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136680.2 |
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|a Buongiorno, Jacopo
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|a Carmichael, Ben
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|a Dunkin, Bradley
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|a Parsons, John
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|a Smit, Dirk
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|a Can Nuclear Batteries Be Economically Competitive in Large Markets?
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|b Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute,
|c 2022-01-21T14:22:36Z.
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|z Get fulltext
|u https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/136680.2
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|a We introduce the concept of the nuclear battery, a standardized, factory-fabricated, road transportable, plug-and-play micro-reactor. Nuclear batteries have the potential to provide on-demand, carbon-free, economic, resilient, and safe energy for distributed heat and electricity applications in every sector of the economy. The cost targets for nuclear batteries in these markets are 20-50 USD/MWh<sub>t</sub> (6-15 USD/MMBTU) and 70-115 USD/MWh<sub>e</sub> for heat and electricity, respectively. We present a parametric study of the nuclear battery's levelized cost of heat and electricity, suggesting that those cost targets are within reach. The cost of heat and electricity from nuclear batteries is expected to depend strongly on core power rating, fuel enrichment, fuel burnup, size of the onsite staff, fabrication costs and financing. Notional examples of cheap and expensive nuclear battery designs are provided.
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|a Article
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|t Energies
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