Talk:Pebble-bed reactor

(Redirected from Talk:Pebble bed reactor)

After reading still missing at least one important info

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How does it work? Are the pebbles hot for themselves, the reaction occurs (mainly?) in the pebble, or are neutrons going from one pebble to others. If second case, how radioactive are the pebble before and after irradiation? And in this case, isnt there a possibility to stop the reaction in case of necessity in draining the core? If first case, are the pebble usable in little amounts like in a thermal-electricity-generator like those used in space? What is the operating life-length of a pebble? I think these are quite important topics that the reader wants to know... Pipecat (talk) 16:13, 15 April 2011 (UTC)Reply

I believe you are confusing radioactive decay with nuclear fission. The PBR is a reactor, and has nuclear fission. A "radioisotope thermoelectic generator" (RTG) has much smaller power densities as it uses decay heat for power. A reactor also has a lot of radioactive decay, but this is more of a side-effect then the power source. In fact, reactors are likely the source of radioisotopes for RTGs, depending on what type of radioisotope is being used.
The neutrons come from the coated particles dispersed in the pebbles. When neutrons are born, they have an average energy of 2 MeV. Through collisions with other materials in the reactor core (principally the moderator), the neutrons will thermalize to .025 eV. The neutron path will very likely travel outside the pebble it was born, but not necessarily.
Like all nuclear reactor fuel, pebbles are only slightly radioactive before irradiation (U-235 has an extremely long half-life), and very radioactive after due to the buildup of fission products.
"Draining the core" in order to stop the nuclear reaction is not necessary in a PBR, as the core is made of high temperature materials. In a core heat-up event, the negative thermal feedback will lower core power. At low power and high temperatures, the core is designed to conduct all the heat through the vessel walls. In fact, retaining pebbles in the core and suppressing natural circulation is seen as an attribute to protect the pebbles from air ingress events.
I expect the operating length of a pebble to be perhaps 3 years, but that depends on its initial enrichment and how high a burnup operators and regulators allow, and how much is useful.Ajnosek (talk) 23:17, 31 May 2011 (UTC)Reply

"Written like an advert"

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The company in South Africa that is developing the PBR always appear to gloss over the safety concerns in an attempt to minimize them in the eyes of the public. I personally think this technology is viable, but when playing with nuclear power, one shouldn't ever downplay the risks.

There is a strong likelihood that this Wikipedia article is being modified by a public relations company, or an expert in PR. —Preceding unsigned comment added by ObseloV (talkcontribs) 04:57, 21 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

I agree that the language is not impartial. The content is informative, however. I don't know how much traffic will come from today's New York Times story, but I might put up a neutrality dispute sign and see what shakes out. - Cwmagee (talk) 05:22, 25 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

Chicken McNuggets

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For anyone who's wondering about the change in emphasis between the old reactors and the PBR designs, the PBR is using the "Chicken McNugget" business model, you put all your high technology investment up-front into the material manufacturing (the "pebble factory"), and then you can set up cheap franchised outlets wherever you want, taking delivery of the high-tech pebbles, bunging them into cheap reactors, and serving up hot and tasty electricity using staff who don't have to be geniuses, and who don't get the chance to do anything potentially dangerous.

Someone who used to design structural steelwork for UK reactors once said that they were designed like cathedrals: every one was different. It's like the restaurant business: you can have a single restaurant with specialist equipment and staff, all working together to create a great product and avoid food-poisoning disasters, but when it comes to franchising it, you have problems: You can't easily duplicate key staff, monitoring quality control through the chain is difficult (so you get stupid accidents) and you don't get bulk deals on the key equipment. You may get an economy of scale regarding know-how, but not for staff or hardware, because you aren't intending to build that many restaurants, and all your equipment is still very specialised.

The alternative is the McDonalds approach: to redesign the entire business model around mass production and franchising. Design once, build many (but spend a lot of money on the design). MacDonalds is the home of the Chicken McNugget: It takes a product that is variable and messy, and needs to be handled with care (chicken) and it turns it into a centrally-produced, encapsulated, idiot-proof format. You move all your high-tech staff and plant and specialist equipment into a central location where you use computers and robots and liquid nitrogen and god knows what else to churn out "nuggets", then you ship the nuggets to your local franchises, where the cheap staff dunk them in hot oil and serve them. The local staff never get to touch a knife or a piece of raw chicken themselves.

