• trollercoaster@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      In electricity generation, it typically can’t be throttled reasonably in a way that allows quick reaction to changing demand. Most reactors’ power output is regulated by changing the chemistry of the coolant, which can only be done gradually, Using quicker control rods for everyday power adjustment rather than only for shutdown and startup, is avoided to avoid uneven, and therefore inefficient fuel burn. While it could be done, it would make nuclear power even more uneconomical than it already is by forcing more frequent shutdowns for fuel changes.

      • plyth@feddit.org
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        2 days ago

        Like solar, batteries can compensate for the difference between supply and demand.

            • trollercoaster@sh.itjust.works
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              2 days ago

              Doesn’t matter what you connect them to, they don’t scale well.

              They take a lot of exotic materials and energy in a complicated process to produce, have a very limited life span, don’t work without highly complex controllers, and a have comparatively low energy density.

              • msage@programming.dev
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                1 day ago

                No?

                There are many batteries with basic materials that can do tens of thousands of cycles.

                They are heavy and big, which makes them unfit for cars, but great for this use case.

                • trollercoaster@sh.itjust.works
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                  11 hours ago

                  The low energy density of batteries does matter for applications at scale. Because you need buildings to put the batteries into, which will need space, and have to support the weight. You will need an awful lot of space for battery storage in the megawatt, let alone the gigawatt range.

                  For uninterrupted power supply in many applications, you can even live with the low energy density of lead acid batteries, because they typically only have to bridge the short time time until the emergency generators (usually diesels, in some applications, gas turbines) have started and spun up to their operating speed. This is, depending on the size of the generators, a matter of seconds (small generators with truck size engines) to minutes (large generators powered by ship engines). In energy intensive industrial processes with backup power, usually only the control systems are on battery based UPS, while the actual processes will lose power for a short moment until the generators kick in.