Integral Fast Reactor: Why Did Funding Stop?

In summary, the Integral Fast Reactor (IFR) project was cut due to concerns about proliferation risk and its high cost. The prototype EBR II had successful tests for its passive safety system, but the project was considered uneconomical and was terminated in 1994. There are differing views on why Congress voted to cut funding, with some arguing that it was due to concerns about proliferation and others saying it was ahead of its time. The IFR had potential for achieving energy independence and consuming waste plutonium, but it was ultimately dismantled. Some negative aspects of the IFR include the cost of its fuel reprocessing cell and potential problems with the liquid metal cooling system. The estimated cost for one IFR reactor is around $1
  • #141
Morbius said:
signerror,

Thank you for posting those graphs.

From the upper graph, you can see that at fusion neutron energies, the fission cross-section is
about 1000 times the capture cross-section. So you are going to get more fissions and less
Plutonium production.

The lower graph shows how the capture cross section that gives you Pu-240 is dropping and at
fusion neutron energies is 1000 times less than the fission cross-section. So you are 1000 times
more likely to fission the Plutonium than to capture the neutron and make Pu-240.
So things "flip around" at about 1 MeV.

Yes, as I said, I did the calculation at 1 MeV, not at 14 MeV.
You can find the plots here (sorry that some stuff is in dutch - guess it is clear), I made them using exactly the cross sections that have been displayed (I can post the Scilab code that generates them).
 

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  • #142
50% of all the EU money going into energy research is scheduled go to hot fusion (ITER funding included)---the other 50% to all other types of energy research combined.

I am geologist; I'd love to spend billions of dollars to install geothermal energy in every single family residence with over a 1/2 acre of land. This would provide thousands of geologists with good, high-paying jobs.

If I were a chemist, I'd love to spend billions of dollars on better batteries, more fuel efficient cars, better insulation, better semiconductors, the realization of high temperature superconductivity, and new energy technologies. This would provide thousands of chemists with good, high paying jobs.

If I were a biologist, I'd love to spend billions of dollars studying cellulose bio fuels, hyrogen-producing algae, ways to harness the promise of unlimited phytoplankton development in the ocean "deserts" where the absence on nutrients makes a food chain impossible. By pumping bottom waters to the surface, it would be possible to grow millions of tons of food for cattle and humans every year by genetically altering phytoplankton to grow faster and produce more proteins. Another possiblility: bio-transmutation of radioactive elements. These projects collectively would provide thousands of biologists with good, high-paying jobs

If I were an atmospheric scientists, I'd love to build windmills everywhere tied to hydogen production, not electricity. This would provide thousands of good, high-paying jobs to atmospheric scientists.

Collectively, they could provide us with all the energy we need FOREVER. And you still maintain we should spend billions of dollars on this pork project for physicists with absolutely no guarantee of success? The people who wanted hot fusion were mostly our wonderful leaders during the cold war so they could tell the Soviet Union, "We put a man on the moon and brought him safely home again; now we are going to conquer the sun". Hot fusion is a Cold War relic that should be shut down immediately. It is a boondoggle, pork for physicists and an albatross around the neck of our goal of energy independence.

The only other people who wanted the hot fusion program are the physicists at the Department Of Energy who wanted to finance their buddies at MIT.


theCandyman said:
Part of the Clinton adminstration's promises were to cut back funding for nuclear related programs. IFR got cut.
 
