If I wanted to produce 2 kilowatts (two thousand watts) of electricity per hour, continuously, what would be the physical size of the reactor?
The Navy has the NR-1 research sub which is probably the smallest mobile reactor. I couldn’t find the power output specs (classified???) but this article
http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/sys/ship/docs/nr_1.htm
mentions twing 50 HP motors, so the reactor has to produce at least 74,570 watts.
Some universities have research reactors – UW-Madison’s is currently at 1 Megawatt.
http://www.engr.wisc.edu/ep/newsletter/2001_springsummer/nuclear.html
Brian
wants to build a nuclear truck (I’m thinking a semi with the reactor in the trailer)
The CANDU SLowpoke was rated at 20kW. Pretty small too
. Maybe drop into a few universities having going out of business sales.
You could check with Ford, and see what they were going to use on the Nucleon.
And you thought the PINTO’s crash tests were bad…:eek:
Oh, BTW, the Russians had a couple of space-based reactors they’ve used on satellites, occasionally. The “Topaz II” reactor was rated at 6KW, and would have weighed about 1 Ton. (I can’t find any details about it’s size, though.)
As folks have said, the minimum capacity of a traditional reactor is driven by critical mass and all that and is a lot bigger than 2KW.
You could build a 2KW radioisotope thermoelectric generator (RTG), which is not a true reactor. You put some radioactive material inside a shield and as it decays it makes heat, which you convert to electricity using a thermocouple. These can be made with as tiny a capacity as you want.
Here’s some info about a unit used for powering space probes from http://www.qmetrics.com/radioisotope_thermoelectric_generato.htm.
Procuring the plutonium would seem to be your biggest hurdle in your quest for an unlimited backyard powerplant.
[nitpick] You can’t really produce 2kW per hour. Watts are already a measure of the rate at which energy is produced. A Watt is equivalent to 1 Joule (energy) per second. Adding another time division could only measure the rate of change of that rate.
So a 2kW generator or reactor will make (2000 W * 3600 sec) 7,200,000 Joules of energy every hour.
[/nitpick]
Thank you LSLGuy for the qmetrics link and RTG. Yor’re probably right about the slight hurdle procuring the 238 for my backyard powerplant. The RTG would be ideal because it comes with a thermocouple.
Thanks Grey The Slowpoke 2 is still small enough, but would have to be monitored. That would take me away from my computer!!
That was funny Ranchoth on the Nucleon.