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The Green Nuke - LFTR - Page 3

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Leftwing
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
Canada229 Posts
January 25 2012 13:40 GMT
#41
Canada is one of the largest producers of uranium in the world, and I highly doubt the US would allow that to change without a fight. With so much money and investment into current new technology I doubt we'll see this change until it is absolutely necessary, and by that time we'll probably be fighting over the last remaining oil supplies.
GeneralStan
Profile Blog Joined August 2007
United States4789 Posts
January 25 2012 13:45 GMT
#42
The reason why PWRs dominated is because of their development in the US Navy's Submarine program. Rickover did all the leg work in developing the PWR (which is also inherently stable due to negative temperature coefficient of reactivity, btw), thus obviating the need for a secondary type of reactor.

When faced with the decision of spending millions in funding to test a new type of reactor with unproven results (the LFTR), or using a safe and proven technology, the decision for most governments was easy to make. It also helps that the PWR has a higher energy output per unit volume of reactor space compared to a LFTR (though this is mainly for ships I guess).

In regards to Chernobyl, it was a PWR, not a LFTR. The design was not inherently stable in the way most American PWRS are (this accident could never happen on a Navy nuke anyway), but it was not particularly unsafe either. The accident was due to a safety test which involved trying to shut down the reactor under some worst case conditions. The test was an egregious violation of all reason in a nuclear plant, which lead to the catastrophe.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Chaosvuistje
Profile Joined April 2010
Netherlands2581 Posts
January 25 2012 15:37 GMT
#43
The only thing they would have to do is scaring the populace, something we are pretty good at, that China will be in a monopoly on energy because they have all the thorium and heavy metals and they will abuse that power to question our freedom. Done. Readily factured for the American media propaganda that will probably work on Fox news.

Of course, doing so would require oil companies to reinvest into a technology that would gain them less money because the cost for energy would go down. So obviously they will invest into energy that is even less efficient but more 'green' so they can price it even more.

I see this as a pretty logical approach to why major energy companies would work like this if what they said was true. The only problem is if your energy is obsolete while anothers is better, there will be a struggle with the old and the new. Unfortunately the old and the new in this case are the US and China. Now I'm pretty glad the Cold war has ended and I don't really want another one in my lifetime.

In any case, I will look up to the first that proves that this is possible.
Perdac Curall
Profile Joined June 2011
242 Posts
January 25 2012 16:03 GMT
#44
On January 25 2012 22:45 GeneralStan wrote:
The reason why PWRs dominated is because of their development in the US Navy's Submarine program. Rickover did all the leg work in developing the PWR (which is also inherently stable due to negative temperature coefficient of reactivity, btw), thus obviating the need for a secondary type of reactor.

When faced with the decision of spending millions in funding to test a new type of reactor with unproven results (the LFTR), or using a safe and proven technology, the decision for most governments was easy to make. It also helps that the PWR has a higher energy output per unit volume of reactor space compared to a LFTR (though this is mainly for ships I guess).


As Kirk Sorensen details in the movie, Alvin Weinberg, who was instrumental in the invention of the PWR and BWR, did not like either design due to safety concerns and the solid fuel aspect and was pushing LFTR. The U-235 and Pu-239 fuel cycles were better understood than Thorium, no question. But Weinberg with the MSRE did prove the viability and safety of the concept, and in the 1960s it was expected by many that PWRs would not last very long because they would be replaced by better technologies like LFTR. The reason this did not happen is primarily due to Cold War considerations. You can't make nuclear bombs with a LFTR, just electricity. With PWRs or LMFBRs you can do both, so that is why both the US and the USSR pursued those technologies.

