Title of article :
South Africaʹs opportunity to maximise the role of nuclear power in a global hydrogen economy Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
R. Greyvenstein، نويسنده , , M. Correia، نويسنده , , W. Kriel، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
10
From page :
3031
To page :
3040
Abstract :
Global concern for increased energy demand, increased cost of natural gas and petroleum, energy security and environmental degradation are leading to heightened interest in using nuclear energy and hydrogen to leverage existing hydrocarbon reserves. The wasteful use of hydrocarbons can be minimised by using nuclear as a source of energy and water as a source of hydrogen. Virtually all hydrogen today is produced from fossil fuels, which give rise to CO2 emissions. Hydrogen can be cleanly produced from water (without CO2 pollution) by using nuclear energy to generate the required electricity and/or process heat to split the water molecule. Once the clean hydrogen has been produced, it can be used as feedstock to fuel cell technologies, or in the nearer term as feedstock to a coal-to-liquids process to produce cleaner synthetic liquid fuels. Clean liquid fuels from coal – using hydrogen generated from nuclear energy – is an intermediate step for using hydrogen to reduce pollution in the transport sector; simultaneously addressing energy security concerns. Several promising water-splitting technologies have been identified. Thermo-chemical water-splitting and high-temperature steam electrolysis technologies require process temperatures in the range of 850 °C and higher for the efficient production of hydrogen. The pebble bed modular reactor (PBMR), under development in South Africa, is ideally suited to generate both high-temperature process heat and electricity for the production of hydrogen. This paper will discuss South Africaʹs opportunity to maximise the use of its nuclear technology and national resources in a global hydrogen economy.
Journal title :
Nuclear Engineering and Design Eslah
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Nuclear Engineering and Design Eslah
Record number :
941554
Link To Document :
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