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Power

Coming Soon: Open-Source Blueprints for a Tiny Nuclear Reactor (popularmechanics.com) 125

"A nonprofit startup is offering an open-source nuclear plant plan," reports Popular Mechanics: A mechanical engineer-turned-tech entrepreneur has plans to, well, empower people around the world to build their own 100-megawatt nuclear power reactors. That's much larger than some of the modular reactors designed by nuclear startups, but still much smaller than operating nuclear power plants in the U.S.

The Energy Impact Center (EIC) is an energy nonprofit that engineer Bret Kugelmass founded in 2017. The organization's goals are similar to other groups working toward carbon neutrality or negativity, except Kugelmass has decided "cheap nuclear" is the only avenue he wants to pursue. By doing that, he's essentially operating a startup model, and for his technology to take hold, a new paradigm for nuclear power plants will have to be installed.

"Today, we offer reference plant schematics and a platform to compile ongoing design work. With the help of our partners and the National Labs, these drawings will evolve into a fully detailed, ready-to-build blueprint," the project website says. It seems like EIC exists to feed new technology into the nuclear startup development pipeline... Kugelmass writes that "It is detailed enough for any utility to begin early site studies with +/- 20 [percent] cost predictability. It is abstract enough to allow for site-specific engineering details to be added, with a $50 million budget allocated per plant for such efforts."

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Coming Soon: Open-Source Blueprints for a Tiny Nuclear Reactor

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  • Where did you get that uranium!
    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Some nations could mine that.
      Then enrich away well from the UN teams and US spies.
      The problems is the USA, Japan, France, Italy, EU nations, the UK would notice the nation is not importing their energy production spare parts and turn key energy products.
      No windmills, huge battery pack, solar farms, dams, gas turn key energy production. No UN loan for a turbine repair team and parts.
      Sooner or later the embassy staff would notice the lights are on and the imports of energy related spare parts from the EU
  • Say, of a suspension bridge. There, you've just "empowered" him to make the Golden Gate Bridge.

    Heck, it would probably take less engineering to build a Hiroshima style "gun-type" fusion weapon. Give someone the blueprints and "all" they need to do is obtain 64 kg of weapons grade U-235, then machine it into two cylinders, one solid and one hollowed-out.

    • if they can do it without poisoning themselves trying to build it
    • Yeah, but as with a bridge, having a reference design with predicted costs helps you get funding to do the actual specific design for the site.

      This doesn't tell people how to build a nuclear power plant, it doesn't explain the technology and how to build everything, it is blueprints for the building that you need to build. The "plant" part of the phrase "nuclear power plant." That is definitely helpful, because "where to put it" it a major planning issue. As is the cost.

      • France figured this out 50 years ago [franceintheus.org]: they standardized the design of the entire plant and built lots of them.
        In the US, every plant is unique, even if they use the same reactor type.

        • France figured this out 50 years ago [franceintheus.org]: they standardized the design of the entire plant and built lots of them.
          In the US, every plant is unique, even if they use the same reactor type.

          How are you going to continue to line the pockets of thousands of engineers, architects, and especially lawyers, unless building every reactor faces all the same legal and regulatory burdens as the very first one? That would be un-American.

        • France is a smaller country with very little variety in geography from the perspective of building this type of plant.

          In the US, every region has different geology, water access and usage are very different, climate is very different, local zoning laws and requirements are different, etc., etc.

          There are lots of things that you can standardize in a small country that you could also standardize in a US State, but not in the whole US.

          This project is one step in that direction; a standardized layout for plants

          • France is a smaller country with very little variety in geography from the perspective of building this type of plant.

            In the US, every region has different geology, water access and usage are very different, climate is very different, local zoning laws and requirements are different, etc., etc.
            You made it!! Dumbest comment for this week, probably for this month, perhaps even the year.
            While France is smaller it has the same variety than the US, unless you want to count eternal summer in Florida.

            Also, for the

    • You are clear about the fact that the factory and resources to make that bomb was bigger than the US auto industry at the time?

      Enriching Uranium is very very hard. As for Plutonium, you cant build a gun type bomb with it and it is even harder to make.

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        I was being ironic here. A gun-type weapon actually *is* quite simple to make *once you have the HEU*, which as you note takes huge industrial facilities [wikipedia.org] to make. Likewise this design calls for industry standard reactor fuel rods.

        So this design empowers anybody who can qualify for a license to buy fuel rods to build a power reactor (of unproven design).

      • Actually, you can design a gun type bomb using Plutonium, and in fact such a bomb was designed during the Manhattan Project. The design was called "Thin Man".

