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Power Technology

A New Class of Nuclear Reactors 560

prunedude tips this quote from a post at Freakonomics about Japan's nuclear crisis: "The folks over at IV Insights, the blog associated with Nathan Myhrvold's Intellectual Ventures, point out that it was the complete loss of power that disabled the cooling systems protecting the plant's reactors. Which raises the question: Is there nuclear technology that could withstand such a catastrophe? Possibly. TerraPower, an Intellectual Ventures spin-off that also boasts Bill Gates as an investor, is working on a new reactor design called a traveling wave reactor that uses fast reactor technology, rather than the light water technology used at the Fukushima Daiichi plant. The two biggest advantages of the fast reactor design is that it requires no spent fuel pools and uses cooling systems that require no power to function, meaning the loss of power from the tsunami might not have crippled a fast reactor plant so severely."
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A New Class of Nuclear Reactors

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 21, 2011 @07:36PM (#35566464)

    From: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorium

    Some of the benefits of thorium when compared with uranium as fuel:
      * Weapons-grade fissionable material (U-233) is harder to retrieve safely and clandestinely from a thorium reactor;
      * Thorium produces 10 to 10,000 times less long-lived radioactive waste;
      * Thorium comes out of the ground as a 100% pure, usable isotope, which does not require enrichment, whereas natural uranium contains only 0.7% fissionable U-235;
        * Thorium can not sustain a nuclear chain reaction without priming, so fission stops by default.

  • by Surt ( 22457 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @07:37PM (#35566478) Homepage Journal

    Indeed, this was what came to mind immediately to me as well.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebble_bed_reactor [wikipedia.org]

  • Re:Pebble Bed (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 21, 2011 @07:51PM (#35566630)

    Actually, the pebble reactor in Julich, Germany (I'll assume that's what you are referring to) had severe problems leading to long half-life fission products contaminating the soil and water around the reactor.

    The flaws are not based on the particular design of the AVR facility, but seem to be flaws in the whole pebble-bed idea. You can read the Julich Research Facilities own post-mortem here: http://www.eskom.co.za/content/AVR-Report-Press.PDF [eskom.co.za]

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 21, 2011 @08:05PM (#35566760)

    Germany ran a pebble bed reactor at the Nuclear Research Facility at Juelich. The Juelich post-mortem report concluded that pebble bed reactors have severe problems in practice (at least some of them base design flaws), in the specific case of the Julich AVR reactor leading to Strontium-90 contamination of the soil and aquifer beneath the reactor.

    The post-mortem report is posted here http://www.eskom.co.za/content/AVR-Report-Press.PDF

    Some interesting bits from the report:

    The AVR primary circuit is heavily contaminated with metallic fission products (Sr-90, Cs-137) which create problems in current dismantling. The amount of this contamination is not exactly known, but the evaluation of fission product deposition experiments indicates that the end of life contamination reached several percent of a single core inventory, which is some orders of magnitude more than precalculated and far more than in large LWRs.
    [...]
    It leads to the conclusion that the AVR contamination was mainly caused by inadmissible high core temperatures, increasing fission product release rates, and not - as presumed in the past - by inadequate fuel quality only.

    From the conclusions:

    As outlined above there exist unresolved safety problems in pebble bed reactors for design basis accidents, as for beyond design basis accidents like severe air ingress with graphite burning. Previously a superior safety behaviour of pebble bed reactors was claimed compared to other nuclear systems including an allegedly catastrophe free design. According to the above presents arguments there are doubts, whether this depicts reality.

    So while pebble bed reactors have some advantages over traditional designs, they are by no means the silver bullet that some people make them to be.

