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Base-Load and Peak Electricity from a Combined Nuclear Heat and Fossil Combined-Cycle Plant...

by James C Conklin, Charles Forsberg
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Proceedings of the ANS GLOBAL '07 - Advanced Nuclear Fuel Cycles and Systems
Publication Date
Page Number
1
Conference Name
GLOBAL '07 - Advanced Nuclear Fuel Cycles and Systems
Conference Location
Boise, Tennessee, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
American Nuclear Society
Conference Date
-

A combined-cycle power plant is proposed that uses heat from a high-temperature reactor and fossil fuel to meet base-load and peak electrical demands. The high-temperature gas turbine produces shaft power to turn an electric generator. The hot exhaust is then fed to a heat recovery steam generator (HRSG) that provides steam to a steam turbine for added electrical power production. A simplified computational model of the thermal power conversion system was developed in order to parametrically investigate two different steady-state operation conditions: base load nuclear heat only from an Advanced High Temperature Reactor (AHTR), and combined nuclear heat with fossil heat to increase the turbine inlet temperature. These two cases bracket the expected range of power levels, where any intermediate power level can result during electrical load following. The computed results indicate that combined nuclear-fossil systems have the potential to offer both low-cost base-load electricity and lower-cost peak power relative to the existing combination of base-load nuclear plants and separate fossil-fired peak-electricity production units. In addition, electric grid stability, reduced greenhouse gases, and operational flexibility can also result with using the conventional technology presented here for the thermal power conversion system coupled with the AHTR.