http://www.moltexenergy.com/
http://www.moltexenergy.com/stablesaltreactors/
Two versions of Stable Salt Reactor are currently under development.....
Not sure how they stack up in terms of cost though...
Stable Salt Reactors
Moderator: Peak Moderation
A Comprehensive Molten Salt Reactor Review:
http://www.the-weinberg-foundation.org/ ... or-review/
Last year, an exciting development occurred for advanced nuclear power: Molten salt reactor (MSR) investigation won funding from the Technology Strategy Board. The Alvin Weinberg Foundation welcomed the development, writing “MSRs could be a game-changing way of producing clean electricity, so this is great news for all who support the revival of clean energy R&D to tackle climate change”. The bid was led by Jasper Tomlinson, Professor Trevor Griffiths, and project manager Rory O’Sullivan, who together planned to produce the UKs first rigorous study of the feasibility of a pilot-scale MSR. And the results are now in.
The review not only argues the necessity of nuclear power, but seeks to answer the questions of how to pursue it. Current nuclear deployment appears, the study states, to be locked into old solid-fuelled technology, with little innovation since the 1970s and even less development of advanced options such as MSRs. Previous reviews of MSRs, such as the Generation VI Forum January 2014 Report, have concluded that the technology is one of the furthest from commercial deployment. However much has been achieved in the MSR world in recent years, and taking into account the latest developments this publication concludes that the time is now right for a “commitment to an agenda to proceed with a molten salt reactor programme”.
Six different reactor options were assessed in the MSR review:
Fibre Energy’s Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR),
Martingale’s ThorCon,
Moltex Energy’s Stable Salt Reactor
Seaborg Technologies – Seaborg Waste Burner
Terrestrial Energy’s Integral MSR
Transatomic Power Reactor
All six display the advantageous characteristics of using molten salt as fuel and coolant including safety, less waste, higher thermal efficiency, fuel cycle flexibility (including the ability to use up the plutonium stockpile as fuel) and co-generation opportunities afforded by the high temperatures at which the reactors operate. Despite finding advantages in all the reactor designs, the review concludes that The Stable Salt Reactor, the design proposed by Moltex Energy, is the best option to pursue. The Stable Salt Reactor is a fast spectrum pool type reactor but its unique characteristic compared with the other designs is that the fuel is static.
Most Molten Salt reactors involve the highly radioactive liquid being actively pumped through a heat exchanger while the Moltex design encases the radioactive molten salt (a fraction of spent nuclear fuel mixed with sodium chloride to reduce its melting point) within metal tubes, similar to the fuel rods in traditional reactors. The flow of molten salt in the tubes is entirely by natural convection with no moving parts involved meaning no possibility of pump failure. The pool of coolant is another molten salt that makes the reactor intrinsically safe since any leakage of radioactive fuel is mixed and diluted in the large pool of coolant. Unlike all other molten salt reactor designs, this design in not a derivative of the Molten Salt Reactor Experiment developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (where MSR designs were initially developed in the 1960s) and is instead a truly 21st century design. Along with a whole host of benefits the Stable Salt Reactor is designed so that all components can be constructed in segments and assembled at any given site. This modular design is far simpler and more affordable than todays reactors and makes deployment all the more attractive.
The report concludes that this UK designed reactor, “due to its relative simplicity and relatively few and low technical hurdles, is the most suitable configuration for immediate pilot scale development in the UK”. Regardless of the specific reactor, the report also outlines the general advantages to the UK of pursuing an MSR program. Britain’s role as a leader in nuclear power has been declining since the 1970s with no new plant built since Sizewell-B in 1987. Currently, the UK has a non-existent nuclear R&D spend compared with other countries. However, the advantages of redeveloping our nuclear strength are many, including manufacturing growth, employment, energy security, reduced waste insecurity, positive contribution to carbon reduction targets, and technology export potential. With clear advantages, and a promising design to develop in the Stable Salt Reactor, it must be hoped the government, in the midst of scrapping subsidies and despairing over delays at Hinkley C, see the prosperity an MSR program could bring.
http://www.the-weinberg-foundation.org/ ... or-review/
Last year, an exciting development occurred for advanced nuclear power: Molten salt reactor (MSR) investigation won funding from the Technology Strategy Board. The Alvin Weinberg Foundation welcomed the development, writing “MSRs could be a game-changing way of producing clean electricity, so this is great news for all who support the revival of clean energy R&D to tackle climate change”. The bid was led by Jasper Tomlinson, Professor Trevor Griffiths, and project manager Rory O’Sullivan, who together planned to produce the UKs first rigorous study of the feasibility of a pilot-scale MSR. And the results are now in.
The review not only argues the necessity of nuclear power, but seeks to answer the questions of how to pursue it. Current nuclear deployment appears, the study states, to be locked into old solid-fuelled technology, with little innovation since the 1970s and even less development of advanced options such as MSRs. Previous reviews of MSRs, such as the Generation VI Forum January 2014 Report, have concluded that the technology is one of the furthest from commercial deployment. However much has been achieved in the MSR world in recent years, and taking into account the latest developments this publication concludes that the time is now right for a “commitment to an agenda to proceed with a molten salt reactor programme”.