  • #143
sloughter said:
5
Collectively, they could provide us with all the energy we need FOREVER.
sloughter,

100% WRONG again. The National Academy of Science has calculated that renewables
can give us about 15-20% of current electric power demand - AT MOST! Why not
calculate how much energy you can get if you can use the deuterium in the waters of the
world's oceans for fuel. The reason thermonuclear fusion gets so much money is that it
has the potential to DWARF all the sources you cite.
And you still maintain we should spend billions of dollars on this pork project for physicists with absolutely no guarantee of success?
That's a pretty ill-considered statement from a supposed scientist. It is research. When do we
require a guarantee from the scientists before we embark on a research path? True - it is
"high risk" research - in that when it was started it was known that it would be a long task - but
the high payoff makes it worth it. That's the type of research that the government typically funds.
Something that is going to payoff in a year or two is something that industry is willing to fund.
The people who wanted hot fusion were mostly our wonderful leaders during the cold war so they could tell the Soviet Union, "We put a man on the moon and brought him safely home again; now we are going to conquer the sun". Hot fusion is a Cold War relic that should be shut down immediately. It is a boondoggle, pork for physicists and an albatross around the neck of our goal of energy independence.
The only other people who wanted the hot fusion program are the physicists at the Department Of Energy who wanted to finance their buddies at MIT.
What is your "hang-up" about MIT anyway? What did they do; reject your admission application?

However, again you demonstrate your profound ignorance of the US fusion program. The work
at MIT is actually "small potatoes" compared to other efforts. MIT did NOT have the largest fusion
energy program. The largest magnetic fusion energy program BY FAR was not at MIT but at
PRINCETON:

http://www.pppl.gov/

The Princeton operation DWARFS the MIT operation. Additionally, universities were not the only
players in the magnetic fusion arena - General Atomics is another big magnetic fusion research lab;
again MUCH, MUCH bigger than MIT:

http://fusion.gat.com/global/Home

Another big magnetic fusion program was hosted at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory:

https://publicaffairs.llnl.gov/WYOP/Fusion_Energy.html
https://www.llnl.gov/str/January01/pdfs/01_01.3.pdf

Lawrence Livermore's other fusion effort in Inertial Confinement or "Laser" Fusion is about to
pay off. A couple weeks ago LLNL dedicated the NIF - the National Ignition Facility. Under
our present understanding of fusion processes - the NIF will have the ability to achieve "ignition";
that is to get more energy out of a burning plasma than you put into it. So why would anyone
shutdown the research effort just when it is about to pay off?

The research in thermonuclear fusion has nothing to do with the Cold War. The motivation for
fusion energy has always been to harness a new energy source rather than as a PR campaign
against the Soviet Union.

The NASA program was more the PR program - but even if the motivation was as a contest
against the Soviet Union; the NASA space program has been great for research. We wouldn't
have the computer power we have today if it were not for advances in scaling down a computer
so that it could go on-board a spacecraft . So who cares what the motivation was - the Space
Program was very good for the USA's science program.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #144
vanesch said:
[
Yes, as I said, I did the calculation at 1 MeV, not at 14 MeV.
vanesh,

Yes - well as you can see 1 MeV is where everything "turns around".

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
  • #145
The major problem with Inertial Confinement Fusion is that physicists think it is a physics problem. It is an engineering problem. Getting fusion is 1% of the job. 99% is the supporting engineering. I don't see anyone defending the farcical cartoon on Charlie Gibson showing an ICF reactor firing every second (Do you really think that it is possible to go from 100,000,000 degrees to -260 degrees in under one second?). Do you really think that you can isolate lasers from the explosive force of a 100 pound stick of dynamite going off a few feet away? Do you really think that one detonation means anything when you are going to have to get a detonation every second? Do you really think hitting a stationary target has any relevance to hitting a moving target? Hitting a static target is comparable to hitting a missile on a launch pad as opposed to hitting it in flight. Do you really think that Star Wars in a bottle is feasible?

This is just a partial list of all the engineering problems faced by ICF engineers.

Captainjf said:
I am in debate and i was instructed by my teacher to find negative evidence on the IFR reactor. is there anything wrong with the reactor that stands out alot?
 