Yes PWRs do have a negative temperature coefficient of reactivity, but they are by no means walk away safe as a LFTR is. On top of constantly worrying about pipe shears, pressure drops and meltdowns, none of which are possible in a LFTR but are entirely possible in a PWR, you also have to constantly monitor Xenon-135 levels in a PWR, since in solid fuel reactors the Xenon-135 stays in the fuel and as a neutron absorber causes a lot of problems in your reactor. In a LFTR since the fuel is a liquid the Xenon-135 just bubbles right out of the solution. This is yet another of the many safety advantages LFTR has over PWRs. PWRs are ready to explode, begging to explode even. LFTRs can never explode.
If a Black Death could spread throughout the world once in every generation, survivors could procreate freely without making the world too full. The state of affairs might be unpleasant, but what of it? -Sith Lord Bertrand Russell
Ercster
Profile Joined August 2011
United States603 Posts
January 25 2012 16:27 GMT
#45
On January 25 2012 22:45 GeneralStan wrote:
It also helps that the PWR has a higher energy output per unit volume of reactor space compared to a LFTR (though this is mainly for ships I guess).

This doesn't make any sense. On land the reactors would be smaller, the amount of nuclear material would be smaller, and the amount of energy would be greater than that of the current method. Why would it be any different on a ship?
“The good thing about science is that it's true whether or not you believe in it.” -Neil deGrasse Tyson
Soleron
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
United Kingdom1324 Posts
January 25 2012 16:31 GMT
#46
On January 25 2012 10:51 Perdac Curall wrote:
matter-antimatter annihilation sometime after that.


How would that even work? Unless you have a supply of antimatter (which we do not), it will take more energy to create the fuel than we get out of it.

It's useful for interstellar propulsion because it has the lowest mass per unit energy output of any fuel, but not as an energy source.
WTFZerg
Profile Joined February 2011
United States704 Posts
January 25 2012 16:31 GMT
#47
On January 26 2012 01:03 Perdac Curall wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 25 2012 22:45 GeneralStan wrote:
The reason why PWRs dominated is because of their development in the US Navy's Submarine program. Rickover did all the leg work in developing the PWR (which is also inherently stable due to negative temperature coefficient of reactivity, btw), thus obviating the need for a secondary type of reactor.

When faced with the decision of spending millions in funding to test a new type of reactor with unproven results (the LFTR), or using a safe and proven technology, the decision for most governments was easy to make. It also helps that the PWR has a higher energy output per unit volume of reactor space compared to a LFTR (though this is mainly for ships I guess).


As Kirk Sorensen details in the movie, Alvin Weinberg, who was instrumental in the invention of the PWR and BWR, did not like either design due to safety concerns and the solid fuel aspect and was pushing LFTR. The U-235 and Pu-239 fuel cycles were better understood than Thorium, no question. But Weinberg with the MSRE did prove the viability and safety of the concept, and in the 1960s it was expected by many that PWRs would not last very long because they would be replaced by better technologies like LFTR. The reason this did not happen is primarily due to Cold War considerations. You can't make nuclear bombs with a LFTR, just electricity. With PWRs or LMFBRs you can do both, so that is why both the US and the USSR pursued those technologies.

Yes PWRs do have a negative temperature coefficient of reactivity, but they are by no means walk away safe as a LFTR is. On top of constantly worrying about pipe shears, pressure drops and meltdowns, none of which are possible in a LFTR but are entirely possible in a PWR, you also have to constantly monitor Xenon-135 levels in a PWR, since in solid fuel reactors the Xenon-135 stays in the fuel and as a neutron absorber causes a lot of problems in your reactor. In a LFTR since the fuel is a liquid the Xenon-135 just bubbles right out of the solution. This is yet another of the many safety advantages LFTR has over PWRs. PWRs are ready to explode, begging to explode even. LFTRs can never explode.


As far as I know, the more modern pebble-bed reactor design is virtually meltdown proof, but I'm not sure if that design is utilized in any modern reactor.
Might makes right.
Perdac Curall
Profile Joined June 2011
242 Posts
January 25 2012 18:06 GMT
#48
On January 26 2012 01:31 Soleron wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 25 2012 10:51 Perdac Curall wrote:
matter-antimatter annihilation sometime after that.


