Methods to Generate Electricity (Nuclear Fuels and Water Energy)
0 Pages | Leaving School | 03/05/2024

Nuclear Fuels and Water Energy


Nuclear fuels

Physics GCSE science revision- Methods Used to Generate ElectricityNuclear fuels, like plutonium and uranium, are radioactive metals. These are not burned, like fossil fuels, but used in nuclear fission reactions. The process involves splitting the nuclei of the atoms and producing heat energy. The overall process, however, is the same a with fossil fuels.

Nuclear fuel: energy stored as chemical energy

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Transferred as heat energy

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Water and steam: energy stored as heat energy

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Transferred as kinetic energy

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Turbine

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Transferred as kinetic energy

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Generator

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Transferred as electrical energy

Physics GCSE science revision- Methods Used to Generate ElectricityAs nuclear power plants take a long time to set up they tend to run constantly and provide ‘base load’ electricity.

Nuclear fuels don’t release carbon dioxide or sulphur dioxide but they do produce a far more deadly waste product: nuclear waste. This remains radioactive and is a health hazard for thousands of years which is why it must be stored safely. Over the years the nuclear plants themselves have had accidents, leading to tons of radioactive material being released into the atmosphere and causing not only the current residents in the area to get cancer but generations after that.

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Water energy

Physics GCSE science revision- Methods Used to Generate ElectricityWater is similar to wind in that’s it can directly drive a generator. Water energy can be produced in three main ways:

  • Wave: waves are produced by the sea rising up and then crashing down. Electricity generators are driven by wave machines which use the kinetic energy produced.
  • Tides: tides push a lot of water into river mouths on a daily basis. The kinetic energy is harnessed by tidal barrages which are constructed over river estuaries. Electricity generators are located in the barrage which is composed of tubes. They’ve driven when water is pushed through the tubes.
  • Hydroelectric power (HEP): similar to tidal barrages, HEP depends on water rushing through tubes which drives the electrical generators. This time the tubes are contained within a dam. The water located behind the dam is high up and contains gravitational potential energy. As it rushes down the tubes it’s converted into kinetic energy.

The main advantages to water power are:

  • – it’s renewable
  • – it doesn’t produce any harmful waste products
  • – it’s a reliable source
  • – it can be easily switched on

The disadvantages include:

  • – wave machines have not yet been produced to a large enough scale – for them to produce enough energy
  • – estuary habitats have been destroyed by tidal barrages
  • – farmland has been flooded due to hydroelectricity
  • – vegetation rots underwater which produces the greenhouse gas methane

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