With cheap local staff and simple local plant, and there's a limit to how badly they can mess things up, because their job has already been made as simple as possible. You try to think of everything beforehand and streamline the local processes to be as close to idiot-proof as possible. The guys with the tough job are the ones back at the nugget factory (or the pebble factory) -- the cost and consistency of what happens there dictates the viability of the entire chain. If the mass-produced designs are right, and the product is designed well, the system runs smoothly and efficiently. If there's a problem at the nugget plant, it affects the whole chain. So it's critically important to get everything right (or nearly right) before you take the thing into mass-production.

This is why we haven't already had a big PBR roll-out: they want to hold off and make sure that they get it right, and then if a few pilot plants show that the model works, and there aren't any further cost or reliability issues with the pebbles ... poom ... the things will be everywhere. But the integrity, durability, reliability, manufacturing safety and cost of the pebbles themselves is critical. ErkDemon 16:22, 22 May 2007 (UTC)Reply

A good essay. It leaves a few things out:
  • The standardisation of reactor designs isn't just a PBMR phenomenon, all reactor designers are doing it. It's part of the maturing of the industry, which may be about to put the "green" hiccup in the past and enter the boom that everyone in the 1950s thought was only 20 years away. I said may.
  • The pebble technology has applications in other reactor designs. If I were directing research, I'd be very interested in investigating a (slightly) higher-temperature Magnox-style plant using the cladding techniques that are involved in the pebbles... and looking at that sort of thing is very much part of the generation IV reactor project. The AGR would have been a world-beater if their original intention of using beryllium-based cladding had worked... but it didn't.
  • There are a number of sleeping problems political still to be encountered... the traditional ones of course are bombs, wastes and accidents. All three have the potential to scuttle the PBMR in favour of other designs (remember we are talking here about politics, not engineering):
    • Bombs - the pebble-bed concept lends itself to online refuelling, and even if the fuel pellets are reprocessing-proof, what's to stop you slipping in some fertile pellets that aren't? Made for it.
Because of online refuelling, you can keep the excess reactivity low. So, if someone is adding extra fertile pellets in, they will soak up noticeable amounts of neutrons, which will increase the amount of fuel used, so producing plutonium will either be slow or will be noticed. Jrincayc 01:52, 29 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
That's the argument that is generally used. There are three problems with it. Firstly, it's a technical argument. Even if valid, frankly these subtleties have generally been lost on the antis. Secondly, it ignores the possibility that the operators will not care that they're being noticed, as happened with India. Thirdly and most important IMO, the point is not so much that the proliferation risk of a PBMR is all that high, it's rather that the risk however small is far greater than that posed by (say) a PWR or BWR - types which have both been resisted on the grounds of proliferation risk (however foolishly) - which gets us back to the politics. Our article on Nuclear fuel currently reads Reprocessing of spent commercial-reactor nuclear fuel has not been permitted in the United States due to nonproliferation considerations. That is high-burnup spent PWR and BWR fuel we are talking about there! Andrewa Andrewa 01:07, 31 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
    • Wastes - the PBMR concept not only abandons recycling of uranium and transuranics, it also throws away the moderator. First proposed nuclear fuel cycle in history to produce more nuclear waste per megawatt-hour than a once-through Westinghouse PWR.
    • Accidents - Graphite-moderated reactors quite simply have the worst accident record of any moderator type, so far. Windscale, Chernobyl. TMI was a hiccup by comparison.
But I like your analysis. Interesting times. Andrewa 01:58, 26 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
Though interesting, this is supposed to be a talk page about the article, not a discussion forum about the topic. There are lots of forums out there, only one Wikipedia though. Pro crast in a tor 10:06, 29 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, Wikipedia is not that special. theanphibian 19:16, 29 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
I think that's a valid point... but one of the special things about Wikipedia is that we do have articles on current events and controversial topics, and we try to be NPOV even there. And it's a challenge at times! Where to draw the line? I think this essay is helpful, and suitable for a talk page, because I think it will help us to improve the article. But, if that's not the case, then you're quite right, it doesn't belong here. There are lots of interesting things that don't belong here. The acid test is simple: Will it help us to improve the articles? Andrewa 00:35, 31 May 2007 (UTC)Reply
The topic was meant to prompt a few thoughts or discussions that might be useful to the development of the main page. But it ended up longer than intended, and if it isn't considered to be sufficiently useful I've no objection to it being deleted. All is happy! ErkDemon 00:33, 12 June 2007 (UTC)Reply
As I said above, it will probably be archived eventually. Even if not, it will probably remain in the history.