  • #146
sloughter said:
The major problem with Inertial Confinement Fusion is that physicists think it is a physics problem. It is an engineering problem. Getting fusion is 1% of the job. 99% is the supporting engineering. I don't see anyone defending the farcical cartoon on Charlie Gibson showing an ICF reactor firing every second (Do you really think that it is possible to go from 100,000,000 degrees to -260 degrees in under one second?). Do you really think that you can isolate lasers from the explosive force of a 100 pound stick of dynamite going off a few feet away? Do you really think that one detonation means anything when you are going to have to get a detonation every second? Do you really think hitting a stationary target has any relevance to hitting a moving target? Hitting a static target is comparable to hitting a missile on a launch pad as opposed to hitting it in flight. Do you really think that Star Wars in a bottle is feasible?

This is just a partial list of all the engineering problems faced by ICF engineers.
sloughter,

Funny you should mention "Stars Wars'. I remember when so many of the self-proclaimed
"experts" said that Livermore's X-ray laser would never work. Well, it turns out they were WRONG!
We now even have table-top X-ray lasers:

https://www.llnl.gov/str/Dunn.html

Actually, the plans are to have the reactor fire about 10X per second. The reactor doesn't have
to go from 100M degrees to -250 degrees. Where did you get that idea? The only thing that needs
to be at those temperatures is the fusion capsules - NOT the entire reactor - and you got the
temporal gradient wrong. It goes from -250 degrees to 100M degrees - and that certainly IS
possible given the energy released. Why do you "think" the capsule can't do that?

As I told you last time - and you've evidently failed to absorb the information - the lasers are NOT
a few feet away from the target. They are hundreds of feet away. You do know that laser light
can propagate a fair distance - you don't need the laser amplifiers right next to the target.

If what you are saying was true - we'd destroy NIF the first time we fire it. That's not going to
happen.

Why don't you read up on ICF - because you really don't know what you are talking about.

It sounds like the clap-trap that comes off the anti-nuke websites.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #147
sloughter said:
Do you really think that you can isolate lasers from the explosive force of a 100 pound stick of dynamite going off a few feet away?
sloughter,

Why not? You just need a big volume to contain the energy - like the target chamber at NIF.

LLNL does that type of testing with normal chemical high explosives all the time at HEAF -
High Explosives Applications Facility.

High Explosives are test-fired in big tanks - and some of the diagnostics are lasers. So there's
no problem isolating an explosive of modest size [ not a huge truck bomb ] from the environs.

https://wci.llnl.gov/fac/heaf/Media/jpg/1Ktank001.jpg

It's not like you don't know what the yield of the capsule is - and you design the facility to
tolerate it.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
  • #148
sloughter said:
Do you really think hitting a stationary target has any relevance to hitting a moving target? Hitting a static target is comparable to hitting a missile on a launch pad as opposed to hitting it in flight.
sloughter,

Except you know EXACTLY the trajectory of the capsules. One design has the capsules attached to
a wire guide that traverses the target chamber. It's like a miniature version of a cable car - like they
have at ski slopes. The capsule isn't in free flight like a missile - it has to be where the cable constrains
it to be - so it has to be along the cable. Since you are also pulling the cable - you know how far along
the cable the capsule is - and that gives you the location of the capsule.

Don't you know where a cable car is at a ski slope if someone has told you how much cable has been
played out since the car left the terminal building?

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #149
Morbius said:
sloughter,

Except you know EXACTLY the trajectory of the capsules. One design has the capsules attached to
a wire guide that traverses the target chamber. It's like a miniature version of a cable car - like they
have at ski slopes. The capsule isn't in free flight like a missile - it has to be where the cable constrains
it to be - so it has to be along the cable. Since you are also pulling the cable - you know how far along
the cable the capsule is - and that gives you the location of the capsule.
...
The cable must also be obliterated with the shot. Then what? Cable per shot? Just curious.
 
  • #150
sloughter said:
Last thing I read was that MIT has gotten $15 billion for their hot fusion program and a total of $20 billion has been spent on the hot fusion program in this country so far.
sloughter,

WAY WAY WAY WRONG!

