enrich U-235

  • up to 130 times its natural abundance

  • and create an explosive chain reaction in a bomb.

  • Methods like centrifuge processing must be carefully regulated

  • to limit the spread of bomb-grade fuel.

  • Remember, only a fraction of the released fission energy

  • goes into speeding up neutrons.

  • Most of the nuclear power goes into the kinetic energy of the fission products.

  • Those are captured inside the reactor as heat by a coolant,

  • usually purified water.

  • This heat is eventually used to drive an electric turbine generator by steam

  • just outside the reactor.

  • Water flow is critical not only to create electricity,

  • but also to guard against the most dreaded type of reactor accident,

  • the meltdown.

  • If water flow stops because a pipe carrying it breaks,

  • or the pumps that push it fail,

  • the uranium heats up very quickly and melts.

  • During a nuclear meltdown,

  • radioactive vapors escape into the reactor,

  • and if the reactor fails to hold them,

  • a steel and concrete containment building is the last line of defense.

  • But if the radioactive gas pressure is too high,

  • containment fails and the gasses escape into the air,

  • spreading as far and wide as the wind blows.

  • The radioactive fission products in these vapors

  • eventually decay into stable elements.

  • While some decay in a few seconds,

  • others take hundreds of thousands of years.

  • The greatest challenge for a nuclear reactor

  • is to safely contain these products

  • and keep them from harming humans or the environment.

  • Containment doesn't stop mattering once the fuel is used up.

  • In fact, it becomes an even greater storage problem.

  • Every one to two years,

  • some spent fuel is removed from reactors

  • and stored in pools of water that cool the waste

  • and block its radioactive emissions.

  • The irradiated fuel is a mix of uranium that failed to fission,

  • fission products,

  • and plutonium, a radioactive material not found in nature.

  • This mix must be isolated from the environment

  • until it has all safely decayed.

  • Many countries propose deep time storage in tunnels drilled far underground,

  • but none have been built,

  • and there's great uncertainty about their long-term security.

  • How can a nation that has existed for only a few hundred years

  • plan to guard plutonium through its radioactive half-life

  • of 24,000 years?

  • Today, many nuclear power plants sit on their waste, instead,

  • storing them indefinitely on site.

  • Apart from radioactivity, there's an even greater danger with spent fuel.

  • Plutonium can sustain a chain reaction

  • and can be mined from the waste to make bombs.

  • Storing spent fuel is thus not only a safety risk for the environment,

  • but also a security risk for nations.

  • Who should be the watchmen to guard it?

  • Visionary scientists from the early years of the nuclear age

  • pioneered how to reliably tap the tremendous amount of energy

  • inside an atom -

  • as an explosive bomb

  • and as a controlled power source with incredible potential.

  • But their successors have learned humbling insights

  • about the technology's not-so-utopian industrial limits.

  • Mining the subatomic realm makes for complex, expensive, and risky engineering.

On a December afternoon in Chicago during the middle of World War II,

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TED-ED】原子力発電の課題とは?- M. V. ラマナとサジャン・サイニ (【TED-Ed】What are the challenges of nuclear power? - M. V. Ramana and Sajan Saini)

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    Jost Lin に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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