How would that even work? Unless you have a supply of antimatter (which we do not), it will take more energy to create the fuel than we get out of it.

It's useful for interstellar propulsion because it has the lowest mass per unit energy output of any fuel, but not as an energy source.


There was a meeting back in 2004 on this very subject detailing the need for a dedicated antiproton facility in the US, but it was ignored by the Bush administration. The amount of energy in matter-antimatter reactions is 1000 times as energy dense as fusion, so it is not implausible that we can achieve a net energy gain there in the future (50-75 years from now when commercial fusion reactors are (hopefully) a reality.)

http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/0410/0410511v1.pdf
If a Black Death could spread throughout the world once in every generation, survivors could procreate freely without making the world too full. The state of affairs might be unpleasant, but what of it? -Sith Lord Bertrand Russell
Perdac Curall
Profile Joined June 2011
242 Posts
January 25 2012 18:12 GMT
#49
On January 26 2012 01:31 WTFZerg wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 26 2012 01:03 Perdac Curall wrote:
On January 25 2012 22:45 GeneralStan wrote:
The reason why PWRs dominated is because of their development in the US Navy's Submarine program. Rickover did all the leg work in developing the PWR (which is also inherently stable due to negative temperature coefficient of reactivity, btw), thus obviating the need for a secondary type of reactor.

When faced with the decision of spending millions in funding to test a new type of reactor with unproven results (the LFTR), or using a safe and proven technology, the decision for most governments was easy to make. It also helps that the PWR has a higher energy output per unit volume of reactor space compared to a LFTR (though this is mainly for ships I guess).


As Kirk Sorensen details in the movie, Alvin Weinberg, who was instrumental in the invention of the PWR and BWR, did not like either design due to safety concerns and the solid fuel aspect and was pushing LFTR. The U-235 and Pu-239 fuel cycles were better understood than Thorium, no question. But Weinberg with the MSRE did prove the viability and safety of the concept, and in the 1960s it was expected by many that PWRs would not last very long because they would be replaced by better technologies like LFTR. The reason this did not happen is primarily due to Cold War considerations. You can't make nuclear bombs with a LFTR, just electricity. With PWRs or LMFBRs you can do both, so that is why both the US and the USSR pursued those technologies.

Yes PWRs do have a negative temperature coefficient of reactivity, but they are by no means walk away safe as a LFTR is. On top of constantly worrying about pipe shears, pressure drops and meltdowns, none of which are possible in a LFTR but are entirely possible in a PWR, you also have to constantly monitor Xenon-135 levels in a PWR, since in solid fuel reactors the Xenon-135 stays in the fuel and as a neutron absorber causes a lot of problems in your reactor. In a LFTR since the fuel is a liquid the Xenon-135 just bubbles right out of the solution. This is yet another of the many safety advantages LFTR has over PWRs. PWRs are ready to explode, begging to explode even. LFTRs can never explode.


As far as I know, the more modern pebble-bed reactor design is virtually meltdown proof, but I'm not sure if that design is utilized in any modern reactor.


UC Berkeley and Oak Ridge are working on a pebble-bed fluoride salt high temperature reactor right now. And yes you are right pebble-bed technology is very safe, being Generation IV technology, but I still believe LFTR is an even better idea. Here is a short video presentation done at the last Thorium Energy Alliance Conference (TEAC3) done by a doctoral student at UC Berkeley explaining the details of the reactor design.