MIT's effort in fusion may be on the order of a few million NOT a few billion. I think you've confused
millions and billions. BY FAR - the major effort of the magnetic fusion research has been at
Princeton. The Princeton Large Torus [ PLT ] and the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor [ TFTR ] have
both been at Princeton. The Dept. of Energy established one of its national laboratories at
Princeton - the Princeton Plasma Physics Lab [ PPPL ]:

http://www.pppl.gov/

There's no national lab scale effort at MIT. MIT runs a small tokamak called "Alcator". The MIT
effort is on the order of a few million. Again, I think you didn't keep "millions" and "billions" straight
in your reading.

The budget for a big national lab like Lawrence Livermore is 1 Billion / year. Lawrence Livermore
get that $15 Billion in a 15 YEARS! That's to run the WHOLE LAB!

The fusion effort at MIT is one small tokamak and may have consumed a few million dollars.

Again, I would posit you've been sloppy in your reading and confused millions with billions.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
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  • #151
sloughter said:
To suggest as you do that no new energy fields would develop in the next few decades to a century that would make hot fusion irrelevant is specious reasoning.
sloughter,

NOT AT ALL! Evidently you evidently can NOT or won't do the calculation of how much energy
is available via hot fusion.

First - there's no such thing as "new energy". We know and can account for ALL the potential energy
sources. Some like nuclear fusion - we don't know how to tap yet - but we know how many atoms
of deuterium there are; and we know how much energy we can get from fusion.

We know how much energy there is in sunshine. We know how much energy there is in wind.

You can calculate the energy potential. The fact that you make the specious arguments that you
do tells me that you have NOT done the calculation. You are either unwilling or unable to calculate
the true energy potential available - so you resort to nonsensical handwaving.

Yes - I know how much energy there are in storms like hurricanes. Did you actually "think" you
were telling me something I don't already know?

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist
 
  • #152
sloughter said:
L
The size of the deuterium/tritium particle is the size of a small piece of gravel. How precisely do you attach a "cable" to it? At or near absolute zero every metal behaves brittlely
sloughter,

OH BROTHER - don't you ever do any research before spouting off??
As usual - you don't know what you are talking about.

As for attaching a cable to a particle the size of a small piece of gravel - child's play. Have you
ever seen videos of how Intel and AMD make CPUs? The processors have these tiny, tiny, tiny,
little contacts WAY WAY smaller than a small piece of gravel - and a machine that acts like a
sewing machine connects those tiny little contacts to the upper end of the little pins on the bottom
of the die that holds the microchip with a slender gold thread.

You "think" there is a "problem" connecting a pea gravel sized pellet to a cable?
That has to be one of the dumbest responses I've seen on this forum.

Additionally, we won't be dealing with metals anywhere near absolute zero. The only component
that has to be extremely cold is the deuterium. The pellets may / may not have deuterium ice.

Surrounding the deuterium ice is a capsule which is essentially plastic. So the temperature on
the outside of the plastic won't be as cold as the deuterium ice because the plastic is a fairly good
insulator.

That plastic capsule is then encased in a hohlraum - little cylinder that the lasers heat in order to
generate the drive that implodes the capsule:

https://wci.llnl.gov/org/ax/projects/phohlraum.html
https://lasers.llnl.gov/programs/nic/icf/plasma_physics.php
https://publicaffairs.llnl.gov/news/news_releases/2005/NR-05-12-02p.html

The hohlraum is the thing that needs to be attached to the cable - and it's not going to be near
absolute zero in temperature.

Additionally, who said the cable was going to be made out of metal?

Your "motis operandi" here seems to be to think up the dumbest way something can be done -
and then rail against how it won't work. Yes - the stuff you come up with won't work - but the
designs that people who know the physics will.

Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicst
 
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  • #153
Sorry, I haven't been paying attention to this thread. We do not allow crackpottery here. In particular, crackpot sources of information, such as the referenced sites. Thread locked.

Sloughter, please reread the forum guidelines before continuing here.
 
