Making communications land - Are they received and understood as intended? we...
Energy resources and Nuclear Reactions
1. Natural Resources
Anything humans use from the Earth is a natural
resource.
A renewable resource is one which can be
replaced at the same rate at which it is used.
Most renewable energy comes from the sun.
In this unit we will look first at how the sun
produces its energy, and then how it is 'recycled'
into renewable energy sources and fossil fuels.
2.
3. Where does the Sun Get Its Energy?
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Celestia_sun.jpg
4. What is it?
The sun has a power of 4*1026 Watts.
-- what fraction of the sun's energy is
needed to meet Japan's extra energy needs
(to replace the nuclear power)?
“The Earth receives more energy from the sun
in one hour than the world's population uses
in a year.”
Why is this misleading (but true)?
5. 1. Write nuclide + + +
symbols for each
atom.
2. How many
different
elements are + + +
++ ++ +
+ ++ +
shown?
+
3. How many + + + + +
isotopes of
carbon are
there? ____
11. Everything Reaction We See is
Around Us is Chemistry (electrons)
e-
e-
e-
e-
e-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:2007_Sakura_of_Fukushima-e_007_rotated.jpg
12. Nuclear Physics
Nuclear physics is the study of what happens
inside atoms. Electrons orbiting the nuclei do not
matter in nuclear physics.
e-
e-
+ e-
++
++
++ +
e-
e- -
e e - e-
13. Nuclear Fusion
Nuclear fusion is the joining of atoms together into
larger atoms. It gives even more energy than
nuclear fission (used in nuclear reactors).
Nuclear fusion requires enormous heat and
pressure to occur.
Nuclear fusion powers the sun.
Unfortunately, it requires so much heat it can not
yet be controlled to produce useful energy on
Earth, but it is being developed.“Nuclear fusion is
50 years away and always will be.”
14. Mass into Energy
In nuclear reactions matter is converted into
energy.
E = energy
m = mass lost
c = the speed of light = 3 * 108m/s
Calculate the energy which would be released if
one kilogram was converted to energy.
16. Nuclear Fusion
Start:
Number species Mass (individual) Mass
(total)
proton 1.672621777
×10−27 kg
End:
proton
Helium-4 6.64465675
×10−27 kg
Total mass
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:FusionintheSun.svg
alculate the percentage lost
17. Experimental Fusion Reactor
It is hoped that fusion will provide energy in the future. It
provides much more power than fission, and (apart from
the reactor itself) no nuclear waste.
There is plenty of deuterium and tritium in seawater –
enough for thousands of years. It does not cause
environmental problems extracting it (unlike mining
uranium).
It is impossible to build up the pressure that exists in the
sun, but scientists can suspend the gas in a Tokomak
and heat it to extremely high temperatures, but it cannot
be sustained for long enough (yet) to produce power.
“Fusion power is 50 years away and always will be.”
Picture of a Tokomak Reactor:
http://ratcrow.nfshost.com/raytracing/amgtorus.html
18. GEKKO XII laser (Osaka)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GEKKO_XII
19. Nuclear Fusion in Warfare
The temperature and pressure required for nuclear fusion have been
created momentarily by using a nuclear explosion to compress
hydrogen. This is known as a hydrogen bomb.
The first H-bomb test was “Ivy Mike”, soon followed by Castle Bravo on
Bikini Atoll. This caused the largest nuclear fallout caused by the US,
including the island's inhabitants and the Daiko Fukuryu Maru.
When Bravo was detonated, it formed a fireball almost four and a half
miles (roughly 7 km) across within a second. This fireball was visible
on Kwajalein atoll over 250 miles (450 km) away. The explosion left a
crater 6,500 feet (2,000 m) in diameter and 250 feet (75 m) in depth.
The mushroom cloud reached a height of 47,000 feet (14 km) and a
diameter of 7 miles (11 km) in about a minute; it then reached a
height of 130,000 feet (40 km) and 62 miles (100 km) in diameter in
less than 10 minutes and was expanding at more than 100 m/s (360
km/h, 224 mph). As a result of the blast, the cloud contaminated
more than seven thousand square miles of the surrounding Pacific
Ocean including some of the surrounding small islands like Rongerik,
Rongelap and Utirik. - WIKIPEDIA
21. The Blast (from the DFM)
The sky on the west lit up like a sunrise. Eight minutes later
the sound of the explosion arrived, with fallout several
hours later. The fallout, fine white flaky dust of calcined
coral with absorbed highly radioactive fission products,
fell on the ship for three hours. The fishermen scooped it
into bags with their bare hands. The dust stuck to
surfaces, bodies and hair; after the radiation sickness
symptoms appeared, the fishermen called it shi no hai
( 死の灰 ?, death ash). The US government refused to
disclose its composition due to "national security", as the
isotopic ratios, namely percentage of uranium-237, could
reveal the nature of the bomb.
