Seminar Report On Nuclear Battery
Seminar Report On Nuclear Battery
Seminar Report On Nuclear Battery
The terms nuclear battery is used to describe a device which uses energy from the
decay of a radioactive isotope to generate electricity. Like nuclear reactors they
generate electricity from atomic energy, but differ in that they do not use a chain
reaction. Compared to other batteries they are very costly, but have extremely long
life and high energy density, and so they are mainly used as power sources for
equipment that must operate unattended for long periods of time, such as
spacecraft, pacemakers, underwater systems and automated scientific stations in
remote parts of the world.
Nuclear battery technology began in 1913, when Henry Moseley first demonstrated
the beta cell. The field received considerable in-depth research attention for
applications requiring long-life power sources for space needs during the 1950s and
1960s. In 1954 RCA researched a small atomic battery for small radio receivers and
hearing aids. Since RCA's initial research and development in the early 1950s, many
types and methods have been designed to extract electrical energy from nuclear
sources. The scientific principles are well known, but modern nano-scale technology
and new wide band gap semiconductors have created new devices and interesting
material properties not previously available.
Batteries using the energy of radioisotope decay to provide long-lived power (1020
years) are being developed internationally. Conversion techniques can be grouped
into two types: thermal and non-thermal. The thermal converters (whose output
power is a function of a temperature differential) include thermoelectric and
thermionic generators. The non-thermal converters (whose output power is not a
function of a temperature difference) extract a fraction of the incident energy as it is
being degraded into heat rather than using thermal energy to run electrons in a
cycle. Atomic batteries usually have an efficiency of 0.15%. High efficiency
betavoltaics have 68%.
1. THERMAL CONVERTERS
Their output power is a function of a temperature differential.
FIGURE 1 is a cross-sectional
view through a direct thermionic
energy converter in accordance
with the present invention, along
line II.
connection, all of the blocks are provided with small support plates 5 which are
embedded in the insulating walls 4 without being in contact with each other. These
support plates 5 may, of course, be suppressed if one obtains another manner of
supporting the blocks.
The operation of the atomic reactor being assured by an adequate dimensioning of
the cores 3 and of the absorbing walls 4, the emitters C, heated directly by the heat
produced in the cores 3 by the nuclear reactions, find themselves carried at a high
temperature (of the order of 2,000 K.). The diodes then produce an output, an
electron emission taking place from the emitters toward the collectors. The latter are
maintained at a temperature of the order of 1,000 K. by a circulation of refrigerating
fluid on the inside of the A blocks. This fluid may be constituted advantageously by a
molten metal or alloy, for example, NaK.
The electric current, produced in the diodes, may be utilized in external loads, and
the heat due to the nuclear reactions of the reactor is thus converted directly into
electrical energy. The thermionic diodes may be of a vacuum type or filled with gas
(for example, cesium vapor), the latter being generally preferred in practice, for they
permit to utilize more important interelectrode spaces than the vacuum-type diodes.
In case of utilization of cesium vapor diodes, the described installation comprises
reservoirs (not illustrated in the drawings) which supply this gas to the interelectrode
spaces of the diodes in a conventional manner.
Significant research on advanced low-temperature thermionic converter technology
for fossil-fueled industrial and commercial electric power production was conducted
in the US, and continued until 1995 for possible space reactor and naval reactor
applications. That research has shown that substantial improvements in converter
performance can be obtained now at lower operating temperatures by addition of
oxygen to the caesium vapor, by suppression of electron reflection at the electrode
surfaces, and by hybrid mode operation. Similarly, improvements via use of oxygencontaining electrodes have been demonstrated in Russia along with design studies
of systems employing the advanced thermionic converter performance.
connected to a heat sink. Radioactive decay of the fuel produces heat which flows
through the thermocouples to the heat sink, generating electricity in the process.
A
thermocouple
is
a
thermoelectric
device
that
converts thermal energy directly
into electrical energy using the
Seebeck effect. It is made of two
kinds
of
metal
(or
semiconductors) that can both
conduct electricity. They are
connected to each other in a
closed loop. If the two junctions
are at different temperatures, an
electric current will flow in the
loop.
