The new fuel is uranium dioxide, enriched to about 4 percent U-235
A nuclear power plant does use uranium as fuel It "burns" it in the nuclear sense not the chemical sense
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Uranium is used as nuclear fuel.
Cola is a renewable thermal fuel power source. It is not radioactive in the sense of nuclear plant fuel.
Natural uranium
Uranium is the fuel that is used.
The only source of vapor (by which the turbine is driven) in nuclear power plant is the nuclear energy (instead of burning out of fossile fuel).
Depending on: - the type of the nuclear reactor - the electrical power of the nuclear reactor - the type of the nuclear fuel - the enrichment of uranium - the estimated burnup of the nuclear fuel etc.
Uranium (or plutonium) is a source of energy (nuclear fuel) in nuclear power plants.
The majority of commercial nuclear power reactors use uranium (natural or enriched) as nuclear fuel.
Bushehr-fuel loading has just started
Nuclear power plant fuel, also known as nuclear fuel, is made by enriching naturally occurring uranium to increase the concentration of the fissile isotope U-235. This enriched uranium is then fabricated into ceramic pellets, usually made of uranium dioxide, which are stacked into fuel rods. These fuel rods are then assembled into fuel assemblies that are used in the nuclear reactor core for power generation.