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Nuclear Engineering focuses on solving several
of the world's most important grand-challenge problems. Our graduates
help solve these problems in industry, the national laboratories,
government and academia, applying the engineering science, the computational
and analytical tools and the experimental methods we teach at U.C.
Berkeley. Our graduates also apply their expertise more broadly,
ranging from computational skills in dot-com startups to modeling
the effects of cosmic rays spacecraft for aerospace companies.
Nuclear engineering is concerned with the science of nuclear processes
and their application to the development of various technologies.
Nuclear processes are fundamental in the medical diagnosis and treatment
fields, and in basic and applied research concerning accelerator,
laser and superconducting magnetic systems. Utilization of nuclear
fission energy for the production of electricity is the current
major commercial application, and radioactive thermal generators
power a number of spacecraft. For the longer term, electricity production
based on nuclear fusion is expected to become an increasingly important
segment of the field.
Nuclear engineers are therefore concerned with maintaining expertise
in the design and development of advanced fission reactors, performing
basic and applied research in the development and ultimate commercialization
of fusion energy, developing both institutional and technical options
for radioactive waste and nuclear materials management, and in fostering
research in nuclear science and applications, with emphasis on bioengineering,
detection and instrumentation and environmental science. The professional
field, although highly interdisciplinary, is unified via a professional
society, the American Nuclear Society.
Our work toward advanced energy systems, waste management,
and nuclear medical applications is highly interdisciplinary, and
thus many NE students pursue double major degrees: EECS for those
interested in fusion energy systems and computational methods; ME
for those interested in mechanical design and heat transfer; MSE
for those interested in nuclear materials; and ChemE for those interested
in nuclear chemistry. All NE students have opportunities to work
in NE research laboratories, or at nearby National Laboratories
if they desire, to obtain experience (and earn money) in nuclear
engineering research during their undergraduate studies.
While energy is back in the headlines, many people
are not aware of the level of activity in the nuclear field. The
following sections give an update in the areas of, waste management,
and medical applications, showing how NE graduates are now working
to solve grand challenge problems.
The last three years have seen much happen for Nuclear
Engineering.
Medical Applications
Nuclear processes have an amazingly diverse range of applications,
perhaps the most important being in medicine, where over 1/3 of
all procedures in the United States use nuclear techniques. Nuclear
processes are used to provide images inside the human body, to detect
and measure biochemical processes, and to provide therapy. A major
event in 2000 was the FDA approval of the first Monte-Carlo
code for use by doctors to design radiation therapy for cancer.
Based on nuclear reactor design methods, this new tool now allows
doctors to take detailed magnetic resonance imaging data (another
nuclear technique) and predict with great accuracy how to deposit
precisely enough radiation to kill cancer tumors without damaging
surrounding tissue. Previous crude calculation methods often forced
doctors to cause damage to substantial amounts of healthy tissue,
or to miss completely killing tumors. Students in the bionuclear
program in NE learn how the principles of engineering physics
can be applied to imaging and therapy.
Fission Energy
The vision of fission energy is compelling. In the last two decades
it has become the world's largest single source of emission-free
energy, and it creates a waste stream sufficiently small and compact
that we can conceive of isolating this waste permanently from the
environment. For fission to provide more energy in the future, our
grand challenge is to continue to improve the safety, economic performance,
waste minimization, and proliferation resistance of fission power
plants.
The U.S. has 103 nuclear power plants providing over
20 % of its electricity; worldwide the number is 433. These plants
have helped stabilize electricity costs, particularly with the recent
volatility of natural gas prices. Our nuclear plants reduce substantially
the amount of carbon dioxide that world-wide electricity use releases
to the atmosphere. Nuclear fission is the only non-fossil energy
source that has been demonstrated at large scale, and that could
be expanded substantially further. Nuclear's current contribution
is sufficiently large that every year since 1999 the increases in
the operating capacity of existing U.S. nuclear power plants from
improving equipment reliability accounted for over half of all carbon-dioxide
reductions reported by the U.S. electrical industry.
We now expect most existing U.S. nuclear plants to
apply for 20-year
license extensions , which means that the existing U.S. nuclear
fleet will operate out past 2030. Many of our U.S. plants has been
sold by regulated utilities to large owner-operator companies like
Excelon
and Entergy.
Besides encouraging further improvements in reliability
and safety, the large technical expertise and financial resources
available to these new nuclear-focused companies provides the best
possible conditions for new plant orders. Designing the next
generation of fission plants is where some of our most interesting
work is now, ranging from planning for light water reactors
with new passive safety features, to gas-cooled reactors with extremely
durable fuel, to lead-cooled reactors that can burn more waste than
they generate.
Fusion Energy
The development of economic fusion energy systems is one of Nuclear
Engineering's greatest grand challenges, since such power sources
would fundamentally alter the way that humankind interacts with
its environment, to the benefit of both humans and nature. In a
well-designed fusion power plant, burning one ounce of fusion fuel,
plentifully available, makes as much energy as burning 300 tons
of coal while making a negligible amount of waste. Worldwide progress
toward fusion has been steady and impressive. In the last decade,
we have seen magnetic fusion experiments create over 13 million
watts of fusion power. In the coming decade, we expect to see the
new National Ignition Facility use inertial confinement to ignite
fusion fuel, and for the first time reach the fusion conditions
needed in an actual inertial
fusion power plant.

UC Berkeley's Nuclear Engineering Department plays
a leading role in advancing fusion technology, both toward advanced
approaches to magnetic fusion using compact
toroidal plasma configurations, as well as collaborations with
Lawrence Livermore and Lawrence Berkeley Laboratories to develop
inertial
fusion systems that can operate at high repetition rates for
power production.
Radioactive Waste Management
Another grand challenge problem that our graduates work on is developing
systems for the safe and permanent disposal of radioactive waste.
The most significant milestone in this field occurred recently with
the opening of WIPP,
the world's first geologic repository. Located 1/2 mile underground
in a 250-million-year-old salt formation in New Mexico, WIPP began
emplacing waste contaminated with radioactive transuranic elements
in 1999. The Yucca
Mountain Project is now working toward submission of a license
application in December, 2004 to develop a repository for commercial
spent fuel and high level waste from early U.S. military activities.
Against this backdrop, extensive international research continues
to improve models for the transport of radionuclides from geologic
repositories, with active participation by the U.C.
Berkeley, Nuclear Research Laboratory. The primary concern for
repositories is the long-term potential for the contamination of
groundwater in areas near the repository, making it unsuitable for
use by future generations. Besides improving models for transport
in natural systems, efforts also focus on improving the quality
of the engineered barriers that contain the waste, so that multiple
barriers can reduce further the probability of radionuclide release.
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