Another interesting question that it raises... is the McNugget approach successful? In the 1970s I shared a house with other undergraduate university students, and one was working as a cook in a fast food chain. He would never eat there, he looked rather green when any of the rest of us did, and occasionally told stories which don't bear repeating to try to convince us not to either. The problem seeemd to be that the job was so simple, there was no sense of responsibility for the product. Some chains now appear to be quite intentionally working to correct this, to introduce some responsibility and accountability and even pride into jobs at all levels.
On the other extreme, one of the common strands to several nuclear reactor accidents (in particular SL-1 and Chernobyl) is that the operators had been told and believed that they couldn't break the reactor. The Soviets had been saying since the mid-1950s that their control systems were foolproof; This was their justification for building reactors of a type that the rest of the world thought dangerously unstable, and they were very proud of the achievement. And they'd evidently communicated this to the management and staff of Chernobyl NPP to the point that nobody was worried about conducting an experiment in the absence of anyone trained in nuclear engineering. The collegues of the three victims of the SL-1 accident have replied to suggestions that one of the victims might have deliberately lifted the control rod assembly in order to commit suicide by pointing out that in their training they were repeatedly told how safe the whole rig was, and that they doubted that any of them knew of the danger that this action posed. Presumably, the same helio belief in the inherent safety of SL-1 was behind the (in hindsight appalling) decision to have these people unbolting and manually operating the control rod without having a nuclear engineer present to supervise.
It's impossible to make anything foolproof, because fools are so ingenious. Andrewa 02:54, 3 July 2007 (UTC)Reply
Firstly, the safety of HTRs is impeccable. Their safety has even been tested several times with accident conditions were ANY other nuclear reactor would have had a meltdown. Full control rod pull-out coupled with a complete shutdown of all cooling has been demonstrated several times in the AVR and the HT-10. HTRs are safe because no operator action is required to prevent the release of radioactive fission products.
There are two hypothetical accident cases situated around the inability to switch off the blowers. In these cases the staff has several hours time to switch off the blowers. That's why the ONLY safety grade equipment within the entire reactor are the switch-off controls for the blowers. And even then, there are multiple ways to switch something off, you know. Just get a fire axe and whack the power cable. You've got several hours time to do that...
Got a leak? No problem. Get a mechanic and weld a piece of metal above the hole once the core is depressurized to minimize future damage from air ingress. BTW, constructing a dangerous case wrt. to air ingress is more difficult than you think, it doesn't just happen with a hole...
The safety of the HTR is that if even only a fraction of the equipment works, and a severe accident happens, the staff can first have a lunch, then go down to the pub for a drink and then afterwards go on weekend trip, and NOTHING would happen. Sure the reactor would be scrap, but no release of fission products would occur. The only way that the core can overheat, and cause about one in a million fuel particles to break, resolves around the inability to switch the blower off during extremely severe accidents. And I am talking here about a terrorist-style-bombing-of-selected-components-extremely-severe accident...
Secondly about fuel waste. HTRs need much, much less fuel due to their insane burn-ups AND the uniformity of that burn-up within the spent fuel. Theoretically, one could mill the spent fuel and then do the usual reprocessing afterwards, but due to the extremely high burn-ups of HTRs this is highly uneconomical. Burn-ups around 200GWd/tHM in HTRs btw. translates to about 70-80% of all energy being created by fissioning breeded Plutonium. There is a reason why the US chose this reactor design to destroy Russian Plutonium: its simply insanely good in utilizing nuclear fuel. --Dio1982 (talk) 19:42, 31 January 2008 (UTC)Reply
I just want to say, this is by far, one of the most interesting "article" I had read on wikipedia. It is quite POV, I agree, but man does it provide insight. I guess that's the problem with POV, what some consider to be insightful would be considered to be total BS by others. 129.173.242.237 19:49, 5 November 2007 (UTC)Reply

Reference 9 is missing

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I just tried to access reference 9 but it appears to have 404d... 87.112.74.244 (talk) 11:46, 3 January 2008 (UTC)Reply

Citation needed on public radiation release

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In section Pebble_bed_reactor#Safety_features, it says:

Later problems with the AVR reactor resulted in a small release of radiation to the public.

I really think we need a citation for this event to clarify just how safe or unsafe these reactors are. I would also like to see information on exactly how "small" it was, if that information can be found.

The best reference I found in Googling is at the end of a page on how pebbles circulate within the reactor, but it is still very vague, and not a very authoritative source. Another potential reference is Reactor Watchdog Project's info page on PBMR, which has more detail, but also comes from a site with an obvious anti-nuclear spin.

