by Dezakin » Sat 06 Aug 2005, 19:15:25
Ludi is posting a link that primarily cites the Storm van bullshit report that was thouroughly dissected as utter garbage a month ago... the one that inflates decomissioning costs, selectively uses the most energy intensitve mining techniques from half a century ago, and most telling, only assumes gasseous diffusion enrichment for light water reactors, something that no one does anymore because its so energy intensive.
And yes, breeder reactors are discounted with one or two sentances as being unviable in spite of decades of experience with them.
I've been over this before with Ludi and shown why nuclear fuel and nuclear power wont run out in any timeframe worth discussing. Uranium and thorium is everywhere.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f the article is correct, then IFR's are the safest, cheapest example of nuclear power to date.
Ah, lets have a sense of perspective here. The IFR was a testbed reactor for doing molten salt reprocessing of metallic fuels. The IFR certainly isn't cheap, less safe than a LWR and presents a significant proliferation risk compared with other reactors, even other breeders. The first problem the IFR faces is the sodium cooling system is a huge mass of chemical potential locked up just waiting to start sodium fires should there be any loss of coolant incident.
Second its a fast neutron reactor that primarily runs on Pu-239, so the delayed neutron component of the reactor (the beta) is very low... meaning the reactivity flux doesn't occur over minutes like in thermal and epithermal reactors but seconds to microseconds. A giant flux is a huge neutron flash incidient waiting to happen and possibly cause corresponding fuel melt.
Interesting work was done at ANL but its a mistake to look at the reactor there as any sort of next generation design. Indeed, all liquid metal breeder reactors are best for doing one thing: make weapons grade Pu239, with some incidental power production at over twice the price of a LWR.