First molten-salt thorium nuclear reactor experiment in over 45 years starts in the Netherlands Petten researchers prepare to place the crucibles containing thorium salt into the reactor Credit: Thorium Energy WorldThe first phase of the Salt Irradiation Experiment (SALIENT) has begun at the Nuclear Research and Consultancy Group
in Petten, a nuclear research facility on the Dutch North Sea coast.
The experiment is being carried out in cooperation with the European
Commission Laboratory Joint Research Center-ITU (JRC) in Karlsruhe,
Germany, and initially aims to produce cleaner reactor fuel, and will
then look at materials for reactor construction. The last research into
molten salt thorium reactors was carried out at the Oak Ridge laboratory in the US. Inside the high flux reactor Credit: Thorium Energy WorldThe
Petten team is using the site’s high flux reactor under product manager
Sander DeGroot and lead scientist Ralph Hania. Using the high heat
inside the reactor, the team is melting a sample of thorium salt fuel — a
mixture of lithium fluoride and thorium fluoride — inside an insulated
graphite crucible, and over time the neutron bombardment will trigger
nuclear reactions that will transmute the thorium in the sample into
uranium isotopes that can undergo nuclear fission.
The team’s first task is to remove noble metals (that is, those which
are not involved in the reactions) to make a more efficient fuel; they
are trying two methods for this, using a nickel foil in one crucible and
a cube of highly porous nickel in another, hoping that the noble metals
will preferentially precipitate out onto the nickel. The JRC is
providing the thorium salts for the project and will analyse the fission
products after irradiation to assess their stability. This stage will
feed into later research into how to deal with the waste from a molten
salt thorium reactor.
The next stage of the project will use a different fuel mixture also
containing beryllium, known as FlIBe, which is believed to be the best
mixture for a working thorium nuclear reactor (the mixture without
beryllium is designed for a specific type of reactor that ‘burns’
nuclear waste from conventional nuclear reactors). This phase will test
the resilience to corrosion and high operating temperatures of materials
to be used in the construction of molten salt thorium reactors, such as
different grades of steel, the nickel alloy Hastelloy (which was used
at Oak Ridge) and titanium-zirconium-molybdenum alloys.
In later stages, the team plans to install systems circulating molten
salt around loops; the Petten high-flux reactor is one of few in the
world large enough for this.
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