Something remotelly related
Posted: 18 November 2009 10:19 AM   [ Ignore ]
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Eric Loewen is the evangelist of the sodium fast reactor, which burns nuclear waste, emits no CO2, and might just save the world.
Read more:
http://www.esquire.com/features/best-and-brightest-2009/nuclear-waste-disposal-1209

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Posted: 21 November 2009 12:36 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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Might be the answer if FF doesn’t happen, but it is still a hot box for a steam engine.  downer

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Posted: 21 November 2009 05:48 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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It is true that all these nuclear power applications have an evangelist and a prophet. Power production has many of the characteristics of a religion with all the same intensity, beliefs, uncompromising tenets of faith, desire to convert the non believers or if not successful, to belittle and discredit them. Each of these energy religions is out to save the world. This world saving must be done is a certain way to conform to the tenets and beliefs of the particular faith. I am not religious in this regard.

Energy systems are just tools that conform to economic political and economic reality. No energy system is perfect and they all are subject to faults and tradeoffs. There are no silver bullets.

True to the Voltaire quote - The perfect is the enemy of the good; The FF system could have already been deployed, but FF is waiting for aneutronic fusion and direct energy conversion to be perfected.

Neutronic fusion with the current state of the art heat conversion turboelectric technology could have already been in the market place as the low cost solution; not perfect but still very good. Yes, FF can do a very good job producing energy today. It could be far better than the Light Water Reactor or the Sodium Fast Reactor or ITER and LIFE or wind mills and solar panels.  So why not get it into the market place?

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Posted: 22 November 2009 05:08 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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Axil - 21 November 2009 10:48 PM

It is true that all these nuclear power applications have an evangelist and a prophet. Power production has many of the characteristics of a religion with all the same intensity, beliefs, uncompromising tenets of faith, desire to convert the non believers or if not successful, to belittle and discredit them. Each of these energy religions is out to save the world. This world saving must be done is a certain way to conform to the tenets and beliefs of the particular faith. I am not religious in this regard.

Energy systems are just tools that conform to economic political and economic reality. No energy system is perfect and they all are subject to faults and tradeoffs. There are no silver bullets.

True to the Voltaire quote - The perfect is the enemy of the good; The FF system could have already been deployed, but FF is waiting for aneutronic fusion and direct energy conversion to be perfected.

Neutronic fusion with the current state of the art heat conversion turboelectric technology could have already been in the market place as the low cost solution; not perfect but still very good. Yes, FF can do a very good job producing energy today. It could be far better than the Light Water Reactor or the Sodium Fast Reactor or ITER and LIFE or wind mills and solar panels.  So why not get it into the market place?

Because it costs many times as much to add a steam turbine as just to drain off electricity.  FF is a poor neutron and heat generator.  Why try to downgrade it to that level of energy?

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