The Nuclear Power Thread

In summary, the author opposes Germany's plan to phase out nuclear power and argues that the arguements against nuclear power are based primarily on ignorance and emotion. He also argues that nuclear power is a good solution to a number of issues, including air pollution, the waste situation, and the lack of an available alternative fuel. He also notes that the research into nuclear power has been done in the past, and that there are potential solutions to the waste problem.
  • #1,051
Astronuc said:
The main concern of US and EU authorities with respect to RBMKs and VVER-440s was the lack of a containment structure and the inability to contain the consequences of a loss of coolant accident (LOCA) or reactivity insertion accident (RIA), i.e., a core disruptive accident. Vessel embrittlement (somewhat related to LOCA) is another concern.

Another concern with respect to the RBMK is the positive void coefficient, which was a critical factor in the Chernobyl accident. "Reactors cooled by boiling water will contain a certain amount of steam in the core. Because water is both a more efficient coolant and a more effective neutron absorber than steam, a change in the proportion of steam bubbles, or 'voids', in the coolant will result in a change in core reactivity. The ratio of these changes is termed the void coefficient of reactivity. When the void coefficient is negative, an increase in steam will lead to a decrease in reactivity."
Yes this is a known fact about the lack of containment for RBMK's and the positive void coefficient, although after 1986 all existing RBMK's were retrofitted to decrease void coefficient and increase safety systems and make sure workers cannot make such blatant mistakes as before.
That being said then in 2011 Fukushima happened , quite frankly can we even calculate the risk of a well maintained and retrofitted RBMK having a destructive event VS any other Gen 2 reactor in operation even with a containment?

I do realize the RBMK flaws and any way we slice it it's history and no new block will ever be built.
 
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  • #1,052
British engineering group Rolls-Royce has announced the establishment of a new business - Rolls-Royce SMR Limited - for the deployment and commercialisation of its small modular reactor (SMR) technology. The announcement follows the securing of GBP210 million (USD285 million) in funding from the UK government, matched by more than GBP250 million of private investment.
https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/Articles/Rolls-Royce-secures-funding-for-SMR-deployment

There are 3 main thrusts in the nuclear power (reactor) industry at the moment: 1) large power reactors (ostensibly for base load), 2) small modular reactors (SMRs), and 3) microreactors for remote areas or mobile deployment. The splits are based on MWt/MWe and/or mass of fissile content in the core. Almost all proposed commercial designs use straight UX as opposed to U,PuX or U,ThX, where X is some other element(s), e.g., O2, N, C, Si, CO, Zr, Mo, . . . .
 
  • #1,053
An emerging industry of nuclear-fusion firms promises aiming to have commercial reactors ready in the next decade.
https://www.nature.com/immersive/d41586-021-03401-w/index.html

Long derided as a prospect that is forever 30 years away, nuclear fusion seems finally to be approaching commercial viability. There are now more than 30 private fusion firms globally, according to an October survey by the Fusion Industry Association (FIA) in Washington DC, which represents companies in the sector; the 18 firms that have declared their funding say they have attracted more than US$2.4 billion in total, almost entirely from private investments (see ‘Fusion funding’). Key to these efforts are advances in materials research and computing that are enabling technologies other than the standard designs that national and international agencies have pursued for so long.

I remember when commercial fusion was 10 years down the road. Then a decade later, it was still 10 years down the road. Forty years later, it may be 10 years about - maybe. :wink:

The latest venture at Culham — the hub of UK fusion research for decades — is a demonstration plant for General Fusion (GF), a company based in Burnaby, Canada. It is scheduled to start operating in 2025, and the company aims to have reactors for sale in the early 2030s. It “will be the first power-plant-relevant large-scale demonstration”, says GF’s chief executive Chris Mowry — unless, that is, its competitors deliver sooner.

We'll see as things heat up. :oldbiggrin:
 
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  • #1,054
Astronuc said:
I remember when commercial fusion was 10 years down the road. Then a decade later, it was still 10 years down the road. Forty years later, it may be 10 years about - maybe. :wink:
It's easier to just say it's 30 years away , because then you have to say it less often. And after almost 30 years people might even forget you have ever said so...It's more convenient that way. :biggrin:
 
  • #1,055
Astronuc said:
I remember when commercial fusion was 10 years down the road. Then a decade later, it was still 10 years down the road. Forty years later, it may be 10 years about - maybe. :wink:
According to the article the standard wisdom is now 30 years. It seems like as time goes by it gets further away. Unless one of these startups succeeds.

If these projects hold significant promise, why are we bothering with ITER? Because nobody knows if they hold promise, because they are being done under a veil of secrecy, away from the skeptical eye of the scientific community. Smells fishy to me.
 
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  • #1,056
Unfortunately for the fusion power crowd, even 10 years from today for a first viable prototype is probably effectively too late.