  • Re:Dumb question... (Score:4, Informative)

    by Charliemopps ( 1157495 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @08:14PM (#35566830)
    Because, in order for the reactor to produce power it needs at least some of its control rods to be removed. Having the control rods removed during an emergency is FAR FAR more dangerous than a loss of cooling. The point of the cooling pumps is to prevent the core from getting so hot that it melts the control rods and the slags down to the bottom of the containment chamber. All modern reactor designs do not need active cooling like these reactors do. They are some of the oldest reactor designs in existence and upgrading such reactors have by put off due to cost and unending legal challenges by environmental groups. It's sad that we could replace our horrendous coal and hydroelectric power grid that does untold damage to the environment, with modern safe reactors within a few decades but can't because "Environmental" groups hold on to this windmill pipe dream... oh wait, they file legal challenges on the windmills to...
  • by mbkennel ( 97636 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @08:41PM (#35567070)

    "the two biggest advantages of the fast reactor design is that it requires no spent fuel pools and uses cooling systems that require no power to function"

    Let's translate what this means. The core of the reactor will be VERY radioactive as it will have decay products from many more gigawatt hours---yes it will transmute quite a bit of these but do not underestimate just how hot it will be.

    The cooling systems use molten sodium. It has the wee problem that it is explosive in contact with water. Say from a flood. Or if the building catches on fire. (and it's probably quite radioactive in itself simply from activation from the neutron flux). Or suppose there's a leak in the roof and it rains.

    And it's right next to an extremely radioactive core. And if the explosion results in something cracking open......

    One huge problem at Fukushima reactors was the unappreciated dangers of flooding, combined with the hydrogen explosions. These explosions damaged other important machinery and structures---you get a 'blunder chain reaction'.

    See some other comments about the TWR

    http://theenergycollective.com/barrybrook/43928/terrapower%E2%80%99s-travelling-wave-reactor-%E2%80%93-why-not-use-ifr [theenergycollective.com]

  • Re:Wikivertisement (Score:4, Informative)

    by 517714 ( 762276 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @08:45PM (#35567102)
    Yeah, but check out the talk [wikipedia.org] page. There is a lot more information on the design there than in the main article.
  • Re:CANDU (Score:4, Informative)

    by sjames ( 1099 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @08:52PM (#35567160) Homepage Journal

    You can't just drain the coolant from a reactor, even when its already been shut down. The reactors in japan shut down the instant the ground started shaking.

    The problem is all the decay products starting with the iodine. It takes a while for those to break down enough to not melt the fuel rods.

    That's not to say that CANDU's heavy water design isn't a good idea, it is. It just isn't a solution to this particular problem.

  • by Martin Blank ( 154261 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @08:52PM (#35567164) Homepage Journal

    Fukushima Daiichi was built to withstand a 5.7m tsunami, as required by Japanese regulators. It was hit with a 10m tsunami [mitnse.com], though, which is why the generators were knocked offline.

  • by ColdWetDog ( 752185 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @08:56PM (#35567212) Homepage
    Rebuttal from Physicians for Social Responsibility [ieer.org]

    Weapons-grade fissionable material (U-233) is harder to retrieve safely and clandestinely from a thorium reactor

    Thorium is not actually a “fuel” because it is not fissile and therefore cannot be used to start or sustain a nuclear chain reaction. A fissile material, such as uranium235 (U235) or plutonium239 (which is made in reactors from uranium238), is required to kickstart the reaction. The enriched uranium fuel or plutonium fuel also maintains the chain reaction until enough of the thorium target material has been converted into fissile uranium233 (U 233) to take over much or most of the job. An advantage of thorium is that it absorbs slow neutrons relatively efficiently (compared to uranium238) to produce fissile uranium233. The use of enriched uranium or plutonium in thorium fuel has proliferation implications. Although U235 is found in nature, it is only 0.7 percent of natural uranium, so the proportion of U235 must be industrially increased to make “enriched uranium” for use in reactors. Highly enriched uranium and separated plutonium are nuclear weapons materials.
    In addition, U233 is as effective as plutonium239 for making nuclear bombs. In most proposed thorium fuel cycles, reprocessing is required to separate out the U233 for use in fresh fuel. This means that, like uranium fuel with reprocessing, bombmaking material is separated out, making it vulnerable to theft or diversion. Some proposed thorium fuel cycles even require 20% enriched uranium in order to get the chain reaction started in existing reactors using thorium fuel. It takes 90% enrichment to make weaponsusable uranium, but very little additional work is needed to move from 20% enrichment to 90% enrichment. Most of the separative work is needed to go from natural uranium, which ahs 0.7% uranium235 to 20% U235.

