anant_s
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Excellent thread XiNiX, but there are a lot of factual error which i wish to point and correct:
1. First of all not all radioactive materials in actinide series are fissile. Isotopes like U235, U233 and Pu239 undergo fission (in Thermal and fast neutron regime respectively) but isotopes like U238 and Th232 (Thorium talked in this thread) are fertile material. This means they have to be converted to a fissile material.
2. Thorium is used as a blanket and converted to an isotope U233 by following reaction
90Th232 + 0n1 (Neutron) -->91Pa233 + Beta --> 92U233 +Beta (first number is atomic number, second is mass number)
92U233 is a fissile material which can be used in thermal reactors (slow neutron reactors using moderator) and then used for power generation.
3. However the problem is that this conversion can be done in a fast breeder reactor (these are called breeder because they convert a fertile material into fissile material, thereby generating fuel), only one such exists now in India, another one is in construction. Also one requires advanced, fuel separation or processing capabilities to recover 92U233 for further use.
4. Hence before, U233 reactors come into existence, India would need to develop large fleet of Plutonium (94Pu239) powered reactors to breed and convert Thorium.
5. India has world's largest thorium reserves and if this can be used on commercial scale, a huge potential for power generation through this route exists.
6. There is an inherent problem with Thorium that it emits alpha radiation and is hence difficult to handle even in un-irradiated form.
7. Design work on a vertical thermal reactor to be used as converter for Thorium to U233 is underway, but Thorium powered commercial reactors are still atleast two decades away.
8. However the good thing is the projects have steady funding and as projected when Uranium reserves start to deplete after 2075, we would definitely have a new source of power at our disposal.
1. First of all not all radioactive materials in actinide series are fissile. Isotopes like U235, U233 and Pu239 undergo fission (in Thermal and fast neutron regime respectively) but isotopes like U238 and Th232 (Thorium talked in this thread) are fertile material. This means they have to be converted to a fissile material.
2. Thorium is used as a blanket and converted to an isotope U233 by following reaction
90Th232 + 0n1 (Neutron) -->91Pa233 + Beta --> 92U233 +Beta (first number is atomic number, second is mass number)
92U233 is a fissile material which can be used in thermal reactors (slow neutron reactors using moderator) and then used for power generation.
3. However the problem is that this conversion can be done in a fast breeder reactor (these are called breeder because they convert a fertile material into fissile material, thereby generating fuel), only one such exists now in India, another one is in construction. Also one requires advanced, fuel separation or processing capabilities to recover 92U233 for further use.
4. Hence before, U233 reactors come into existence, India would need to develop large fleet of Plutonium (94Pu239) powered reactors to breed and convert Thorium.
5. India has world's largest thorium reserves and if this can be used on commercial scale, a huge potential for power generation through this route exists.
6. There is an inherent problem with Thorium that it emits alpha radiation and is hence difficult to handle even in un-irradiated form.
7. Design work on a vertical thermal reactor to be used as converter for Thorium to U233 is underway, but Thorium powered commercial reactors are still atleast two decades away.
8. However the good thing is the projects have steady funding and as projected when Uranium reserves start to deplete after 2075, we would definitely have a new source of power at our disposal.