Pressurized Water Reactor: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
imported>Pat Palmer (adding seealso) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{subpages}} | {{subpages}} | ||
{{seealso|Nuclear power reconsidered}} | |||
{{TOC}} | |||
A '''Pressurized Water Reactor''' is a type [[nuclear power]] reactor in which the heat of fission affects water in a primary loop, which is piped to a heat exchanger that generates steam in a secondary loop that drives the turbine; water in the primary but not the secondary loop is [[radioactivity|radioactive]]. While it is larger and more mechanically complex than a [[Boiling Water Reactor]], it is easier to maintain because the turbines and associated equipment do not become radioactive. | A '''Pressurized Water Reactor''' is a type [[nuclear power]] reactor in which the heat of fission affects water in a primary loop, which is piped to a heat exchanger that generates steam in a secondary loop that drives the turbine; water in the primary but not the secondary loop is [[radioactivity|radioactive]]. While it is larger and more mechanically complex than a [[Boiling Water Reactor]], it is easier to maintain because the turbines and associated equipment do not become radioactive. |
Revision as of 09:53, 23 October 2021
- See also: Nuclear power reconsidered
A Pressurized Water Reactor is a type nuclear power reactor in which the heat of fission affects water in a primary loop, which is piped to a heat exchanger that generates steam in a secondary loop that drives the turbine; water in the primary but not the secondary loop is radioactive. While it is larger and more mechanically complex than a Boiling Water Reactor, it is easier to maintain because the turbines and associated equipment do not become radioactive.