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No nuclear waste: Fuel of future produced at Russia's high-tech underground plant

Why are you worried, even the slightest, that this "news" report carries no hint of the dangers of this power plant? I don't see much difference between it and a Soviet puff piece from the early 1980s.

When youre talking about nuclear power plants there are always dangers but from my understanding Russians are the best in the business. The point being. It looks like theyve accomplished a great thing. Something no one else has been able to do. And if this trial reactor is successfull, it means great things for all humanity. Maybe im just not a pessimist.
 
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No nuclear waste: Fuel of future produced at Russia's high-tech underground plant
Published time: September 17, 2014 11:47
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Photo from sdelanounas.ru


Russia’s ‘Breakthrough’ energy project enables closed a nuclear fuel cycle and a future without radioactive waste. The first batch of MOX nuclear fuel has been manufactured for the world’s only NPP industrially power generating breeder reactors.

The first ten kilograms of the mixed-oxide fuel (MOX) - a mixture of plutonium and uranium dioxides (UO2 and PuO2), have been industrially produced by Russia’s nuclear monopoly, Rosatom, at the Mining & Chemical Combine (GKhK) in the Krasnoyarsk region.

A world first, tablets of the fuel of the future have been put on serial production and are destined for Russia’s next generation BN-800 breeder reactor (880 megawatts), currently undergoing tests at the Beloyarskaya nuclear power plant.

The production line, now undergoing start-up and adjustment, was assembled in a mine 200 meters underground and will become fully operational by the end of 2014.



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Demonstrating the work of the spent fuel storage of the Mining and Chemical Plant. (RIA Novosti/Alexandr Kryazhev)



Fast fission reactors solve the problem of depleted uranium nuclear fuel on the planet. They can ‘burn’ not only ‘classic’ uranium-235, (scarce and already coming to an end), but also uranium-238, which is abundant, and expands the world’s nuclear fuel capacity by an estimated 50 times.

Fuel for breeder reactors could even be made from nuclear waste, which from an ecological point of view is a priceless advantage.

The GKhK facility will be equipped with a unique dissolvent reactor that will break down nuclear waste containing plutonium and extract plutonium dioxide to be used in MOX-fuel production.



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The spent fuel storage of the Mining and Chemical Plant. (RIA Novosti/Alexandr Kryazhev)



Also, while producing electric energy, breeder reactors actually generate more fissile material, and that one also can be used as nuclear fuel.

The GKhK plant is Russia’s leading full nuclear fuel cycle complex, processing nuclear waste from power generating nuclear reactors to establish future nuclear fuel ring closure.

MOX-fuel for previous versions of fast breeder reactors in the USSR and Russia had limited production at Russia’s oldest Mayak nuclear processing facility.

Starting from 2016, industrial-level MOX-fuel production in Russia will run at full capacity.

“Produced MOX-fuel tablets fully conform to the technical specifications,” Rosatom’s statement said, adding that the fuel will now be thoroughly tested.



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The spent fuel storage of the Mining and Chemical Plant. (RIA Novosti/Alexandr Kryazhev)



Energy from here to eternity
Humankind has already produced so much nuclear waste that it would take decades, if not hundreds of years to process and recycle it. As of now, the only light at the end of the tunnel is fast-neutron reactor technology.

The fast-neutron nuclear – or breeder - reactors use technology that enables the use of a wider range of radioactive elements as fuel, thus considerably enlarging the potential stock of nuclear fuel for electric power generation.
Russia is the only country that operates fast neutron reactors industrially.

After decades of research, practically all breeder reactor projects around the world, including in the US, France, Japan and several other countries possessing nuclear energy technologies, were closed down. The only country that currently has operating breeder reactor power generation is Russia.

Over the last 50 years the USSR, then Russia, introduced a number of industrial and research fast neutron reactors. One of them, the BN-600 (600 megawatt), running at the Beloyarskaya nuclear power plant since 1980, is the only fast neutron reactor in the world that generates electricity on an industrial scale. The BN-600 is also the most powerful operable fast neutron reactor in the world.

The Beloyarskaya nuclear power plant is in Zarechny, some 45 kilometers from the regional center of Yekaterinburg, in the Urals region.



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The front of the BN 600 generating unit control building at the Beloyarsk I.V.Kurchatov Nuclear Power Plant. (RIA Novosti/Pavel Lisitsyn)



This year a new BN-800 breeder reactor will become operable at the Beloyarskaya plant.

The service life of the BN-800 breeder reactor is expected to be 45 years. Every month it will produce 475 million kilowatt hours of electricity, enough to ensure constant supply to 3.15 million families (the average monthly consumption of a family of three is 150 kilowatt hours).

The BN-800 uses liquid metal sodium (Na) as a coolant heat transfer agent. Commercial operation of the new reactor is planned to start in early 2015.



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Construction of the BN-800 breeder reactor. Photo from sdelanounas.ru



Russian physicists have already elaborated the next step for the revolutionary technology: a BN-1200 breeder reactor that is set to be assembled at the same Beloyarskaya nuclear power plant by 2020.

Overall, eight BN-1200 breeder reactors are expected to be constructed by 2030, which means that Russia is the only nation that is entering a new era of nuclear energy power generation – the closed nuclear fuel cycle, in other words truly clean and practically unlimited nuclear power generation.
@Dillinger @Oscar

Your comments ???
 
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Nuclear physics isnt my strong suit. Please explain.

Here is a good basic explanation:

The Energy From Thorium FoundationChernobyl and the Central Role of the Temperature Coefficient

QUOTE:

"Permit me to spend a little time talking about the temperature coefficient of reactivity, and why it must always be negative. It is the single most important quantity in any reactor design, and the reason why can be understood from a thought experiment. Let us imagine, for a moment, that instead of being negative, the temperature coefficient of reactivity were positive. This would mean that if the temperature in the reactor were to increase, then the fission rate would increase. If the fission rate increased, then the reactor would generate more power and heat, which in turn would lead the temperature to rise, which in turn would lead to more fission, until boom! The reactor would either explode, like a nuclear bomb, or explosively disassemble itself. This of course is not acceptable.

So reactors must be built where the temperature coefficient of reactivity is negative. But how do we do this? Actually, it’s much easier than you think. In a conventional light-water reactor, the water both cools the nuclear fuel and moderates (slows) the neutrons, increasing the probability of fission. The temperature coefficient in these reactors is negative, because if the temperature increases, the water heats up and expands. If it expands, there’s less water in the core, which means there’s less hydrogen (bound in the water) to moderate the neutrons. The energy of the neutrons increases, and fission becomes less likely (as we can see from the earlier chart that shows the probability of fission as a function of neutron energy). Hence, the temperature coefficient controls the temperature of the reactor—too high and it brings it down, too low and it brings it up. It is a very nice operational feature—a built-in natural throttle."

/QUOTE
 
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