TR10: Traveling-Wave Reactor
A new reactor design could make nuclear power safer and cheaper, says John Gilleland.
Enriching the uranium for reactor fuel and opening the reactor  periodically to refuel it are among the most cumbersome and expensive  steps in running a nuclear plant. And after spent fuel is removed from  the reactor, reprocessing it to recover usable materials has the same  drawbacks, plus two more: the risks of nuclear-weapons proliferation and  environmental pollution. 
  These problems are mostly accepted as a given, but not by a group of  researchers at Intellectual Ventures, an invention and investment  company in Bellevue, WA. The scientists there have come up with a  preliminary design for a reactor that requires only a small amount of  enriched fuel--that is, the kind whose atoms can easily be split in a  chain reaction. It's called a traveling-wave reactor. And while  government researchers intermittently bring out new reactor designs, the  traveling-wave reactor is noteworthy for having come from something  that barely exists in the nuclear industry: a privately funded research  company.
 As it runs, the core in a traveling-wave reactor gradually converts  nonfissile material into the fuel it needs. Nuclear reactors based on  such designs "theoretically could run for a couple of hundred years"  without refueling, says John Gilleland, manager of nuclear programs at  Intellectual Ventures. 
 Gilleland's aim is to run a nuclear reactor on what is now waste.  Conventional reactors use uranium-235, which splits easily to carry on a  chain reaction but is scarce and expensive; it must be separated from  the more common, nonfissile uranium-238 in special enrichment plants.  Every 18 to 24 months, the reactor must be opened, hundreds of fuel  bundles removed, hundreds added, and the remainder reshuffled to supply  all the fissile uranium needed for the next run. This raises  proliferation concerns, since an enrichment plant designed to make  low-enriched uranium for a power reactor differs trivially from one that  makes highly enriched material for a bomb.
 But the traveling-wave reactor needs only a thin layer of enriched  U-235. Most of the core is U-238, millions of pounds of which are  stockpiled around the world as leftovers from natural uranium after the  U-235 has been scavenged. The design provides "the simplest possible  fuel cycle," says Charles W. Forsberg, executive director of the Nuclear  Fuel Cycle Project at MIT, "and it requires only one uranium enrichment  plant per planet." -TechnologyReview
 
 

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