II.
III.
Its half-life must be long enough so that it will release energy at a relatively
constant rate for a reasonable amount of time. The amount of energy
released per time (power) of a given quantity is inversely proportional to halflife. An isotope with twice the half-life and the same energy per decay will
release power at half the rate per mole. Typical half-lives
for radioisotopes used in RTGs are therefore several decades, although
isotopes with shorter half-lives could be used for specialized applications.
IV.
For spaceflight use, the fuel must produce a large amount of power
per mass and volume (density). Density and weight are not as important for
terrestrial use, unless there are size restrictions. The decay energy can be
calculated if the energy of radioactive radiation or the mass loss before and
after radioactive decay is known.
The first two criteria limit the number of possible fuels to fewer than 30 atomic
isotopes within the entire table of nuclides. Plutonium-238, curium-244 and
strontium-90 are the most often cited candidate isotopes, but other isotopes such as
polonium-210, promethium-147, caesium-137, cerium-144, ruthenium-106, cobalt60, curium-242, americium-241 and thulium isotopes have also been studied.
RTGs have been used as power sources in satellites, space probes and unmanned
remote facilities such as a series of lighthouses built by the former Soviet Union
inside the Arctic Circle. RTGs are usually the most desirable power source for
robotic or unmaintained situations that need a few hundred watts (or less) of power
for durations too long for fuel cells, batteries, or generators to provide economically
and in places where solar cells are not practical. Safe use of RTGs requires
containment of the radioisotopes long after the productive life of the unit.
1. The heat source contains thermal energy at temperature, TH, and a radiator
to emit photons for conversion. Chemical, solar thermal, and nuclear
sources have all been used or considered for TPV applications. The
temperature of the heat source is important to system performance because
higher efficiencies are generally possible with higher radiator temperatures.
The AMTEC units, placed behind the radiation shadow shield, arc heated by a
multitude of sodium heat pipes, which are thermally coupled to the reactor's Na heat
pipes
(Figure7).
The AMTEC units
in
the
SAIRS
power system are
grouped into six
blocks of three or
four units each.
Each
AMTEC
block is cooled by
a
multitude
of
potassium (K) heat
pipes, assembled
into a separate
radiator panel. The heat rejection radiator panel for each AMTEC block is made of
two sections, a stationary forward section attached to the AMTEC units and a rear
conical deployable section, which is folded on to the stationary section in the stowed
launch configuration. The K-heat pipes in the forward fixed and rear deployable
sections of the radiator panels are hydraulically coupled using flexible joints. The
surface of the radiator is covered with CC composite armor to protect against
impact by meteoroids. The SAIRSs hexagonal core, fast spectrum nuclear reactor is
cooled using a total of 60 1.5-cm- OD. Mo-14% Re sodium heat pipes. To minimize
the physical penetrations through the radiation shadow shield behind the reactor, the
Na-heat pipes exiting the reactor vessel and the axial BeO reflector are bent around
the shadow shield before entering the radiator cavity.
The steady alternating expansion and contraction of gas within this Stirling heat
cycle drives the magnetized piston through the coil of wire more than 100 times per
second, thus creating an alternating current of electricity.
Each ASRG contains two sets of
pistons and displacerseach
set known together as an
Advanced Stirling Convertor.
The two convertors are aligned
endto-end in the middle of the
generator; this configuration
helps to cancel out the small
linear vibrations produced by
the pistons when their motion is
synchronized. The helium gas
sealed inside each converter
also functions as a hydrostatic bearing, keeping the displacer and the piston from
rubbing the walls of the cylinder and eliminating almost all physical wear. This
enables the ASRG to be designed for a long operating lifetime of 17 years.
A controller connected by electrical cables to the ASRG synchronizes the two
pistons, provides data about the status of the ASRG to the spacecraft carrying it,
and transforms the alternating current (AC power) produced by the generator into
about 130 watts of direct current (DC power) at a voltage that a spacecraft can use.