If a Black Death could spread throughout the world once in every generation, survivors could procreate freely without making the world too full. The state of affairs might be unpleasant, but what of it? -Sith Lord Bertrand Russell
Sanctimonius
Profile Joined October 2010
United Kingdom861 Posts
January 26 2012 03:23 GMT
#50
On January 25 2012 12:56 Perdac Curall wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 25 2012 12:49 Sanctimonius wrote:
It's a decent idea but I'm not expecting to see any LFTR reactors anytime soon. After decades of nuclear mismanagment from the various industries public opinion isn't exactly at an all-time high, and this will be sold as modern nuclear power. Add to that the current nuclear industry is based on uranium, I would say they have a vested interest in not seeing any competition, and they don't have the money to be building an entire new industry. So discounting private start-up (who has the money?) or civil projects, as someone said above the military is the most likely way for thorium. Except you can't make a thorium bomb, so where is the incentive? Still, opposition to thorium will change as we exhaust other possibilities andd resources.

Question to the guy above who mentioned thorium is expensive now - surely economics says that prices are low if the market is flooded or if a product is undesirable. Making a demand for something drives up a price, so wouldn't the price of thorium remain very high? It wouldn't be in the interests of the industry to make too much thorium available...


It is impossible to limit the amount of thorium available, we already have too much. But Thorium does not obey the economic laws you quoted above because it is an ore and requires processing which is very expensive and if there isnt a market for it no one invests in the processing facilities and getting processed ore becomes very expensive.

The military are interested in LFTR for mobile modular power supplies that can power a base in the middle of the desert or other remote locations, not for bombs.

I would not characterize nuclear power as being decades of mismanagement, though I definitely would characterize Tepco as that. Nuclear power in the United States has never killed anyone, ever. Coal annually kills over 10,000 people. Annually!! So while you are right that public opinion is against nuclear, I wouldn't say decades of mismanagement is a fair characterization. Nuclear power actually has one of the safest track records of any industry, but public opinion reflects the opposite.


Tepco is just the latest and most obvious example of nuclear mismanagement. Nuclear power stations across the world have in numerous cases been found to have low-level leaks and failing safety systems, but discounting those what about the more well-known leaks - Three Mile, Chernobyl etc. Spread over decades. Mismanaged

Thing is it doesn't matter what is a fair characterisation when it comes to public opinion. Public opinion is very strongly against nuclear power, regardless of the safety record of the industry. You can show the figures to people but we always have that fear of nuclear meltdown in our minds.
You live the life you choose.
OneWhoIsMany
Profile Joined May 2010
Canada292 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-01-26 04:57:24
January 26 2012 04:56 GMT
#51
I've been very interested in Thorium reactor fuels ever since I heard of them about a year ago. It has always sounded like a miracle fuel as such I've been very sceptical of the claims around it. But I have yet to see anything truly negative in comparison to other technologies out there. This looks and feels right now like the energy technology that will be heavily invested in within the coming years (perhaps a decade). I truly hope there's not some catch 22 because clean, cheap and abundant energy sources would solve so many of the worlds current problems.
Flamingo777
Profile Joined October 2010
United States1190 Posts
January 26 2012 06:58 GMT
#52
I read something about Pebble Bed Reactors in a magizine (Time?) while waiting for my turn at the orthodontist. The concept seems much safer than normal rod-fueled plants. Here's a link: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebble_bed_reactor
Perdac Curall
Profile Joined June 2011
242 Posts
January 27 2012 01:39 GMT
#53
On January 26 2012 12:23 Sanctimonius wrote:
Show nested quote +
On January 25 2012 12:56 Perdac Curall wrote:
On January 25 2012 12:49 Sanctimonius wrote:
It's a decent idea but I'm not expecting to see any LFTR reactors anytime soon. After decades of nuclear mismanagment from the various industries public opinion isn't exactly at an all-time high, and this will be sold as modern nuclear power. Add to that the current nuclear industry is based on uranium, I would say they have a vested interest in not seeing any competition, and they don't have the money to be building an entire new industry. So discounting private start-up (who has the money?) or civil projects, as someone said above the military is the most likely way for thorium. Except you can't make a thorium bomb, so where is the incentive? Still, opposition to thorium will change as we exhaust other possibilities andd resources.

