This capstone course is a group design project involving integration of nuclear physics, particle transport, control, heat transfer, safety, instrumentation, materials, environmental impact, and economic optimization. It provides opportunities to synthesize knowledge acquired in nuclear and non-nuclear subjects and apply this knowledge to practical problems of current interest in nuclear applications design. Each year, the class takes on a different design project; this year, the project is a power plant design that ties together the creation of emission-free electricity with carbon sequestration and fossil fuel displacement. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
This course is an elective subject in MIT’s undergraduate [Energy Studies Minor](http://mitei.mit.edu/education/energy-minor/). This Institute-wide program complements the deep expertise obtained in any major with a broad understanding of the interlinked realms of science, technology, and social sciences as they relate to energy and associated environmental challenges.
Overview
Syllabus
- Lecture 1: Core - Nonconventional (Non-PWR/BWR) Reactors
- Lecture 2: Process Heat - Major Challenges
- Lecture 3: Hydrogen and Biofuel Production; Design Process
- Lecture 4: Quality Function Deployment (QFD) and House of Quality
- Lecture 7: Qualitative Optimization of CaC2/Acetylene Block Diagram
- Lecture 8: Metals and Cheeses - Uncoventional Pairings
- MIT22_033F11_lec01.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_lec02.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_lec03.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_lec05.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_lec07_note.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_lec08_menu.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_lec08.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_rec04.pdf
- MIT22_033F11_rec10.pdf
Taught by
Prof. Michael Short