The far end of each convertor is connected to a General Purpose Heat Source
(GPHS) that contains the radioisotope fuel heat source. The ASRG uses two of the
identical GPHS modules, the same type used in the MultiMission Radioisotope
Thermoelectric Generator (MMRTG) that powers the Curiosity Mars rover. The
GPHS contains the power sources nuclear fuel within several layers of rugged and
heat resistant carbon-carbon material, graphite and iridium metal.
These tough layers help ensure the safety of the power source in the unlikely event
of an accident during launch of an RPS-powered mission or in an accidental
atmospheric reentry during an Earth-swingby maneuver. In addition, the nuclear
radioisotope fuel in an RPS (plutonium dioxide) is used in a ceramic form that would
break primarily into large, non-inhalable and non-soluble pieces, rather than fine
particles that could be harmful to human health or the environment.
The energy conversion process used by an ASRG allows it to use about one quarter
of the plutonium-238 used in previous radioisotope systems to produce a similar
amount of power. This greater efficiency helps extend the limited supply of this
special material.
NASA and the scientific community are studying a wide variety of missions that
might require an ASRG, from orbiters, landers and rovers to balloons and planetary
boats. Possible destinations for future missions that would carry an ASRG include
Mars, Saturns moon Titan, Jupiters moon Europa, or the outer planets Uranus and
Neptune. It may be possible to build a small Stirling-powered RPS that would use
only one GPHS module, to power smaller spacecraft, highly mobile missions, or
those that might require a network of small stations.
2. NON-THERMAL CONVERTERS
Non-thermal converters extract a fraction of the nuclear energy as it is being
degraded into heat. Their outputs are not functions of temperature
differences.
English physicist H.G.J. Moseley constructed the first of these. Moseleys apparatus
consisted of a glass globe silvered on the inside with a radium emitter mounted on
the tip of a wire at the center. The charged particles from the radium created a flow
of electricity as they moved quickly from the radium to the inside surface of the
sphere. As late as 1945 the Moseley model guided other efforts to build
experimental batteries generating electricity from the emissions of radioactive
elements.
On the other hand, the Direct Charge Nuclear Battery has these features:
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
2.2. Betavoltaics
that the typical flux of beta particles emitted from a beta source is a minute fraction
of the photon flux emitted by the sun. As a result, betavoltaic devices typically
generate currents on the order of nano- to micro-amperes, which are several orders
of magnitude smaller than currents generated by similarly sized photovoltaic
devices.
When selecting a beta source for a betavoltaic device, fluence rates and isotope
half-lifetimes are important aspects that must be considered. Obviously, utilizing long
half-lifetime isotopes that can generate sufficient beta particle fluxes is critical to the
design of long-lasting betavoltaic power sources. However, the effects of radiation
damage in the semiconductor material must also be taken into account. Ideally, the
maximum kinetic energy (Emax) of the beta particles emitted from the beta source
should be smaller than the radiation damage threshold of the material (Eth).
Otherwise, the emitted beta particles would have sufficient energy to displace atoms
in the semiconductor lattice. Radiation induced defects in the semiconductor
material can result in shortened minority carrier diffusion lengths, increased leakage
currents, and overall device performance degradation.
Betavoltaics fill a unique nicke among
energy
storage
devices.
Their
distinguishing feature is their longevity, but
in addition, the energy density of a tritium
or 147Pm powered betavoltaic battery can
be many times greater than that of a lithium
battery. In the defence market, tritium
based betavoltaics are already being
introduced to power the encryption keys in
field-programmable gate arrays. Although
their power requirements are quite low (150
nW), the arrays tend to experience extreme
temperatures that can cause chemical batteries to fail. A betavoltaic decice trickle
charging a second secondary battery or capacitor can provide burst power in the
range of milliWatts to watts, for critical device operations such as wireless
communications which can be used in extreme conditions. Implanted medical
devices are a natural application for betavoltaic power sources, whose long life
spans can help minimize trauma to patients, like pacemakers, with other possibilities
including defibrillators, cerebral neurostimulators, cohlear implants, brain computer
interface devices, etc.