  • #154
I've deleted crackpot and conspiracy theory posts and responses and reopened the thread. Apologies to those who lost time to deleted responses.

Lets keep the thread on point and, more importantly, scientific.
 
  • #155
IFR Question.

I was writing up my ideas for replacing Yucca mountain and I wrote that a fuel reprocessing facility should co-located with the storage facility and also an IFR to handle whatever can't be reprocessed. What exactly would be leftover after that? Would any of it have a long half life? How much waste would we talking about per TWH?

If you want to see what I wrote, use the link and go to section 2.
"[URL
http://www.anupchurchchrestomathy.com/2009/06/upchurch-american-energy-act.html
 
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  • #156
joelupchurch said:
How much waste would we talking about per TWH?

Since there is a one-to-one mass correspondence between fissile material and fission products (minus the tiny fraction of binding energy that is lost), there is a fixed ratio of the mass of fission products to energy generated, for each fissile isotope. For a U-238/Pu-239 closed cycle, it would be about 45 kg/TWh(thermal), where 199 MeV is the energy per fission of a Pu-239 nucleus, and the TWh is of heat produced (not electricity). So for a 50% efficient high-temperature reactor (say), it would 90 kg/TWh(electricity).

So this is the absolute minimum spent fuel waste for any fission reactor. A fast reactor with full reprocessing (like the IFR system) would come close to this.

In an ordinary once-through reactor, there is a lot more waste. For example, the new French EPRs have a (design) burnup of 70 GW-days per ton fuel, which corresponds to spent fuel mass of 595 kg/TWh(thermal) or 1,653 kg/TWh(electric) (so, 26 tons/year). But only a small fraction of this is fission products, corresponding to the same mass fraction which was fissioned (about what, 5%?). The rest is mostly harmless U-238, and a tiny fraction of synthetic actinides created by neutron capture (Pu-239 and beyond). So with full reprocessing and MOX fuel burning (as the French do), the once-through light water reactors produce about the same mass of high-level waste as fast reactors - although since it has a much larger amount of transuranic isotopes, it is much longer-lived.

I hope the experts here will correct me if I've misunderstood something.
 
  • #157
I obviously don't understand. What I read is that 95% of the spent fuel is Uranium or Plutonium and all those isotopes are fissile or fertile and can be reused. Most of the rest is actinides that can be burned in an IFR. It looks to me like the only thing that needs to be disposed of are the actual fission products, but it isn't clear what those products are and how long they are dangerous.

From what I read on the LFTR, it looked like you could get a GWe Year out of 1 ton of Thorium, so the actual waste product would be 1 ton or less. I was hoping to get a similar result with uranium, albeit with more hassle.

From what I read about spent fuel, they amount to about 1 ounce per person per year, so I was hoping to get it down to a couple of grams a year using all the technology available.
 
  • #158
joelupchurch said:
From what I read on the LFTR, it looked like you could get a GWe Year out of 1 ton of Thorium, so the actual waste product would be 1 ton or less.

Yes, 1 ton/GWe-yr is about 100 kg/TWh. (There are 104 hours in a year.)

It looks to me like the only thing that needs to be disposed of are the actual fission products, but it isn't clear what those products are and how long they are dangerous.

Hundreds of years.

i5bvxs.jpg


from http://www.nea.fr/html/ndd/reports/2002/nea3109.html

The third bold line is fission products (FPs). The individual examples shown are Strontium-90, Cesium-137, Technetium-99, and Iodine-129.
 
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  • #159
Thanks signerror, I like the graph. It looks like most of the fission products are safe in 400-500 years, but there are some long half-life isotopes that need to be separated out and handled differently.

That would mean that each fuel recycling would produce some fission products that need to separated and stored. I guess one ton a year for a GWe electrical plant isn't too bad.

I calculated what a GWe coal plant would put out per year and came out with over 7 megatons of CO2 and 600 to 700 kilotons of other waste, including 12 tons of thorium and 5 tons of uranium.
 

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