It is also mentioned in THTR-300#Decommissioning, but I don't see a citation there either.

Different sources identify the event as happening in 1986, 1988, or May 4, 1985.

       Correct is May 4, 1986  —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.137.39.188 (talk) 10:00, 14 October 2010 (UTC)Reply 

LeBleu (talk) 00:44, 4 February 2008 (UTC)Reply

The NIRS is not a credible source. I have removed the link. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.162.2.55 (talk) 00:09, 17 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Also, it is very difficult to get exact information on these accidents, since most of them have to do with national security interests. 128.196.210.75 (talk) 22:35, 17 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

Check Dr. Moormann's paper http://hdl.handle.net/2128/3136 Jrincayc (talk) 13:16, 18 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
For the AVR, the best resource is probably "Decommissioning of the AVR Experimental Nuclear Power Plant, Disassembly of Plant Components and Entombment" by Arbeitsgemeinschaft Versuchsreaktor AVR in Nov 1991, available on the NEA cdrom http://www.nea.fr/abs/html/nea-1739.html. In it it states that the releases off site were less than 1 μSv/a from the exhaust air, 3.5 mSv/a at the edge of the fence when the plant was operating, and 0.42 mSv/a at the edge of the fence at worst when the plant was shutdown (due to some stored radioactive waste). Jrincayc (talk) 04:51, 27 November 2008 (UTC)Reply
The initial quotation was incorrect. The AVR had no problems. It was the THTR that had the pebble problem. I would imagine there's a decommissioning white paper on the THTR out there that discusses the incident, but I cannot find anything in English. 70.162.2.55 (talk) 06:36, 3 December 2008 (UTC)Reply

Neolithic nuclear reactors?

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Articles like this give me the impression that potentially, a shaman would need merely mix a powdered mineral containing unenriched uranium with a pure lampblack in order to make an ever-burning fire. (Though some ill might have befallen some villagers burned with it, he can scarcely be blamed for the judgments of the gods) Is it plausible for people to have made reactors this way in Neolithic times? Wnt (talk) 22:06, 7 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

Rather implausible. You might be able to do it with natural uranium, but you would need pure uranium, not uranium ore. See Chicago Pile-1 and Natural nuclear fission reactor Jrincayc (talk) 04:02, 17 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

burial at sea to disrupt thermoclines

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A pile of "spent" pebbles will still get hot, right? It seems like if the issues with cesium and strontium leaking out could be resolved, one could dump them in a sea with circulation issues to circulate the water by heating the depths. 65.46.169.246 (talk) 15:07, 16 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

It is unlikely that water cooling will be necessary to cool this type of spent fuel. Pebbles have relatively low power densities and are designed for high temperatures. A better idea is to keep them away from possible corrosive environments like saltwater.Ajnosek (talk) 18:18, 19 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Dimensions of the pebbles

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What are the typical dimensions of the pebbles used in such reactors? This should be included in the text of the Design section, as now it seems one can only roughly deduce their size by looking at one of the pictures. —Centrxtalk • 05:21, 18 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

6 cm in diameter is what AVR, HTR-10 and THTR used. Other sizes have been discussed (Someone from MIT put out a paper on this, but I don't remember the exact reference Kadak and others 2004ish maybe?) The pdf you can get from http://hdl.handle.net/2128/3136 has the pebble dimensions on page 2 for AVR. Jrincayc (talk) 03:39, 20 November 2008 (UTC)Reply

The pebble diameter for the AVR, THTR, HTR-10 as well as for the planned PBMR in South Africa and the planned HTR-PM in China are all 6cm. There is a lot of experience in manufacturing and handling as well as experimental data about the 6cm diameter pebbles due to the AVR and THTR program. There isn't really any benefit to changing this diameter in terms of reactor physics and thermohydraulics, but it would cause a significant amount of work in getting new reactors designed and licensed. --129.69.25.217 (talk) 12:36, 20 January 2009 (UTC)Reply

Textual error?

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Section "Safety Features", final paragraph contains the text "The graphite is the moderator for the reactor, and are strong containment vessels", which defies grammar and seems meaningless. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 212.159.59.5 (talk) 18:33, 27 February 2009 (UTC)Reply

Lots of logic probelms. I think a lot of this was written by someone who wasn't that skilled at english and worked in a hurry. consider this last sentence that I found:

The THTR management continued to charge the Chernobyl fallout for all the contamination in the surrounding, 
until the presence of Pa-233 ... 233Pa is not formed in uranium reactors as Chernobyl, but only in thorium reactors .... 
Thus, step by step, the THTR management report was accurate.

