Implications
of Climate Change on the Heat Budget
of Lentic Systems Used for Power Station Cooling: Case Study Clinton
Lake, Illinois
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Version 1 2016-02-11, 23:19Version 1 2016-02-11, 23:19
Posted on 2016-01-05 - 00:00
We
use a numerical model to analyze the impact of climate changein
particular higher air temperatureson a nuclear power station
that recirculates the water from a reservoir for cooling. The model
solves the hydrodynamics, the transfer of heat in the reservoir, and
the energy balance at the surface. We use the numerical model to (i)
quantify the heat budget in the reservoir and determine how this budget
is affected by the combined effect of the power station and climate
change and (ii) quantify the impact of climate change on both the
downstream thermal pollution and the power station capacity. We consider
four different scenarios of climate change. Results of simulations
show that climate change will reduce the ability to dissipate heat
to the atmosphere and therefore the cooling capacity of the reservoir.
We observed an increase of 25% in the thermal load downstream of the
reservoir, and a reduction in the capacity of the power station of
18% during the summer months for the worst-case climate change scenario
tested. These results suggest that climate change is an important
threat for both the downstream thermal pollution and the generation
of electricity by power stations that use lentic systems for cooling.
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Quijano, Juan C.; Jackson, P. Ryan; Santacruz, Santiago; Morales, Viviana
M.; García, Marcelo H. (2016). Implications
of Climate Change on the Heat Budget
of Lentic Systems Used for Power Station Cooling: Case Study Clinton
Lake, Illinois. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.5b04094