    Thorium produces 10 to 10,000 times less long-lived radioactive waste;

    Proponents claim that thorium fuel significantly reduces the volume, weight and longterm radiotoxicity of spent fuel. Using thorium in a nuclear reactor creates radioactive waste that proponents claim would only have to be isolated from the environment for 500 years, as opposed to the irradiated uraniumonly fuel that remains dangerous for hundreds of thousands of years. This claim is wrong. The fission of thorium creates longlived fission products like technetium99 (halflife over 200,000 years). While the mix of fission products is somewhat different than with uranium fuel, the same range of fission products is created. With or without reprocessing, these fission products have to be disposed of in a geologic repository.

    Thorium comes out of the ground as a 100% pure, usable isotope, which does not require enrichment, whereas natural uranium contains only 0.7% fissionable U-235

    Compared to uranium, thorium fuel cycle is likely to be even more costly. In a oncethrough mode, it will need both uranium enrichment (or plutonium separation) and thorium target rod production. In a breeder configuration, it will need reprocessing, which is costly. In addition, as noted, inhalation of thorium232 produces a higher dose than the same amount of uranium238 (either by radioactivity or by weight). Reprocessed thorium creates even more risks due to the highly radioactive U232 created in the reactor. This makes worker protection more difficult and expensive for a given level of annual dose.

    (The article goes into a bit more detail. One does have to keep in mind that PSR is generally quite anti nuclear - but I think these are fairly reasonable counterarguments)

    Lastly, no one has actually made a commercial level thorium cycle reactor despite decades of trying. It MIGHT have some advantages and engineering and research efforts should continue, but it's hardly a viable solution as of yet.

  • Re:CANDU (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 21, 2011 @09:29PM (#35567466)

    CANDU is banned in the US because it has a small positive void coefficient when initially fueled. Over the life of the fuel it moves into small negative void coefficient - basically the reactor is neutral. Chernobyl had a HUGE positive void coefficient so that was probably a reason why CANDU is banned - another is it would compete with US corps.

    But TBH, CANDU reactor was the first reactor designed for safe power generation. The BWR and similar designs are scaled up version of what drives US aircraft carriers - they are not designed to be safe. CANDU on the other hand, has dual independent cooling loops. The moderator is liquid (heavy water). It has dual emergency shutdown (control rods and neutron poison into the moderator). CANDU breeds and burns plutonium - so it can be a proliferation risk though normally plutonium content in fuel is very small.

    I think CANDU is vastly safer than BWR. You can also refuel it without turning it off. Runtime can be up to 3 years before you have to power down for maintenance. I'm not certain what is better, the EABWR or CANDU-6, but I think I would stick with CANDU for now. They are more expensive to build than equivalent power EABWR.

    Funny thing is, people built cheaper rather then safer and then they complain that the plant is not as safe as they wanted.

  • by Mspangler ( 770054 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @09:32PM (#35567482)

    "One big tank on that big hill behind the plant,"

    (Pardon my English Engineering units)
    Let's see, 2.3 feet per psi, 1000 psi steam pressure (According to wikipedia, sounds a bit high to me) so we are looking at a 2300 foot high hill. If it's 600 psi steam, at least after shutdown, then it's only about 1700 feet of hill.

    And the big tank has to still be there after the 9.0 earthquake. There is more complication in "All they needed" than you think.

    The basic design is supposed to have a steam powered feed pump with a source of makeup water. Whether it broke, was never there, or the source of makeup water was a condenser that was mudded out by the tsunami, I don't know. And I would like to know. I used to serve on an SSN, so I have a certain professional curiosity.

  • by mcguiver ( 898268 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @10:01PM (#35567670)
    A lot of the safety of the pebble bed design comes from the TRISO fuel particles that it uses. In the even of an accident like the one at Fukushima there would be no concern over the fuel melting down since the power density is so low and the melting point of graphite is so high there is no possible way for the fuel to melt down. These particles can be used in any sort of a Very High Temperature Gas Cooled Reactor, of which the gas cooled pebble bed and prismatic designs are both very attractive options. The helium atmosphere in the core cools and helps to inhibit the ignition of a graphite fire.

