All-in over here 👍 Hey, I was a piping designer for United Engineers at Seabrook Station in 82 to 86. Worked primarily in the reactor room of Unit 1 designing field-run pip
5 years ago (edited) | 0
I'm so hyped! Seriously though, it's great to have a channel on YT looking at energy and energy transition to renewables with a balanced eye. It's very easy to say throw renewables and nuclear in the bin at once and move on. It's a lot harder to rationally discuss how we manage the transition and the considerations at hand. The fossil fuel bridge that is needed in the interim is a gap that's often not looked at and it's interesting getting some insight from a prof. For reference I'm very pro renewable and pro nuclear (fission) for getting us over the hump towards 100% renewable. Best case scenario we crack fusion and go over capacity for carbon sequestration.
5 years ago | 0
Hi EnergyProf, Happy New Year! Would you consider making full length video dedicated to Thorium and molten salt fuel concept? I enjoyed watching your IV Gen video, but I am still left wanting and wondering 😉
5 years ago | 1
Hi I’m an Electrician in North Carolina and I enjoy your videos very much! I started watching because I’m interested in power production!
5 years ago | 0
Sweet! Your videos are always of top quality and informative. Looking forward to new ones!
5 years ago | 0
Happy new years professor and big greetings from Norway!! Looking forward for more excelent videos in the year's to come.
5 years ago | 0
My wife is so happy she won't have to hear those squeaks when listening in the background again.
5 years ago | 0
Please consider making a Thorium molten salt reactor educational video and how its different method of operation provides higher safety compared to uranium fission reactors.
5 years ago | 0
Will you do a lesson on “low dose long lived radiation” or “bio kinetics with some rads”? Thanks in advance.
5 years ago | 0
Hi I am french and your video are great Can you make a video about radioactive underground storage facility of very radioactive waste, and in particulary the gas problem that could have, because some element will transmut into radon and other radioactive or non radioactiv element who are gas, so all that gas element into a airtight enclosures (where are store very dangerous radioactive element like plutonium) will increase the pressure into it and finally break it so other very dangerous element will be release into environement, and so the radioactive storage will quickly become very dangerous because of this radioactive gas and the other radioactive element that will be release into nature, so you need at least have a ventilation process for thousand and thoudand year.... There is also the problem of water who will invade the undergroud storage so because of realeasing of very dangerous element (Plutonium....) because of gas and pressure breaking the airtight enclosures, you will see very dangerous element contaminate the ground and river and the surface Can you make a subject about that risk thanks
5 years ago (edited) | 0
Illinois EnergyProf
Hope everyone is having happy holidays! We just posted our first video from the new studio. Listen for the marker…..
A brand new full-length video will be posted on Dec. 30th at noon. We hope to do a couple new ones per month. Thank you for watching.
5 years ago | [YT] | 302