--Wikipedia
22. Wind Power
Wind is small but growing source of electricity.
Once installed, wind turbines do minimal
environmental harm. They can kill or harm birds.
Some people dislike them because they claim they
are noisy or unpleasant to look at.
Wind turbines can be placed onshore (on land) or
offshore. Offshore is more expensive, but produces
more wind.
Wind technology is growing rapidly.
24. Solar Energy
Enough energy reaches the sun to power our energy needs. However,
converting it to electricity is difficult and expensive, but it is being
developed.
Photovoltaic solar panels means converting light energy to electricity.
The Japanese government buys electricity from solar panels at a
higher price than normal to encourage people to install them.
Rooftop installations do not require more land, but space is limited and
installation can be difficult and potentially dangerous.
http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Solar_panels_on_a_roof.jpg
26. Solar Farms
Most solar farms use large arrays of photovoltaic
solar panels.
They produce DC, which must be converted to
AC for a national grid.
The energy is free and renewable, however the
production of solar panels is energy-intensive.
The power output is low, and inconsistent.
27. Solar Trackers
A solar tracker can be used to follow the sun
through the sky, to minimise the angle of
incidence.
The extra power output covers more than the use
of the motor (so the power per square meter
increases) but the installation costs increase.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:SolarTrackerRoofView300W200H.jpg
28. Concentrated Solar Power
Concentrated Solar Power uses mirrors to focus
sunlight to produce heat.
The heat usually boils water, and the steam turns a
turbine just as in a thermal power station.
The power output per square metre is lower, but it is
much cheaper to produce.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:PS10_solar_power_tower.jpg
30. Solar Water Heating
Solar water heating is more efficient than making
electricity, and could be used much more widely in
Japan, especially in the south.
It is much more efficient to use sunlight to heat water
directly than it is to use it to produce electricity and
use that to heat water.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_water_heating
31. Biomass is growing fuel to be
burned. Biomass
It is renewable, clean and safe,
however it requires a lot of time
to grow the fuel.
Biofuel is like solar energy, as
sun is needed to grow the fuel,
and the plants are like batteries.
Increasing use of biomass is
increasing the prices of food
around the world, with
devastating consequences for
the third world – why? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Soybeanbus.jpg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:%C5%A0palek_na_%C5%A1t%C3%ADp%C3%A1n%C3%AD.jpg
32. Geothermal Energy
Geothermal energy uses heat from within the
Earth to produce heat or electricity.
It is a clean, renewable energy source, but is
only available in some areas. If too much is
used, it runs out of heat.
Geothermal heat comes from heat generated
when the Earth formed and radioactive decay
inside the Earth.
http://www.inforse.org/europe/dieret/Geothermal/binary.gi
f
33. Hydroelectric
Power
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d8/Hoover_Dam_Nevada_Luftaufnahme.jpg
34. Hydroelectricity
Hydroelectricity is clean and renewable, and very
reliable if a good dam is built.
Building a dam usually has disastrous effects on
the local ecosystem.
Dams can run out of water if there is not enough
rain. It is also possible for them to run in reverse
and pump water uphill, making a ‘battery’.
35. Banqiao Dam
Banqiao Dam is a huge dam in China. It was built to
survive a ‘1000 year flood’.
It’s power stations produced 18GW, as much electricity as
20 nuclear reactors, or over half of Japan's loss due to
closure of its nuclear power plants.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banqiao_Dam
36. Dam Collapse
In 1975 a ‘one in two thousand years’ flood
occurred, producing record levels of rain. Banqiao
Dam collapsed.
The flood waters were 10km wide and 3-7 high,
and wiped out an area of 55km. Official reports
say 26 000 died in the flood and 145 000 from
resulting disease and famine, but unofficial
reports claim up to 230 000.
37. Wave Power
Wave power uses energy from waves to produce
electricity.
