No. Nuclear energy is a type of energy that is quite different from chemical energy.
nuclear power station generates electric
A coal-fired power station uses chemical energy from burning coal to generate electricity. A nuclear power station uses nuclear reactions to generate electricity.
An example of chemical energy being converted to nuclear energy is a nuclear power plant. In a nuclear reactor, uranium atoms undergo nuclear fission, releasing a large amount of energy in the form of heat. This heat is then used to produce steam, which drives turbines to generate electricity.
That is impossible to answer. There are many kinds of chemical energy and each costs a different amount. AA batteries are chemical energy. A car battery is chemical energy. Gasoline is chemical energy. Food is chemical energy.
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nuclear energy
The energy released is nuclear energy.
That is called chemical energy - assuming conventional fuel. Nuclear fuel has nuclear energy.
a place that generates nuclear energy
Nuclear fusion produces nuclear energy
The energy released is nuclear energy.
Chemical energy does not change into nuclear energy. Chemical energy is associated with the bonds between atoms in molecules, whereas nuclear energy is associated with changes in the nucleus of an atom, such as nuclear fission or fusion.