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Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor |
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| Jun18-12, 11:04 AM | #137 |
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Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor |
| Jun18-12, 12:59 PM | #138 |
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What is concerning power density I don`t know. For example they make statement like: |
| Jun18-12, 01:12 PM | #139 |
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So I would be hesitant to accept the kind of huge reductions suggested in the analysis, at least not until some more convincing experimental evidence is forthcoming. That said, there are active proposals to use thorium fuel bundles in conventional LWRs, based on a lot of solid work done in Russia. However, these have none of the more speculative elements suggested above, where thorium is burnt down to a few residual short lived actinides. Absent demonstration, it is unwise to rely on such pie in the sky projections. They remind me altogether too much of the Reagan era NASP, a proposed aerospace plane that would take off and fly to orbital speed. The theory was compelling, the engineering a nightmare. They quit when the design had gone from 50,000 pounds to 1 million pounds, with cost increases to match. |
| Jun18-12, 01:55 PM | #140 |
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Also as I could understand from their claims the higher voltage means better rate reductions.With modern technologies there is no problem to create static electric field up to billions of volts.For exaple tabletop pyroelectric fusion device is claimed to create 25 gigavolts per meter.I think this effect could be easily verified if it exists. |
| Jun18-12, 04:01 PM | #141 |
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Anyone know the scientific basis for asserting that a high E field can change the decay rate of a nucleus? If that was (is?) possible, seems like it throw a large kink in all the historical dating done from isotope ratios, at least in the cosmos where high E fields can occur naturally.
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| Jun19-12, 06:47 AM | #142 |
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http://www.newscientist.com/article/...ear-waste.html One more article on beta decay: https://docs.google.com/viewer?a=v&q...c4vAeByUYtCfcg |
| Jun19-12, 11:19 AM | #143 |
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| Jun19-12, 12:52 PM | #144 |
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| Jun19-12, 01:09 PM | #145 |
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| Jun25-12, 04:31 AM | #146 |
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| Nov14-12, 10:45 AM | #147 |
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| Nov15-12, 06:28 AM | #148 |
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Since 232U is just the alpha decay product of 236Pu, which is found in all spent fuel from Uranium powered reactors, and concentrated in MOX. There is no additional shielding needed.
Google books has Neeb's Radiochemistry of Nuclear Power Plants With Light Water Reactors, and on pg 78-79 he gives activity measurements for spent fuel isotopes from enriched uranium after differeent burnups. You can compare that yourself to the activity from fission products, which he gives earlier. The ~2MeV γ is not unusual for reactors, the prompt γ average is 1MeV. So, really, the 232U "hard gamma" claim is somewhat of a red herring: its a feature of ALL spent fuel - and all Plutonium, all recycled Uranium and all recycled Thorium. Since 228Th has a half life of 1.9 yrs vs. 232U's half life of 68.9 yrs, the concentration of 228Th is determined by 232U, and Thorium recycling shouldn't add any worries. |
| Nov25-12, 01:30 PM | #149 |
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So is the general opinion that working on development of LFTR good or bad?
Seems like from what I have read in this thread it is leaning strongly towards good... |
| Nov25-12, 05:42 PM | #150 |
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LFTR has a complex radiological path, and all of it is running at molten fluoride temperatures. Molten fluorides are NOT fun things to work with, they are very active. There are significant engineering hurdles for making a 700 C Material that can handle fluence for a reactor. Since there is no fuel loading - additional reactivity is inserted as needed from 233U-F4 salts in storage as needed, and fission products are removed in a chemical treatment of the main coolanant/fuiel salt, you're going to need materials which can handle 10^15 n/cm^2/s at 700 C for decades, not just a few years.
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| Nov25-12, 06:15 PM | #151 |
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yO0Qk-_Gms Also, don't we have better suited materials today than these guys had 47 years ago? Are the materials the biggest concern for building this type of reactor? |
| Nov25-12, 06:43 PM | #152 |
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| Nov26-12, 04:47 AM | #153 |
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Yeah. Well. |
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