The technology is still being developed, but has
potential to generate a lot of electricity (6kW/m).
It is very weather dependent.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pelamis_at_EMEC.jpg
38. Tidal Power
Tides are caused by the orbit of the moon.
Tidal power has much potential but is currently
not used much.
Tides are predictable, unlike other renewables.
Tidal stream generators are like wind turbines
under water, which are turned by flowing water.
Tidal barrages dam an enclosed area of water
(eg harbour) and capture energy of water
flowing over the dam as the water level drops.
40. Renewable Energy Sources
Energy Source How does the Energy Advantages Disadvantages
Come from the Sun?
Solar
(photovoltaic)
Concentrated
Solar Power
Wind Turbines
Hydroelectricity
Biofuel
Wave generation
Tidal power
41. The Carbon Cycle
View the animation
here:
http://upload.wikimedia.org
Note that some
carbon is stored as
fossil fuels and
permanently
removed from the
atmosphere.
This reduction
continued for millions
of years, until
humans discovered
fossil fuels and
began burning them,
returning the carbon
to the atmosphere.
42. Fossil Fuels
Most organisms decay when they die, and return
their carbon to the atmosphere as carbon dioxide.
Sometimes, dead organisms are buried before
they can decay. Then, over millions of years they
can become fossil fuels. So fossil fuels are fuels
made from dead organisms which lived long ago.
It has taken billions of years for the Earth to build
up fossil fuels, and we have burned the best part
of them in one hundred years. This is why our
current lifestyle is unsustainable.
43. Fossil Fuels are Life-Changing
http://photos.yis.ac.jp/HS-Sports/2011-2012-Tennis/21180559_9Rqfr4#!
i=1685411294&k=VrnsncZ
44. Coal
If a forest is covered by water or volcanic ash, it
can not decay. It is buried and becomes coal.
Coal is the most abundant fossil fuel and will
probably be the last one to run out. It is also the
worst for the environment.
Coal is often used to produce electricity because
it is the cheapest. It contains toxic heavy metals
which are harmful to the environment and
humans.
45. Petroleum is liquefied Petroleum
fossil fuels. It is
usually deep
underground, and
pipes must be drilled
down to get it. If this
goes wrong, it can
leak and be very bad
for the environment.
Petroleum is distilled
in refineries into
petrol/gasoline (for
cars), jet fuel, diesel http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Oiled_bird_3.jpg
and kerosene.
46. Natural Gas
Natural gas is fossil fuels in the form of a gas. It is
mostly used for heating and generating electricity.
Natural gas is the ‘cleanest’ of fossil fuels. It
produces less carbon dioxide (CO2) and fewer
other pollutants than coal and oil.
Natural gas is difficult to store because it requires
strong cylinders and can cause explosions if not
used safely. Natural gas will probably run out in
our lifetimes, though there is much debate about
when.
47. Climate Change
Burning fossil fuels produces CO2 , which traps in
sunlight, known as the greenhouse effect. The
greenhouse effect causes global warming, which
melts ice caps and causes the sea level to rise.
Climate change includes increasing numbers of
typhoons, colder winters, hotter summers and
other strange patterns caused by global warming.
Some scientists now believe that climate change
also causes increases in the number of
earthquakes, as weight of the oceans shifts from
the poles to the equator (as ice melts).
52. Atom
The word atom means indivisible.
Indivisible means it can't be broken down into
more things. Why not?
Is this true for atoms?
53. John Dalton
John Dalton was a British schoolteacher.
He said that atoms:
1. Everything is made of atoms.
2. Atoms of the same element are exactly alike,
and atoms of different elements are different.
3. Atoms join with different atoms to make new
substances.
54. J .J . Thomson
J. J. Thomson was another British
scientist. In 1887 he discovered
electrons.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:JJ_Thomson_exp2.png
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:J.J_Thomson.jpg
55. Plum Pudding Model
J J Thompson
suggested that
electrons were
mixed up in the
atoms like raisins in
a 'plum pudding'.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Christmas_pudding.JPG
56. Earnest Rutherford
Earnest Rutherford was from Christchurch.
A good image to describe his
experiment can be found here:
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/R/
57. Rutherford's Conclusions
1. The atom is mostly empty space.
2. There is a small, dense, nucleus at the centre of
the atom.
