What you'll learn:
- Understand the fundamental physics behind atomic structure and isotope stability
- Calculate the energy released from radioactive decay, fission, and fusion using E=mc^2
- Practice the foundations of nuclear reactor design with the 4-Factor Formula and the one-speed Neutron Diffusion Equation
- Study the high-level principles behind different fusion reactor designs
- Learn the history behind medical applications of radiation and how technology has improved over the last century
- Discover how medical radioisotopes can be used for diagnostic imaging and cancer therapy
- Discover how advanced reactors work, including Small Modular Reactors, Microreactors, and Liquid-Metal Cooled Reactors
- Learn the designs of Boiling Water Reactors, Pressurized Water Reactors, and CANDU reactors and how they power the US and Canada
- Follow along with problem solving using Python for our number-crunching needs
My name is William Roysdon Murray, and welcome to NuclearEngineering 101!
There's not many online resources available online for getting started with Nuclear Engineering, so I made my own! I first learned about nuclear fission in my high school Chemistry class, and I had hundreds of questions for my teacher after that lesson - Why does both splitting an atom and fusing two atoms both produce energy? Can you make infinite energy from splitting and fusing atoms over and over again? Why are we not using more nuclear power to fight climate change when it makes so much energy without carbon dioxide? How do we have so many nuclear power plants but none of them use fusion technology?
Well, I went to NCState University for about 6 years to study Nuclear Engineering and get my questions answered, and it put me about $86,000 in student debt by the time Iwas done. Not everyone has the time or the money for that! If you're interested in Nuclear Engineering but its not taught at your school, or you don't want to go through the hassle of enrolling in a university again, this course is for you! I've developed this course based off my first year of nuclear courses at NCState, even using the same textbook - Fundamentals of NuclearEngineering by Shultis and Faw. My lectures will guide you through the physics concepts covered in each chapter, and the textbook will serve as your technical guide for modelling the physics with mathematics. I'll even walk you through number crunching the homework problems in Python to show you how to use the textbook to better understand nuclear science!
My hope for this course is that you will discover the magic behind nuclear technology and find a specialty within nuclear that you will want to continue studying -I'll tell you where to go next at the the end of the course based on what you like too!
Radiation Physics: Classical physics from Newton won't be enough for us to understand how nuclear technology works! We will cover the advances in physics made by the likes of Meitner, Schrodinger, Einstein, and others in the early 20th century in preparation for our deep dive into nuclear reactors and medicine.
This course covers:
Fundamentals of atomic structure, modern physics, and Einstein's Special Theory of Relativity
The various types of particle and electromagnetic radiation, and how radioactive decay processes can be modeled using differential equations
Binary nuclear reactions between bombarding radiation and target nuclei - producing new isotopes and radiation in the process
How radiation interacts with matter - calculating nuclear reaction rates in materials that and the basics of radiation shielding
NuclearFission: Nuclear power plants are one of the largest sources of carbon-free electricity in the world. Understanding the nuclear fission process is absolutely necessary to designing the next generation of nuclear power plants to fight climate change. This course covers:
Calculating the energy released from nuclear fission and chain reactions
The anatomy of a nuclear reactor and how its components control the chain reaction
Differences between Traditional and Advanced nuclear reactors, including Small Modular Reactors and Liquid-Metal Reactors
Basics of the nuclear fuel cycle - how we mine uranium, enrich it, use it in power plants, and dispose of it as nuclear waste. Nuclear waste reprocessing and recycling is also discussed!
NuclearFusion: Fusion technology aims to harness the power of the stars with the greatest advancements in science and engineering, without the harmful waste that comes with nuclear fission technology. Dozens of companies are pursuing the fusion dream and aiming to be the first to connect a fusion reactor to the electricity grid. This course covers:
Comparing the energy released and waste produced by fusion power compared to fission power
Basics of Plasma Science and Engineering that are necessary for advanced studies in fusion energy
Types of nuclear fusion reactors - Gravitational Confinement (Stars & the Sun), Magnetic Confinement (Tokamaks and Stellarators), and Inertial Confinement Fusion (High-EnergyLasers)
Nuclear Medicine: Nuclear technology has brought incredible advancements in diagnostic and therapeutic medicine over the last century. Over 40 million nuclear medicine procedures are performed each year, with demand constantly increasing! This course covers:
How medical radioisotopes are produced in reactors and particle accelerators
How these isotopes can be used to perform diagnostic imaging and destroy cancer cells
How radiation can be applied externally without invasive surgery to irradiate tumors
How nuclear diagnostic and therapeutic devices are built and the principles of their operation
Course Logistics
This course is roughly equivalent to a one-semester, 4-credit university engineering course taken by STEMstudents in their sophomore or junior year. It is expected that students have taken two semesters of university-level physics (Mechanics and Electromagnetism) and two semesters of Calculus (Derivatives, Integrals, and basic Differential Equations). It is strongly recommended that students have taken Python forNuclearScience and Engineering or an equivalent programming course to be able to solve homework problems involving number crunching and plotting graphs.
Course Textbook: Fundamentals of NuclearScience andEngineering, 3rd Edition by Shultis and Faw
Suggested Pace: 1 Chapter each Week, with selected problems for that chapter as homework
Total ChaptersCovered: ~12 of 14 Chapters in Shultis and Faw; approximately 12 weeks of learning
Upon enrolling in the course, students will be invited to join the NuclearLearning Community to assist each other in solving technical problems and improving their understanding on topics discussed in the course.
Disclaimer:No organizations mentioned in this video series have endorsed the contents of this series, nor does the lecturer claim to speak on official behalf of any organizations mentioned in this series.