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Yes Distilled water can be used in nuclear power plants to obtain steam. This steam after spinning the turbines (to turn electric generators for electricity generation) is condensed in a closed circuit and returned back as water to be heated up again and turned to steam.
Boiling Water + Steam x Gushing in the air = Geiser...
Otherwise it wouldn't be a STEAM destillation, would it?
The heat from nuclear fission is what generates electricity. Water is heated in a nuclear reactor, which then generates steam which is used to power electrical generators.
This is a type of geothermal power. There are a number of power plants built on this principle. The Related Links below can take you to a Wikipedia article on geothermal power.
The coal heats water into steam the steam runs turbines connected to generators.
A boiler in a coal power station is responsible for converting water into steam. The coal is burned in the furnace of the boiler, producing heat which is used to generate steam. This steam is then used to drive a turbine, which spins a generator to produce electricity.
A coolant is needed in a power station to absorb and transfer the heat generated during the power generation process. It helps in maintaining proper temperature levels and preventing overheating of equipment, such as turbines and generators. Additionally, the coolant also helps in condensing the steam back into a liquid state in steam power plants.
The fissioning of uranium and plutonium nuclei releases energy as heat, which is then used to produce steam to drive conventional turbine/generators.
Power turbines are driven by steam. Steam can be raised by thermal, nuclear or geothermal processes. Wind and water can also drive a generator. The auxiliaries for a power station (which I think is what this question is asking) are typically powered by step down transformers within the power station. In nuclear power stations there are often standby-critical supplies which are driven by gas turbines or diesel generators.
Nuclear power produces heat, used to make steam to run generators.
First they put the fuel in a burner to burn it, then when it is burning it heats up water above it which cause the water to produce steam. The steam is used to turn turbines then the turbines turn the generators, which then leads to energy.
Usually the same way coal, oil, and natural gas fired power plants make electricity: boiling water to make steam, which turns turbines, which turns the generators.
Nuclear fission (splitting of atoms to release their powerful forces) takes place in a nuclear power station. This produces heat which is used to turn water into steam. The steam is used to spin turbines which in turn run generators. A generator is a machine that produces electricity.
The Navy uses Nuclear Power to create steam. Steam is then used to power steam turbines, which in turn power the ship's screws and generators. The US Navy has steam plants, gas turbines, diesel and nuclear powered vessels.
Think of a nuclear power station as a slowed down nuclear bomb. The heat energy released in the fission process is used to turn water into steam to drive electric turbine generators.
The difference is in the name; nuclear power plants produce electricity via a nuclear reaction producing head to turn a turbine, whereas coal fired power plants burn coal to produce the same efffect.