    The problem with the pebble bed reactors of releasing Cs and Sr are both due to the design of the TRISO particle. The TRISO particle has a silicon carbide (SiC) layer that provides structural stability as well as stopping for most fission products. Unfortunately there are a few fission products (Cs, Sr, Ag especially) that are able to pass through the SiC in significant quantities. There is research going on to investigate the use of zirconium carbide (ZrC) in addition to SiC in the TRISO particle. The addition of this layer provides many benefits, including the ability to stop fission products that SiC can't stop.

    As a side note, TRISO particles also make a great waste form. Graphite doesn't dissolve readily in any natural environment and would be able to remain intact for millions of years.
  • Re:Wikivertisement (Score:5, Informative)

    by spun ( 1352 ) <loverevolutionary&yahoo,com> on Monday March 21, 2011 @10:17PM (#35567760) Journal

    Good Lord. This looks like a total scam. This is all funded by a known patent troll. It appears to be some sort of viral marketing campaign to drum up customers, i.e. moronic investors willing to part with huge sums of money they will never see again. And now we're all part of it, they'll point at Slashdot and say, "Look! Nerds are talking about it. Smart people. See them talking about it? Now give me some money." I feel dirty now.

  • by KonoWatakushi ( 910213 ) on Monday March 21, 2011 @10:36PM (#35567882)

    Nice "fact sheet" by people who are clearly not experts in the field and obviously have an anti-nuclear agenda. Most importantly though, it is anything but objective; it is highly selective of the "facts", full of half truths and strawmen, and has a clear intent to deceive the reader. While I have little desire to sift through their drivel, I fully expect that they have similar "fact sheets" for many other competing energy sources. What we could use is a real fact sheet for fossil fuels, and especially coal...

    Just to start with, anything with a half life of 200,000 years is so stable, that it is only technically "radioactive", and poses no health risk whatsoever, beyond possible issues of toxicity. Any residual radiation remaining after a few hundred years is below the background level; the only reason to point out things like this is to incite fear and induce hysteria.

    Otherwise, while some hypothetical straw man reactor in once-through mode might suffer from some imaginary reprocessing problems, real designs such as the Molten Salt Reactor are conveniently ignored. There is no solid fuel to start with, no separation necessary, and the "reprocessing" is basically just removing the reaction products, and can be done online.

    The amount of real waste from such reactors is so small, and the timeframes so short, that it is ludicrous to even begin talking about geologic storage. For a comparison of the waste and mining requirements, see this presentation [energyfromthorium.com]. In terms of raw environmental devastation and heath effects, it would also be nice to see a comparison with coal.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday March 22, 2011 @04:52AM (#35569742)
    So it's a building designed to withstand an earthquake larger than any that has been recorded in history. It's a building with a 6m tsunami wall around the grounds to withstand a larger tsunami than has ever been experienced anywhere on that pacific rim. Oh and it had battery backup that is stored in a sealed room which was completely unaffected by all the above and worked entirely as intended, but ultimately ran out of juice.

    Basic planning. You don't rely on your backup backup to run the plant as it's designed. You rely on that first backup in case the main system fails, and you rely on the second backup to buy you enough time to restore one of the primary backups. This is common in all industrial situations. Here's a question for you, can your datacentre run indefinitely on battery power, or does battery power only keep you up for an hour or so to ensure that your diesel generators have a) time to kick in, and b) if they are out you can reasonably expect main power to come on within the intended time anyway?

    Here's another question for you. Has your disaster plan taken into account a direct nuclear strike? I mean just because it hasn't happened before doesn't mean it couldn't happen right? What about an alien attack? Both of these were just as likely to occur as an earthquake of this magnitude followed by a tsunami of that size.
  • by Ihlosi ( 895663 ) on Tuesday March 22, 2011 @05:26AM (#35569866)
    how about having a huge chlorine bath under the sodium reactor,

    Great idea. Let's build a huge potential bomb by placing a metal that reacts violently with pretty much anything else next to the substance that it reacts most violently with.

    and if there's a reactor problem the barrier dividing the two is lowered resulting in radioactive NaCl being created?

    The reaction between chlorine and sodium is hugely exothermic. What you propose basically amounts to blowing the reactor and its contents sky-high.

    Also, you don't want chlorine anywhere near neutron radiation, since the Cl-36 created that way has a half-life of a few hundred thousand years. Short enough to make it a radiation hazard, and yet long enough to make disposal quite difficult.

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