We are at a point where there is a recognized global need for clean power at the same time that global energy demand is increasing as existing 3rd world countries modernize their economies and global populations are still rising. As the 3rd world modernizes, their population will stabilize as will their demand for energy. At that point the global energy infrastructure will probably already be largely “clean”, so the demand for new clean energy technologies will drop.

I don’t see how a power technology that is still in early development today will play any major role in the future. The economic opportunity is now and technologies that are available now will be used now.

That said, it is sad that fission will probably be reduced for largely political reasons at this time when it is a well proven technology that could really help with simultaneous power decarbonization and power expansion.
 
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  • #1,057
russ_watters said:
If these projects hold significant promise, why are we bothering with ITER? Because nobody knows if they hold promise, because they are being done under a veil of secrecy, away from the skeptical eye of the scientific community. Smells fishy to me.
Inertia of large projects.

Back in April 2018, 3.5 years ago.
https://physicstoday.scitation.org/do/10.1063/PT.6.2.20180416a/full/
 
  • #1,058
Astronuc said:
Inertia of large projects.
What I'm asking is if there really is any significant confidence that any of these private reactors will succeed. Remembering Lockheed's effort:

The project began in 2010,[6] and was publicly presented at the Google Solve for X forum on February 7, 2013. In October 2014, Lockheed Martin announced a plan to "build and test a compact fusion reactor in less than a year with a prototype to follow within five years".[7] In May 2016, Rob Weiss announced that Lockheed Martin continued to support the project and would increase its investment in it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_Martin_Compact_Fusion_Reactor#History

Still waiting for an announcement that the 2015 test succeeded.
 
  • #1,059
russ_watters said:
If these projects hold significant promise, why are we bothering with ITER? Because nobody knows if they hold promise, because they are being done under a veil of secrecy, away from the skeptical eye of the scientific community. Smells fishy to me.
Exactly , what is more interesting is that some of them (the private concepts) use the same methods just with different arrangement. I remember Lockheed made a lot of "hot air" with their design and somehow we don't hear anything anymore nor we see this technology being implemented into "secret military vessels". Oh I see you've beat me to it...
When fission physics went silent back in the 40's , it wasn't for long when everyone knew why it had been so... A bright flash appeared over the horizon.

Dale said:
At that point the global energy infrastructure will probably already be largely “clean”, so the demand for new clean energy technologies will drop.
I'm not sure I would agree. I think there simply aren't that many "clean" energy options from a physics perspective to begin. I don't see how that situation will change anytime soon. Given energy consumption will increase beyond population increase (E vehicles etc) just goes to make this point stronger.
 
  • #1,060
artis said:
I think there simply aren't that many "clean" energy options from a physics perspective to begin.
Why would we need more options?

artis said:
Given energy consumption will increase beyond population increase (E vehicles etc) just goes to make this point stronger.
Increased consumption doesn’t require more options, simply more implementation of existing options.
 
  • #1,061
@Dale I simply meant to say that given our clean energy options without nuclear are not enough to cover our whole demand , nuclear will be on the table irrespective of how long from now.
This equally applies to fusion I think, the moment it will prove itself viable economically it will see a market I think.
Anything that gives something of real value has a market I believe.
 
  • #1,062
russ_watters said:
A citation [7] from that article - https://news.yahoo.com/lockheed-say...fusion-energy-project-123840986--finance.html

russ_watters said:
What I'm asking is if there really is any significant confidence that any of these private reactors will succeed.
It's hard to say. Have they thought of something that others haven't? Or, have they realized a better piece of technology?

I suppose they look at SpaceX, and think, "we could be the next SpaceX" of fusion/nuclear.

There are something like 30 small startup groups looking at microreactors and medium or modular reactors. There groups like Terrapower that has transformed itself, teamed up with other like GEH, and received tens of millions of $ from the federal government to establish a demonstration plant. I believe X-energy is another recipient of federal $.

Then there are groups like Transatomic that went bust.
 
  • #1,064
Speaking of US nuclear reactors , a farewell to Crystal River which went into planned maintenance in 2009 but never "recovered" due to problems as it seems
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystal_River_Nuclear_Plant

And then CDI made a nice and smooth ending just yesterday. A beautiful video especially the beginning.
 
  • #1,065
Astronuc said:
A citation [7] from that article - https://news.yahoo.com/lockheed-say...fusion-energy-project-123840986--finance.htmlIt's hard to say. Have they thought of something that others haven't? Or, have they realized a better piece of technology?

I suppose they look at SpaceX, and think, "we could be the next SpaceX" of fusion/nuclear.

There are something like 30 small startup groups looking at microreactors and medium or modular reactors. There groups like Terrapower that has transformed itself, teamed up with other like GEH, and received tens of millions of $ from the federal government to establish a demonstration plant. I believe X-energy is another recipient of federal $.