Six different reactor options were assessed in the MSR review:
Fibre Energy’s Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor (LFTR),
Martingale’s ThorCon,
Moltex Energy’s Stable Salt Reactor
Seaborg Technologies – Seaborg Waste Burner
Terrestrial Energy’s Integral MSR
Transatomic Power Reactor
All six display the advantageous characteristics of using molten salt as fuel and coolant including safety, less waste, higher thermal efficiency, fuel cycle flexibility (including the ability to use up the plutonium stockpile as fuel) and co-generation opportunities afforded by the high temperatures at which the reactors operate. Despite finding advantages in all the reactor designs, the review concludes that The Stable Salt Reactor, the design proposed by Moltex Energy, is the best option to pursue. The Stable Salt Reactor is a fast spectrum pool type reactor but its unique characteristic compared with the other designs is that the fuel is static.
Most Molten Salt reactors involve the highly radioactive liquid being actively pumped through a heat exchanger while the Moltex design encases the radioactive molten salt (a fraction of spent nuclear fuel mixed with sodium chloride to reduce its melting point) within metal tubes, similar to the fuel rods in traditional reactors. The flow of molten salt in the tubes is entirely by natural convection with no moving parts involved meaning no possibility of pump failure. The pool of coolant is another molten salt that makes the reactor intrinsically safe since any leakage of radioactive fuel is mixed and diluted in the large pool of coolant. Unlike all other molten salt reactor designs, this design in not a derivative of the Molten Salt Reactor Experiment developed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (where MSR designs were initially developed in the 1960s) and is instead a truly 21st century design. Along with a whole host of benefits the Stable Salt Reactor is designed so that all components can be constructed in segments and assembled at any given site. This modular design is far simpler and more affordable than todays reactors and makes deployment all the more attractive.
The report concludes that this UK designed reactor, “due to its relative simplicity and relatively few and low technical hurdles, is the most suitable configuration for immediate pilot scale development in the UK”. Regardless of the specific reactor, the report also outlines the general advantages to the UK of pursuing an MSR program. Britain’s role as a leader in nuclear power has been declining since the 1970s with no new plant built since Sizewell-B in 1987. Currently, the UK has a non-existent nuclear R&D spend compared with other countries. However, the advantages of redeveloping our nuclear strength are many, including manufacturing growth, employment, energy security, reduced waste insecurity, positive contribution to carbon reduction targets, and technology export potential. With clear advantages, and a promising design to develop in the Stable Salt Reactor, it must be hoped the government, in the midst of scrapping subsidies and despairing over delays at Hinkley C, see the prosperity an MSR program could bring.
I find it very hard to get a real overview of alternative nuclear reactor designs.
As far as I can tell, all commercial reactors ever built have been Uranium fission reactors, with minor differences in their moderation leading to different fission sequence profiles - eg. more or less plutonium produced, etc.
Breeder reactors seem be based on plutonium as their source of neutrons, and create more plutonium than they consume. However, they appear to be a commercial failure and a political embarrassment.
Has anyone built a molten salt reactor that produces commercial levels of energy?
Has anyone built a viable Thorium reactor, ever?
I keep hearing stories of very small rectors, even portable reactors, but apart from nuclear piles in submarines and big military ships, I can find very little in the real world about them.
We all know about the state of fusion development.
As far as I can tell, all commercial reactors ever built have been Uranium fission reactors, with minor differences in their moderation leading to different fission sequence profiles - eg. more or less plutonium produced, etc.
Breeder reactors seem be based on plutonium as their source of neutrons, and create more plutonium than they consume. However, they appear to be a commercial failure and a political embarrassment.
Has anyone built a molten salt reactor that produces commercial levels of energy?
Has anyone built a viable Thorium reactor, ever?
I keep hearing stories of very small rectors, even portable reactors, but apart from nuclear piles in submarines and big military ships, I can find very little in the real world about them.
We all know about the state of fusion development.
- adam2
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Re: Stable Salt Reactors
It would appear that this type of reactor is again being seriously considered.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-59245973
Not certain about the proposal to fit them onto barges though. Anything that floats adds the small but real risk of sinking, collisions, or failure of moorings and drifting away, in addition to the risks of accident to the actual reactor.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-59245973
Not certain about the proposal to fit them onto barges though. Anything that floats adds the small but real risk of sinking, collisions, or failure of moorings and drifting away, in addition to the risks of accident to the actual reactor.
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Re: Stable Salt Reactors
Perhaps in the event of a real accident they could be towed away and become someone else's problem. A kind of nuclear 'tragedy of the commons' if you will.
G'Day cobber!
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Re: Stable Salt Reactors
Here's a critique of Bill Gates support for new sodium reactors in the US.
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