The illustration showed that if an atom was the size
of a sports stadium, the nucleus (protons and
neutrons) would be the size of a pinhead in the
centre, and all the rest is empty space.
The alpha particles which travelled through
undeflected showed that it is mostly empty space.
The alpha particles which were deflected or
bounced back showed that the nucleus must be
dense and charged.
58. Bohr's Model
Bohr (Danish) improved Rutherford's Model by
discovering that there are energy levels for
electrons.
Electrons can only be at set energy levels.
They are like rungs on a ladder.
A good diagram can be found here:
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_DZbDcIFlgfo/TLz1ufvQ5iI/AA
59. Radioactivity
Most small atoms are ‘stable’. They stay together.
Sometimes forces inside large atoms ‘push each
other away’ or change their form very quickly. This
is known as radioactivity.
241
95 Am
60. Beta Radiation
Some atoms emit beta radiation. A beta particle is
an electron which comes from the nucleus. A
neutron becomes a proton and emits an electron.
61. Beta Decay of Iodine
131 131 0
53 I −− Xe
54 −1
1. Copy and complete the equation to show what
Carbon-14 decays to when it undergoes beta
decay.
14
6 C
62. Bananas
"Food is radioactive, Bananas more so than most foods
due to their high Potassium content. About 0.01% of
Potassium is K-40, which undergoes beta decay. Write
an equation for potassium undergoing beta decay. What
does it become and is this harmful?"
40
19 K
63. Gamma Rays
Gama rays are electromagnetic radiation with a low
wavelength/high frequency.
They are usually emitted with alpha and beta particles.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromagnetic_spectrum
65. Ionising Radiation and DNA
Alpha particles stop at paper (or skin) so are harmless outside the body.
Beta and Gama radiation can be more harmful.
"If an alpha emitting radionuclide gets inside us (typically by breathing it
in or consuming it) it is much more dangerous than if it is outside us
because when it is inside us there is nothing to stop the alpha
particles from colliding with our DNA"
"When an alpha particle (or any other ionising radiation) strikes an atom
in our body, it knocks of some of it's electrons. That atom then
participates in a chemical reaction that normally wouldn't take place in
order to get enough electrons to be in a stable chemical
configuration. If these abnormal chemical reactions happen in DNA
66. Half Life
http://www.avon-chemistry.com/nuclear_lec.
It is impossible to predict when an atom will
decay (and emit an alpha or beta particle),
however it is known that half of the atoms will
decay in a given time, called the half life.
Americium-241 has a half life of 432 years.
Potassium-40 has a half life of 1.3 billion years.
Iodine-131 has a half life of 8 days.
http://www.avon-
67. Use the first two simulations Half Life
and answer the following:
1.What percentage of the
original atoms of carbon-14 or
uranium-238 are left after one
half life? Two half lives? Three
half lives?
2. “God does not play dice” -
Albert Einstein.Was he correct?
3. Why is the computer game 10B*
called “Half-life” and what does
the term refer to in the game?
http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/radioactive
69. Penetration
Alpha particles can only travel a few centimetres in
air, then they ionise the air and stop. They can be
stopped by a piece of paper or skin.
Beta particles can travel through paper but are
stopped by a thin sheet of aluminium.
Gamma rays are very penetrating, but their intensity
can be reduced by thick concrete or lead.
70. Background Radiation
We naturally receive a small amount of radiation.
Air, water, soil and food all naturally contain
radioactive isotopes. We also receive radiation
from the sun.
The level of background radiation is different for
different parts of the world. More radiation is
received closer to the north and south pole.
Radiation in Tokyo is still much lower than in
many other cities around the world. Why?
71. Detection of Radiation
A Geiger-Muller tube can detect nuclear radiation. It can be
connected to:
A ratemeter, which tells the number of 'counts' per second. This
may be converted to more 'user-friendly' units.
An electronic counter, which counts the total number of
particles detected by the tube.
An amplifier and a loudspeaker, which makes a sound each
time it detects a burst of radiation.
The “Air counter - S” is a device for sale locally (~6000 Yen at
Yodobashi and pharmacies). It gives counts in microsieverts
per hour.
10B*
73. Contaminated Food & Water
Spinach, milk and other foods from around Fukushima were found to
contain 7.5 times the safety limit for Iodine-131. Iodine 131 has a half
life of 8 days.
1) How long will it take for the radiation levels to drop to the allowed
limit? EITHER give an approximate answer, or use logs.