Then there are groups like Transatomic that went bust.
Surely the long pole in the tent is management, not technology.
Space X is management intensive, not technology limited. Senior people get fired for non performance and the CEO, the richest man in the world, lives in a $50k home by his Boca Chica proof site. That is what management should be, deeply engaged in the creation of the product.
The various fusion and nuclear start ups all are focused on the technology, perhaps correctly, as no one has actually demonstrated an economic fusion plant or a really cost effective fission facility. However, that seems disjointed to me, because it requires investors to believe that the resulting design will be so much better than what is available that the customers will flock. Barring government order, which always has strings attached, that seems an unlikely outcome.
 
  • #1,066
NuScale Power has announced plans to merge with Spring Valley Acquisition Corp to create a new "first of its kind" energy company to accelerate the commercialisation of NuScale's small modular reactor (SMR). The new publicly listed company will be named NuScale Power Corporation and is projected to be 60%-controlled by NuScale's current majority owner Fluor Corporation.
https://www.world-nuclear-news.org/Articles/NuScale-merger-to-accelerate-SMR-commercialisation
 
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  • #1,067
Just hope that fear drives Fluor to move the ball forward.
There are very few examples of large US companies actually innovating.
Perhaps the fear of death because of climate change will help Fluor look at alternatives.
 
  • #1,069
This just in:
CNN said:

A giant donut-shaped machine just proved a near-limitless clean power source is possible​

On Wednesday, however, scientists working in the United Kingdom announced that they more than doubled the previous record for generating and sustaining nuclear fusion...

...a record-breaking 59 megajoules of sustained fusion energy over five seconds on December 21 last year. Five seconds is the limit the machine can sustain the power before its magnets overheat...

Experts say the results prove that nuclear fusion is possible, and no longer a pipedream solution for the climate crisis.
Ehh?

I'm so sick of the fusion hyperbole. And as an added slap in the face of the Earth's climate they threw in some bonus anti-fission sentiment.
 
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  • #1,070
Yeah, +1 on the hyperbole. I did find this part a little funny though...

The tokamak in Oxford, called the Joint European Torus (JET), has been subject to such extreme heat and pressure that this experiment is likely the last it will cope with.
 
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  • #1,072
russ_watters said:
This just in:

Ehh?

I'm so sick of the fusion hyperbole. And as an added slap in the face of the Earth's climate they threw in some bonus anti-fission sentiment.
It's for 500-1000 years from now, when we start running out of fission fuel.
Edit: Just glanced at the CNN report :( I think one can hardly complain about Fox News any more after that.

Here's a news report in Science.
European fusion reactor sets record for sustained energy
World’s largest tokamak paves the way for ITER with a capstone run of pulses using power-producing tritium
https://www.science.org/content/article/european-fusion-reactor-sets-record-sustained-energy
 
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  • #1,073
atyy said:
It's for 500-1000 years from now, when we start running out of fission fuel.
Edit: Just glanced at the CNN report :( I think one can hardly complain about Fox News any more after that.

Here's a news report in Science.
European fusion reactor sets record for sustained energy
World’s largest tokamak paves the way for ITER with a capstone run of pulses using power-producing tritium
https://www.science.org/content/article/european-fusion-reactor-sets-record-sustained-energy
From the article: “To see shots in which it sustains high power for a full 5 seconds is amazing,” . . .

But then, "Researchers had to put roughly three times as much energy into the gas as the reaction produced."

I took my first course in fusion engineering 40 years ago. We still aren't there yet!

Also from the Science article
The $25 billion ITER, funded by China, the European Union, India, Japan, South Korea, Russia, and the United States, is due to start operation in 2025 but won’t produce large amounts of power until 2035, when it is due to start burning the energy-producing isotopes deuterium and tritium (D-T).
Ten years from the start of operation? What does 'start of operation' mean? Heating the plasma?
 
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  • #1,074
Astronuc said:
Ten years from the start of operation? What does 'start of operation' mean? Heating the plasma?

Same pattern. We are just ten years away from fusion power. How many decades has that been going on? I drank the kool-aid when young. But time subdues the follies of youth. Don't get me wrong - of course, I support research into fusion - just not the hype.

Thanks
Bill
 
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  • #1,075
Astronuc said:
From the article: “To see shots in which it sustains high power for a full 5 seconds is amazing,” . . .

But then, "Researchers had to put roughly three times as much energy into the gas as the reaction produced."
That is a weird business where the best thing that can be said is that (at their peak) a -200% gross profit was maintained for 5 seconds. And that achievement is described as “amazing”.
 
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  • #1,076
russ_watters said:
I'm so sick of the fusion hyperbole.
Me too, but I'm more annoyed.