I'll clean this up but a once-over by someone who knows would help. OsamaBinLogin (talk) 00:10, 21 May 2012 (UTC)Reply

Cleaning up citations

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There's a scattering of [citation needed] markers -- any chemists out there who can assist? E.g.:

pebble leakage

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This paragraph ...

"A pebble-bed reactor thus can have all of its supporting machinery fail, and the reactor will not crack, melt, explode or spew hazardous wastes. It simply goes up to a designed "idle" temperature, and stays there. In that state, the reactor vessel radiates heat, but the vessel and fuel spheres remain intact and undamaged. The machinery can be repaired or the fuel can be removed. These safety features were tested (and filmed) with the German AVR reactor.[10]. All the control rods were removed, and the coolant flow was halted. Afterward, the fuel balls were sampled and examined for damage and there was none."

... is in contrast to ...

"Darüber hinaus wurde im Jahre 2008 ein Bericht von Rainer Moormann, Mitarbeiter des FZJ, veröffentlicht, in dem die übermäßig starke radioaktive Kontamination des Reaktors auf eine unzureichende Überwachung des Reaktorkerns sowie einen länger andauernden Betrieb bei unzulässig hohen Temperaturen zurückzuführen ist. Dies habe u. a. dazu geführt, dass Spaltprodukte aus den Graphitkugeln austreten konnten."

... from http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/AVR_%28J%C3%BClich%29 , which translates to ...

Furthermore in 2008 Rainer Moormann, who works at the FZJ, published a report where the overly high contamination of the reactor was caused by inadequate monitoring of the reactor core as well as by lengthy operations at inadmissively high temperatures. This has among others led to the release of fission products from the graphite balls.

Is Rainer Moormann's report correct? Did the pebbles leak due to excess temperature? What is excess temperature? I thought the reactor can go up to idle temperature which is not excessive and safe. Or was the leakage caused by additionally leakage of water into the reactor? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Darsie42 (talkcontribs) 15:31, 18 July 2010 (UTC)Reply

I think the excess temperature issues is a bit of a debate, that being how they happened, or even if they happened. I believe in-core temperature monitoring is difficult to do, and so they relied on ex-core monitoring to calculate the core temperature profiles. Pebbles with melt wires were put into the reactor, and operators were surprised to find that the wires indicated higher than expected temperatures. One hypothesis is that the pebbles travel through the core at different velocities, specifically slower velocities near the side. Because of this, some areas have groups of pebbles with large burnups while other areas with relatively fresh fuel would have large temperatures and fluxes.
In addition, I also recall an issue where AVR (I believe AVR) was not designed with guidetubes for the control rods. When operators used the control rods, the rods would jam through the pebbles, breaking some. This would contribute to fission product release, although I doubt this would effect the most significant barrier, that being the SiC layer of the TRISO fuel particles. I do not know how much "leakage" occurred, perhaps enough to be significant in that it created some contamination, but perhaps not enough to develop into a safety concern. AVR was a prototype reactor, and many of these types of lessons are the reasons for having prototypes. What I know is mostly hearsay, so I don't feel it will be accurate enough to put in the article. Ajnosek (talk) 18:44, 19 August 2011 (UTC)Reply

Reference 6 missing

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Reference 6 returns a 404 error mostly in German. Some sleuthing may be required to find the correct new link. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 65.160.229.33 (talk) 17:01, 14 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

Control rods: Article contradicts itself

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The article emphasizes at various spots that there are no control rods in this reactor design; however, later, it states:

"All the control rods were removed"

How does that fit together?

Intrr (talk) 19:14, 26 March 2011 (UTC)Reply

Answer:

Every reactor design has some kind of manual mechanism to control neutron absorption. The most common is control rods inserted into the center of the reactor, alongside the fuel rods. In a pebble bed reactor, this is clearly not a good idea. The alternative is to surround the fuel area with neutron reflecting material, and alter this material in order to control the amount of neutrons in the core. One design uses rotating cylinders, which are neutron reflecting on one side, and neutron absorbing on the other. Another method would be to have a solid block of neutron reflecting material, with spaces where neutron absorbing material can be slid into place. These sliding neutron absorbers are different from conventional control rods, but could also be reasonable described as control rods. I do not see a contradiction here, just vagueness.