Question to the guy above who mentioned thorium is expensive now - surely economics says that prices are low if the market is flooded or if a product is undesirable. Making a demand for something drives up a price, so wouldn't the price of thorium remain very high? It wouldn't be in the interests of the industry to make too much thorium available...


It is impossible to limit the amount of thorium available, we already have too much. But Thorium does not obey the economic laws you quoted above because it is an ore and requires processing which is very expensive and if there isnt a market for it no one invests in the processing facilities and getting processed ore becomes very expensive.

The military are interested in LFTR for mobile modular power supplies that can power a base in the middle of the desert or other remote locations, not for bombs.

I would not characterize nuclear power as being decades of mismanagement, though I definitely would characterize Tepco as that. Nuclear power in the United States has never killed anyone, ever. Coal annually kills over 10,000 people. Annually!! So while you are right that public opinion is against nuclear, I wouldn't say decades of mismanagement is a fair characterization. Nuclear power actually has one of the safest track records of any industry, but public opinion reflects the opposite.


Tepco is just the latest and most obvious example of nuclear mismanagement. Nuclear power stations across the world have in numerous cases been found to have low-level leaks and failing safety systems, but discounting those what about the more well-known leaks - Three Mile, Chernobyl etc. Spread over decades. Mismanaged

Thing is it doesn't matter what is a fair characterisation when it comes to public opinion. Public opinion is very strongly against nuclear power, regardless of the safety record of the industry. You can show the figures to people but we always have that fear of nuclear meltdown in our minds.


Chernobyl was absolutely bad in every way. Bad design, bad management, a clusterfuck. And people should be concerned about meltdowns and safety with PWRs. Eugene Wigner, who invented the PWR, was against PWRs because it was only a matter of time before an accident occurs with water held at that much pressure. That is why Wigner was such a huge advocate for LFTR for civilian power, because it is so much safer. People would not have to worry about meltdowns anymore if we transitioned to LFTRs.
If a Black Death could spread throughout the world once in every generation, survivors could procreate freely without making the world too full. The state of affairs might be unpleasant, but what of it? -Sith Lord Bertrand Russell
Dynastywar
Profile Joined July 2011
United States59 Posts
January 27 2012 03:10 GMT
#54
Got interested by the article and read up on it. Definitly intrieged me, but one thing caught my eye on wikipedia.
After shutdown the salt was believed to be in long-term safe storage, but beginning in the mid-1980s, there was concern that radioactivity was migrating through the system. Sampling in 1994 revealed concentrations of uranium that created a potential for a nuclear criticality accident, as well as a potentially dangerous build-up of fluorine gas — the environment above the solidified salt is approximately one atmosphere of fluorine. The ensuing decontamination and decommissioning project was called "the most technically challenging" activity assigned to Bechtel Jacobs under its environmental management contract with the U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge Operations organization. In 2003, the MSRE cleanup project was estimated at about $130 million, with decommissioning expected to be completed in 2009.[17]

A detailed description of potential decommissioning processes is described here.18] uranium is to be removed from the fuel as the hexafluoride by adding excess fluorine, and plutonium as the plutonium dioxide by adding sodium carbonate.

That was from the Molten-Salt Reactor Experiment held in the 1960s. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molten-Salt_Reactor_Experiment
Perdac Curall
Profile Joined June 2011
242 Posts
January 27 2012 03:44 GMT
#55
On January 27 2012 12:10 Dynastywar wrote:
Got interested by the article and read up on it. Definitly intrieged me, but one thing caught my eye on wikipedia.
Show nested quote +
After shutdown the salt was believed to be in long-term safe storage, but beginning in the mid-1980s, there was concern that radioactivity was migrating through the system. Sampling in 1994 revealed concentrations of uranium that created a potential for a nuclear criticality accident, as well as a potentially dangerous build-up of fluorine gas — the environment above the solidified salt is approximately one atmosphere of fluorine. The ensuing decontamination and decommissioning project was called "the most technically challenging" activity assigned to Bechtel Jacobs under its environmental management contract with the U.S. Department of Energy's Oak Ridge Operations organization. In 2003, the MSRE cleanup project was estimated at about $130 million, with decommissioning expected to be completed in 2009.[17]

A detailed description of potential decommissioning processes is described here.18] uranium is to be removed from the fuel as the hexafluoride by adding excess fluorine, and plutonium as the plutonium dioxide by adding sodium carbonate.