        But the problem was that it was designed for Plutonium-239. And the reactor breed Plutonium wasa contaminated with Plutonium-240 which has a spontaneous neutron release rate high enough that predetonation was virtually certain, so they went with the more complicated implosion design.

        Although, even with the Plutonium-240 contamination, it's still possib

        • The "Thin man" design was before they realized the barrel of the gun could be shorter and lighter, since it only had to fire once.

          It would have been Uranium, as plutonium wasn't in the picture yet.

        • A nuke's core takes 81 "shakes" to explode; that's 810nS.

          Calculate how far a gun projectile travels in 1uS, even at ludicrous speed. :)

    • I looked into that for curiosity, as a teen, and unless you manage to get the whole mass to be *exactly* symmetrical in all directions, after and while pushing it together, you'll end up with a shitty bomb with barely any power, spraying most of its mass out, before it can contribute to the boom.
      It will be dirty, yes, but a huge waste of hard to obtain material.
      E.g. the timing of the charges, down to the precise cable lengths and electronics tolerances, is *crucial*. And apart from obtaining the material, i

      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        That's my point. This thing assumes you can just buy premade fuel rods and the control rod assemblies. Sot he correct analogy here is building the gun weapon if the uranium parts were available premade.

      • by Anonymous Coward
        you're talking about an implosion type weapon, not a gun-type weapon. idiot.
    • Heck, it would probably take less engineering to build a Hiroshima style "gun-type" fusion weapon.

      You left out the tritium, and the time machine...

  • Of course, this might initially drive up the wages for nuclear power operators, but I anticipate a glut on those folks, and a BRIGHT future for nuclear waste processors.

    New employee: Hi honey, I'm home.
    Wife: How did it go? You look... happy. More radiant... a healthy glow. Finding a new job after all this time must really feel good!
    New employee: YES! And there's higher levels of turnover in this company, so I see promotional opportunities coming more quickly!
    Wife: OOOH, I'm so proud of you! Time for

  • by tronicum ( 617382 ) * on Saturday March 07, 2020 @01:22PM (#59806336)
    What could possibly go wrong. I thought Fukushima showed that reactor design is delicate and details matter. Like the elevation, flood resistance, backup generators, etc. Just giving it without complete supervision and risk analysis by third parties is dangerous.
  • nuclear-secrets.com

  • We got a giant fusion reactor in the sky, pumped storage, molten salt, wind, solar, hydro, batteries... and of all the things you choose the ONE other method of power generation that is both very dangerous and will run out comparatively early.

    ONLY to feed your obsession to be backwards. To not care about pesky things like long-term viability or side effects or other "complicated" and "cumbersome" parts that are the difference between *doing it right*, and a lazy hack job done by somebody who "doesn't like t

    • If we harvested the uranium from seawater we'd have enough for millions of years. I guess that's still technically comparatively early since the sun will be there for a few more billion years.
    • There's still one good reason to use nuclear power, and that's if you don't have the space or unique geology for solar/wind/hydro.

    • Is that the sun only yields about 750 W/m^2 best-case at most populated latitudes. Average after factoring in weather, night, rotation of the earth, etc. is closer to 110 W/m^2. And if you factor in the efficiency of mass-produced commercial solar panels, this drops further to about 20 W/m^2.

      To call other energy sources "backwards" just indicates that you're either blithely ignorant of this drawback to solar, or you're deceitfully neglecting it. That ship that sailed around the world on solar [wikipedia.org]? It spe
    • what a stupid title for a thread. So France, China, India, Russia, South Korea, don't have expanding nuclear programs? Maybe they know more than you do.

    • by caseih ( 160668 )

      Not every place can do pumped storage. Renewables doesn't even come close to dealing with the baseline load requirements of power grids. If open collaboration led to safe and clean mini nuclear reactors, that solved the waste problem (by processing it until the point it's no longer a long-term dangerous material), then that would tip the balance quite dramatically and quickly towards clean, carbon-neutral energy. It's hardly backwards to consider nuclear energy this day an age. Indeed it's probably the

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Saturday March 07, 2020 @01:43PM (#59806374)

    I rather random idiots have access than lunatic government officials. Education should never be restricted to people the government designate. The craziest anti-human and most unstable people work for the government â" dammit itâ(TM)s a fact. Think about it if you are a control freak, irrational, and love power what job would you try to get?

  • Any nuclear design that is not inherently safe these days, and allow for a variety of nuclear fuel, is already outdated.

    There are much superior designs nowadays and /. reported on this years ago. [wavewatching.net]

  • We can have a nuclear boy scout on every block, and they won't have to settle for recycled smoke detectors!

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • Dual loop pressurized water reactors do not fail safe. Simply put, this is the next Chernobyl or Three Mile Island waiting to happen. Only, they propose to put it in the middle of a city.

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