Astronuc said:
“To see shots in which it sustains high power for a full 5 seconds is amazing,” . . .
Consider that in 500 days, roughly a moderate-to-high capacity 18 month cycle (CF ~ 0.914), there are 4.32 E7 seconds. The 5 seconds is a burp.

A high capacity cycle would be more like 530 EPFD (4.5792 E7 seconds) out of a possible 547 calendar days (with a 17 day outage), or a CF ~ 0.97. Some plants operate on a 2 year cycle, or 660 to 700 EFPD out of 730 calendar days, or CF ~ 0.90 - 0.96.

Some nuclear plants have remained on annual cycles or 290-350 EFPD out of 365 days. NPP outages can be accomplished within 15-20 days, but some may take longer (major equipment service/repair, or abundance of cheap hydropower in the spring).
 
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  • #1,077
One thing seems certain. We will see more sensational headlines announcing breakthroughs and significant milestones. Many more such headlines. Many many more.

However, the arrival of commercial fusion power is not at all certain.
 
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  • #1,078
Astronuc said:
The 5 seconds is a burp.
Or a better than average fart.
 
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  • #1,079
I remember many years ago reading this forums and some of the members that participate now had bit better feelings towards fusion power if judged by rhetoric alone, now it seems even that has changed, sometimes you can simply judge something by the attitude of those that are knowledgeable about the issue...

Oh and when I said many years ago I meant about 10 years or "just around the corner" ago.
 
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  • #1,081
artis said:
I remember many years ago reading this forums and some of the members that participate now had bit better feelings towards fusion power if judged by rhetoric alone, now it seems even that has changed, sometimes you can simply judge something by the attitude of those that are knowledgeable about the issue...

Oh and when I said many years ago I meant about 10 years or "just around the corner" ago.
When I joined PF around 20 years ago I was in my 20s and hadn't yet had the opportunity to watch decades of spectacular, record-breaking breakthroughs. Seeing so much success over the past few decades has left me jaded. At the time I thought "maybe this next 30 years will be the one?" Seems unlikely now.
 
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  • #1,082
russ_watters said:
When I joined PF around 20 years ago I was in my 20s and hadn't yet had the opportunity to watch decades of spectacular, record-breaking breakthroughs.
Not sure what exact breakthroughs in commercial fusion were there before 2000's?
The only major one I can recall was the accidental discovery that Li7 also undergoes fission with fast neutrons producing an "alpha", Tritium and a additional neutron greatly boosting a thermonuclear bomb's yield and this was with "Castle Bravo" back in 1954, :biggrin:

Oh yes almost forgot...
1997 JET set the record for the closest approach to scientific breakeven, reaching Q = 0.67 in 1997, producing 16 MW of fusion power while injecting 24 MW of thermal power to heat the fuel.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joint_European_Torus

As far as I know that's about it , no other breakthroughs,
Well NIF has done some good stuff with implosion but I fail to see how that approach can ever lead to a viable commercial energy plant instead of being just a good tool for weapons research, the same could be said about Z pinch with metallic liners (Sandia labs et.al.) because there again the repetition rate is slower than a snail, unless of course we find a way to create implosion net gain fusion with a implosion technique that has a fast repetition rate and is capable of more than "breakeven" during each shot.
 
  • #1,083
artis said:
Not sure what exact breakthroughs in commercial fusion were there before 2000's?
The better question would be the number of headlines claiming breakthroughs. Unfortunately, the search engines aren't good at finding things that old. Especially pre-1994.
 
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  • #1,084
anorlunda said:
The better question would be the number of headlines claiming breakthroughs.
Exactly, but then again that was my point, the headlines have been quite few, but the actual physics that would bring us to a working device , I can't recall anything spectacular at all well there has been slow seemingly steady progress but then again there had to be since we started from nothing.
 
  • #1,085
artis said:
Not sure what exact breakthroughs in commercial fusion were there before 2000's?
The only major one I can recall was...

As far as I know that's about it , no other breakthroughs...
artis said:
Exactly, but then again that was my point, the headlines have been quite few, but the actual physics that would bring us to a working device , I can't recall anything spectacular at all well there has been slow seemingly steady progress but then again there had to be since we started from nothing.
It isn't clear to me if you understood my snark. My point was that the recent spate of breakthroughs is hyperbolic and not as big of a deal as the newspapers or even many researchers are claiming. Obviously such "breakthroughs" lose their luster over time. And as said it's harder to research news articles before the modern internet. However, here's a list of several dozen advancements in fusion research:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_nuclear_fusion

If you'd like, I can write a few sample headlines for them. I do remember one breakthrough specifically though, from 1989 that was probably the first thing I'd ever heard about fusion when I read about it in Time Magazine...though their coverage was less than favorable.
 
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