That was from the Molten-Salt Reactor Experiment held in the 1960s. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molten-Salt_Reactor_Experiment


There are a few known technical challenges left to master with LFTR, and this is one of the biggest. However in the grand scale of things engineering-wise this is not that difficult of problem to overcome. This is basically a storage and containment problem. When compared to the technical hurdles still facing other reactor designs such as Fusion reactors, Integral Fast Reactors or the Travelling Wave reactor that Bill Gates is so keen on funding, the challenges associated with LFTR are almost "easy" relative to them.
If a Black Death could spread throughout the world once in every generation, survivors could procreate freely without making the world too full. The state of affairs might be unpleasant, but what of it? -Sith Lord Bertrand Russell
Rafael
Profile Joined January 2011
Venezuela182 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-01-27 03:48:18
January 27 2012 03:46 GMT
#56
I heard of the LFTR a few days ago in this thread.

Conclusion I made so far:

Even though it really looks promising, I think humans need to to take nuclear energy way more seriously (even LFTR). I still don't understand how can we use nuclear energy as of now with the current problems radioactive waste presentes, right now we don't have the understanding in science to treat and handle this substances correctly to ensure the well-beeing of the generations of livings things to come.

I do think LFTR still have many challenges before dreaming of implementation.

And finally LFTR does produce radiactive waste just in smaller quantity and faster radioctive decay (this means that the radioctive element desactivates faster)

Although it really looks promising, but let's see only a lot of research and time will tell.

PS.: We only have one earth it really worries me, that we are directioning to our auto-anihilation by the hazardous subproducts of our current technology (i.e. contamination) and the unforgiving exploitation of our resources.

I think it's a responsability of this generations technic and scientific professionals to stop and prevent this madness and improve the current human process for the better of ourselves and our planet.
meegrean
Profile Joined May 2008
Thailand7699 Posts
Last Edited: 2012-01-27 04:12:23
January 27 2012 04:11 GMT
#57
I'm surprised that the United States haven't already restarted investing into this technology since the Soviet Union collapsed. Maybe it had something to do with political pressure?
Brood War loyalist
Roe
Profile Blog Joined June 2010
Canada6002 Posts
January 27 2012 04:13 GMT
#58
isn't thorium just some mineral from world of warcraft?
CapnAmerica
Profile Blog Joined November 2010
United States508 Posts
January 27 2012 06:53 GMT
#59
On January 27 2012 13:13 Roe wrote:
isn't thorium just some mineral from world of warcraft?


Yes, that's why this new technology is being developed in China. All of their gold farmers have built up a large surplus over the time that WoW has been out, and now they're making use of it to generate power.


Also, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorium
After all this time, I still haven't figured out the correlation between sexual orientation and beating an unprepared opponent. Are homosexuals the next koreans? Many players seem to think it's an unfair advantage. - pandaburn
furymonkey
Profile Joined December 2008
New Zealand1587 Posts
January 27 2012 09:53 GMT
#60
On January 26 2012 00:37 Chaosvuistje wrote:

Of course, doing so would require oil companies to reinvest into a technology that would gain them less money because the cost for energy would go down. So obviously they will invest into energy that is even less efficient but more 'green' so they can price it even more.



You made it sound like the whole world's energy is generated by 1 company. If a company is able to come up a super efficient and green energy, it will dominate the market, earning way more money.
Leenock the Punisher
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