2.3. Alphavoltaics
deposited into the layer of semiconductor material 18(1) and to decrease the selfabsorption of photons by absorption and conversion layer 12(1).
The emitted photons in the absorption and conversion layer 12(1) are either emitted
towards the layer of semiconductor material 12(1) or are substantially reflected at
the interface between the metal foil 16 and the absorption and conversion layer12(1)
towards the layer of semiconductor material 12(1). Since the photons have energy
greater than the bandgap of the p/n junction in the layer of semiconductor material
18(1), the photons are absorbed in the p/n junction layer of semiconductor material
12(1) creating electron-hole pairs that are converted into useful electricity. This
generated electricity or power is transferred to a load 20(1) which is coupled
between the absorption and conversion layer 12(1) and the layer of semiconductor
material 18(1) across the p/n junction.
Alphavoltaic batteries have at least two unique properties when compared to
conventional chemical batteries that make them outstanding candidates for deep
space missions:
I.
II.
The alpha emitting materials have half-lives from months to 100's of years, so
there is the potential for everlasting batteries; and
Alpha voltaic batteries in accordance with the present invention can operate
over a tremendous temperature range. Ordinary chemical batteries all fail at
temperatures below 40 C., while alpha voltaic batteries have been
demonstrated to work at 135 C.
2.4.
An opto-electric nuclear battery is a device that converts nuclear energy into light,
which it then uses to generate electrical energy.
A nuclear-cored battery that emits alpha, beta, or gamma radiation and is
surrounded by a ceramic phosphor material. The ceramic material within the ceramic
phosphor material is a high temperature ceramic and is used to shield and absorb
the radiation emitted by the nuclear core while the phosphors are excited by the
radiation causing them to produce energy in the form of photons. Structural defects
are used to increase the bandwidth of the ceramic material and phosphor material
such that photons are produced and radioactive radiation is prevented from being
emitted past the ceramic material. Surrounding the ceramic phosphor material is a
photovoltaic layer that transforms the photons into a flow of electrons to create a
sphere. Surrounding a plurality of these spheres is a conductive material that is an
intermediate layer that carries the spheres. A P and N layer sandwiches the spheres
therebetween to harness the electron flow created by the photovoltaic layer to create
the nuclear-cored battery.
Below is a list of examples of different ceramic phosphors and the color wavelengths
of the photons that are emitted by each depending on the amount of each element
provided:
I.
II.
III.
IV.
V.
VI.
VII.
Finally, spheres 12 in one embodiment are in powder form and will range in size
from 50 microns to sub micron in size depending on the application and output.
Nonetheless, in another embodiment a metal is added to the nuclear core 14 of the
battery 10 in order to increase the size of the spheres 12 for macro-sized
applications.
Major disadvantages of Opto-electric Nuclear Battery:
I.
II.
III.
The inherent risk of failure is likely to limit this device to space-based applications,
where the finely divided radioisotope source is only removed from a safe transport
medium, and placed in the high-pressure gas, after the device has left Earth orbit.
SUMMARY
There is no argument that batteries are the necessities of modern life, powering
everything from cell phones to vehicles. The traditional batteries, powered up by
chemical reaction that convert stored chemical energy into electrical energy, are
omnipresent and very economical but they have their own limitations.
These chemical batteries can be used only for a certain period of time and even the
rechargeable ones can be recharged only a specific no of times. Nuclear batteries
boast of their longevity as their working is directly dependent on the half-life of the
radioactive core.
Although at the moment chemical batteries are a lot safer than the nuclear batteries
for general purposes, but their use it limited to normal working conditions as they
tend to fail in extreme conditions. Right now nuclear batteries can be used and are
generally used in extreme conditions only where there is less manual labor and
minimal chances of a widespread hazard.
Nuclear batteries are already being used in space exploration, underwater systems,
automated satellite stations in remote parts of the world, for medical applications and
various other purposes. With further scientific advancement in the field of nuclear
batteries aiming to decrease the risk factor for the user and/or the environment,
nuclear batteries can be used to power the future.