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1 Nov 2010

Volume 2, Issue 6, Articles (06xxxx)

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Benefits and concerns of a closed nuclear fuel cycle

Sarah Widder

J. Renewable Sustainable Energy 2, 062801 (2010); http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3506839 (10 pages)

Online Publication Date: 17 November 2010

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Nuclear power can play an important role in our energy future, helping to meet increasing electricity demand while at the same time decreasing carbon dioxide emissions. However, the nuclear fuel cycle in the United States today is unsustainable. The 1982 Nuclear Waste Policy Act establishes the U.S. Department of Energy as responsible for disposing of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) generated by commercial nuclear power plants operating in a “once-through” fuel cycle in a deep geologic repository located at Yucca Mountain, NV. However, unyielding political opposition to the Yucca Mountain site has hindered the commissioning process to the extent that the current administration has recently declared the site unsuitable. In light of this, the DOE is exploring other options, including closing the fuel cycle through reprocessing and recycling of spent nuclear fuel. The possibility of closing the fuel cycle is receiving special attention because of its ability to minimize the final high level waste package by separating and isolating the most long-lived components, as well as recovering additional energy value from the original fuel. Reprocessing and recycling of SNF can decrease the volume of waste stored by a factor of 4 and reduce the timeframe of storage from hundreds of thousands of years to thousands of years. Reprocessing and recycling technologies are, however, still very controversial because of the increased cost and proliferation risk reprocessing can present. Estimates of increases in the levelized cost of electricity with reprocessing range from about 10% to 50% due to large uncertainties in the financing, construction, and licensing of a new plant. Ultimately, the U.S. will need to compare each of these fuel cycle options with respect to sustainability, proliferation risk, commercial viability, waste management, and energy security to define the future of nuclear power.
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28.41.Kw Radioactive wastes, waste disposal
28.41.Vx Fuel cycles
89.30.Gg Nuclear fission power
28.41.Bm Fuel elements, preparation, reloading, and reprocessing
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Evaluation of active flow control applied to wind turbine blade section

O. Stalnov, A. Kribus, and A. Seifert

J. Renewable Sustainable Energy 2, 063101 (2010); http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3518467 (24 pages)

Online Publication Date: 8 December 2010

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A feasibility study for implementing active flow control (AFC) methods to improve the performance of wind turbines was performed. The experimental effort investigated the impact of zero-mass-flux (ZMF) piezofluidic actuators attempting to control boundary layer separation from thick airfoils that are suitable for wind turbine rotor blades. It was demonstrated that the ZMF actuators can replace passive vortex generators that are commonly used for boundary layer separation delay, without the inherent drag penalty that the passive devices impose. It has been shown that ZMF fluidic actuators are suitable for flow control in wind turbine application due to the fact that they are adjustable for wider Reynolds number range, while vortex generators are tuned to perform well in one design point. It was demonstrated that AFC can effectively double the maximum lift of this airfoil at low Reynolds numbers. A possible application is a significant reduction of the turbine start-up velocity. It was also found that even for a contaminated blade, AFC is capable to delay the stall and decrease the drag using low energy expenditure, therefore restoring and even surpassing the clean airfoil performance. The effectiveness of the AFC method was examined using a newly defined aerodynamic figure of merit. Various scaling options for collapsing the effect of the excitation magnitude on the lift alternation due to the activation of zero-mass-flux periodic excitation for boundary layer separation control are proposed and examined using experimental data.
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47.85.ld Boundary layer control
47.85.Gj Aerodynamics
47.15.Cb Laminar boundary layers
47.20.Ib Instability of boundary layers; separation
47.32.Ff Separated flows

Novel spray pyrolysis for dye-sensitized solar cell

V. Senthilnathan and S. Ganesan

J. Renewable Sustainable Energy 2, 063102 (2010); http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3517228 (15 pages)

Online Publication Date: 10 December 2010

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In the area of photovoltaic, the silicon solar cell is the most popular and it has issues such as stability and scaling up cost. On the other hand, a dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC) is one of the most promising candidates for a high-performance solar cell in the next generation, since it is fabricated by a simple manufacture process at relatively low cost. The focus of interest in this research paper is to mention the usage of maiden single and simple apparatus of spray pyrolysis thin film deposition to fabricate the electrode and counterelectrode for DSSC. It involves the novelties introduced in the instrumentation of the apparatus and the characterizations (x-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscope, and atomic force microscopy) of the prepared thin films for the fabricated DSSC. In this work, the pomegranate fruit dye is used to sensitize the nano-TiO2.
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88.40.jr Organic photovoltaics
88.40.H- Solar cells (photovoltaics)
81.15.Rs Spray coating techniques
81.05.Cy Elemental semiconductors
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