Probably the details of the PBR design should be researched, properly referenced and described. However, the information in the article regarding control rods seems basically correct, though technically vague. The article mentions the sliding neutron absorbers, but does not specifically say that the PBR design used them.

Anyway, the whole point of the PBR design is that conventional neutron control systems are not needed for safe operation. So this control rod discussion is not all that important.

-Anon, March 28

Combustible graphite

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I would have to say that the statements about graphite burning are the results of original research. There are no citations regarding this. It was just presumed that because it was a form of Carbon that it would readily burn.

In fact, graphite is not combustible, or only slightly combustible at high temperatures. There is also pyrolytic Carbon that is also used in making TRISO fuel elements that is only combustible at high temperatures. Some actual research should be done on the subject regarding just how combustible graphite is under the temperature conditions in the reactor.

Tyrerj (talk) 06:00, 23 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

Chernobyl. That is all.178.15.151.163 (talk) 15:12, 9 August 2016 (UTC)Reply

The myth of using spent reactor fuel for nuclear weapons

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The article says: "it is difficult to re-use pebble-bed reactor waste for nuclear weapons"

Since it is impossible to make nuclear weapons from reactor "waste", that really makes no difference. Reactor waste contains Plutonium. However, it is what is called reactor grade Plutonium. If you read Wikipedia, you will find that there is more than one isotope of Plutonium and that only Plutonium-239 is desirable for making weapons. Plutonium that contains over 10% of Plutonium-240 is simply not suitable for making weapons. The Plutonium in reactor waste not only contains more than that much 240 but also contains 241 and 242. I suggest that you do some research instead of repeating incorrect anti-nuclear propaganda.

Tyrerj (talk) 06:27, 23 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

THTR-300 - Commission and 75 % of activity

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"In spite of the limited amount of radioactivity released (0.1 GBq 60Co, 137Cs, 233Pa)a commission of inquiry was appointed. The radioactivity in the vicinity of the THTR-300 was finally found to result 25% from Chernobyl and 75% from THTR-300."

This is incorrect and probably a lie coming from an editor who should know the final report of that commission. It rejected all claims coming from anti-nuclear-power-activists regarding the 75 % as unfounded. It actually states that the activity in the vicinity coming from the plant was so small that it could not be measured and was not detected by the installed measuring stations and estimated it based on the measured emissions(!) of that week using a distribution model to be less than 1 Bq / m² of soil surface at maximum (while the immissions(!) coming from Chernobyl in that area at that time being around 10000 Bq / m²).

The final report of that commission:

https://www.landtag.nrw.de/portal/WWW/dokumentenarchiv/Dokument?Id=MMV10%2F561%7C1%7C0

Jwalter (talk) 08:24, 31 May 2016 (UTC)Reply

Does pebble-bed include particle-bed

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Project Timberwind used particle-bed reactor designs - are they considered pebble-bed reactors ? - Rod57 (talk) 17:40, 15 April 2021 (UTC)Reply

I still don't know - but PB reactors seem to use 60mm diam 'pebble' elements, each containing many 1 mm diam coated fuel particles. - Rod57 (talk) 09:53, 9 October 2021 (UTC)Reply

Reactor sketch - gas circulation direction?

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There seems to be a problem with the sketch of the reactor. Where does it come from? There's no source listed. Here's what I found disturbing: the arrows that illustrate gas circulation and these arrows suggest that the cooling gas is forced down the pebble bed and then down through the heat exchanger which is the opposite of natural gas circulation due to temperature and density changes. Without pumping, the gas would heat and rise in the reactor and cool down and fall in the heat exchanger. This natural circulation seems like a fail-safe for the pumps. Also, forcing the flow down through the pebble bed could cause convection heat bubbles to form - the hotter the area, the more it would resist the forced downwards flow (the opposite would happen in the exchanger, though there the linear structure and coolant flow make it much less relevant). - not signed by User:78.11.145.7 06:18, 26 July 2021‎‎

The sketch may be based on similar in [1] which has comments that also question the direction of gas flow. - Rod57 (talk) 09:00, 9 October 2021 (UTC)Reply
[2] has a more detailed diagram that also shows gas flow down in the chinese HTR-10, so I guess down is correct. That blog refs China 210 MWe pebble bed reactor starts construction April, 2011 which has more refs. - Rod57 (talk) 09:48, 9 October 2021 (UTC)Reply
AVR reactor says its helium coolant flows UP through the core. - Rod57 (talk) 18:08, 9 October 2021 (UTC)Reply