2) What does Iodine-131 decay to? Is this safe to eat/drink?
3) Is it possible to 'save' the spinach? How about the milk? How?
4) Cesium-137 has a half life of 30 years. Is it possible to 'save' food
contaminated with Cesium?
5) Traces of Iodine were found in Tokyo's drinking water, above the
limit for babies. Why was it not necessary for residents to buy many
months worth of bottled water (assuming the nuclear plant stopped
leaking Iiodine-131)?
74. Bookwork
Page 185, 187, 189 and 193. For question 3,
draw it to the standards expected by IGCSE
Paper 6 exams.
10B*
We will do these
during the first class
after Spring Break.
75. Experimental Fusion Reactor
It is hoped that fusion will provide energy in the
future. It provides much more power than fission,
and (apart from the reactor itself) no nuclear
waste.
There is plenty of deuterium and tritium in
seawater – enough for thousands of years.
The temperature and pressure needed cannot be
sustained for long enough (yet) to produce power.
“Fusion power is 50 years away and always will
be.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Homemade_fusion_reactor.JPG
76. Nuclear Fission
Nuclear fission is breaking apart large atoms into
small atoms. It occurs in nuclear reactors and
nuclear bombs.
The smaller atoms created are radioactive,
meaning the give off radiation.
Nuclear energy releases enormous amounts of
energy: one kilogram of uranium yields as much
energy as 2000 Tonnes of coal.
77. Nuclear Fission
Some large atoms can be broken up into smaller
atoms if a neutron hits them. This releases more
neutrons which can cause more atoms to split,
making a chain reaction.
78. Density
Normally, the density of atoms is too small so the
neutrons just escape and no nuclear reaction occurs.
81. In a nuclear power plant, a moderator is used to slow
down the neutrons so that they can make more atoms
split. The more moderator there is, the faster the reaction.
"Control rods absorb neutrons to slow or stop the nuclear
reaction. If the control rods are in too far, more neutrons
are absorbed than are released and the reaction slows. If
the control rods are out too far, the reaction builds
exponentially as more and more neutrons are released
than are absorbed - in old reactors, this can cause the
reactor to overheat which can lead to a "meltdown" and or
a steam explosion.
82. Example
Try This:
http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/nuclear-fission
And then play this:
http://esa21.kennesaw.edu/activities/nukeenergy/nuke.htm
Try to get as much power generated as possible.
83. Chernobyl Accident
Chernobyl is an abandoned city
in the Ukraine, formerly Russia.
The Chernobyl nuclear power
station suffered a steam
explosion (which blew the top of
the reactor and the roof off of the
building) which was followed a
few seconds later by a second
explosion of approximately 40
GJ.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Chernobyl_Disaster.jpg
84. The Effects of Chernobyl
"The Chernobyl nuclear accident resulted in
under 100 direct deaths – mostly workers at the
plant and "liquidators" – but about 4000 extra
cancer deaths can be expected over time due
to the radioactive contamination of the
environment. Many of these could have been
prevented if the government had given people
stable iodine and promptly evacuated them
from the contaminated area."
85. The Fukushima Nuclear Power Plants
Modern nuclear power plants are designed to automatically shut down in
an earthquake.
Many fission products are still radioactive, so they give out heat even
after the reactor has been shut down. This heat must be removed from
the fuel rods with cooling water otherwise they will melt down. Electricity
is required to pump the water.
The power station was stuck by a tsunami stronger than designed for.
This cut off external power and drowned the backup generators. The
emergency battery power supply was able to keep the cooling water
pumps running for 8 hours but unfortunately another source of electricity
was not made available before the batteries were completely discharged.
Some new nuclear reactors are designed to use passive means like
convection, conduction and infra-red radiation to remove decay heat from
fuel rods without the need for electricity to run cooling water pumps.
87. Why Fukushima Isn't Chernobyl
The Chernobyl reactor was being used at the time it
exploded, so much more radiation was being produced and
released during the explosion.
The Chernobyl reactor exploded. The Fukushima reactor
(like all in the developed world) has a “containment vessel”
around it which should keep most of the dangerous
radionuclides inside it.
The Japanese government is testing food and telling
everyone what has happened. The Russian didn't want to
admit what had happened, so they didn't do necessary
safety measures. Thousands of cases of thyroid cancer
could have been prevented by giving out iodine.