Small modular reactor
Small modular reactors (SMRs) are a type of nuclear fission reactor which are smaller than conventional reactors, and manufactured at a plant and brought to a site to be assembled. Modular reactors allow for less on-site construction, increased containment efficiency, and heightened nuclear materials security. SMRs have been proposed as a way to bypass financial barriers that have plagued conventional nuclear reactors.
Several designs exist for SMR, ranging from scaled down versions of existing nuclear reactor designs, to entirely new generation IV designs. Both thermal-neutron reactors and fast-neutron reactors have been proposed.
Advantages and potential uses
The main advantage of small modular reactors is that they could be manufactured and assembled at a central factory location. They can then be sent to their new location where they can be installed with very little difficulty. SMRs are particularly useful in remote locations where there is usually a deficiency of trained workers and a higher cost of shipping. Containment is more efficient, and proliferation concerns could be lowered.[1] SMRs are also more flexible in that they do not necessarily need to be hooked into a large power grid, and can generally be attached to other modules to provide increased power supplies if necessary.
The electricity needs in remote locations are usually small and highly variable.[2] Large nuclear power plants are generally rather inflexible in their power generation capabilities. SMRs have a load-following design so that when electricity demands are low they will produce a lower amount of electricity.
Many SMRs are designed to use new fuel ideas that allow for higher burnup and longer fuel cycles. Longer refueling intervals can decrease proliferation risks and lower chances of radiation escaping containment. For reactors in remote areas, accessibility can be troublesome, so longer fuel life can be very helpful.
SMRs could be used to power significant users of energy, such as large vessels or production facilities (e.g. water treatment/purification, or mines). Remote locations often have difficulty finding economically efficient, reliable energy sources. Small nuclear reactors have been considered as solutions to many energy problems in these hard-to-reach places. Cogeneration options are also possible.[3]
Because of the lack of trained personnel available in remote areas, SMRs have to be inherently safe. Many larger plants have active safety features that require "intelligent input", or human controls. Many of these SMRs are being made using passive or inherent safety features. Passive safety features are engineered, but do not require outside input to work. A pressure release valve may have a spring that can be pushed back when the pressure gets too high. Inherent safety features require no engineered moving parts to work. They only depend on physical laws.[4]
Operation
There are a variety of different types of SMR. Some are simplified versions of current reactors, others involve entirely new technologies.[5]
All current small modular reactors use nuclear fission.
When an unstable nucleus (such as 235
U) absorbs an extra neutron, the atom will split, releasing large quantities of energy in the form of heat and radiation.
The split atom will also release neutrons, which can then be absorbed by other unstable nuclei, causing a chain reaction. A sustained fission chain is necessary to generate nuclear power.
SMR designs include thermal-neutron reactors and fast-neutron reactors.
Thermal-neutron reactors rely on a moderator to slow neutrons and generally use 235
U as fissile material. Most currently operating nuclear reactors are of this type.
Fast reactors don’t use moderators to slow down the neutrons, therefore they rely on the nuclear fuel being able to absorb neutrons travelling at higher speeds.
This usually means changing the fuel arrangement within the core, or using different fuel types. 239
Pu is more likely to absorb a high-speed neutron than 235
U.
A benefit of fast reactors is that they can be designed to be breeder reactors.
As these reactors produce energy, they also let off enough neutrons to transmute non-fissionable elements into fissionable ones.
A very common use for a breeder reactor is to surround the core in a "blanket" of 238
U, which is the most easily found isotope of uranium.
Once the 238
U undergoes a neutron absorption reaction, it becomes 239
Pu, which can be removed from the reactor once it is time to refuel, and used as more fuel once it has been cleaned.[6]
Cooling
Currently, most reactors use water as a coolant. New reactor designs are experimenting with different coolant types. Liquid metal cooled reactors have been used both in the United States and other countries for some time. Gas cooled reactors and molten salt reactors are also being looked at as an option for very high temperature operation.[7][8]
Thermal/electrical generation
Traditionally, nuclear reactors use a coolant loop to heat water into steam, and use that steam to run turbines to generate electricity. Some new gas-cooled reactor designs are meant to drive a gas-powered turbine, rather than using a secondary water system. Thermal energy from nuclear reactors can also be used directly, without conversion to electricity. Nuclear reactor heat can be used in hydrogen production and other commercial operations,[7] such as water desalination and the production of petroleum products (extracting oil from tar sands, creating synthetic oil from coal, etc.).[9]
Staffing
Several SMR developers are claiming that their designs will require fewer staff members to run the reactors because of the increased inherent and passive safety systems. Fewer staff members is also a safety risk if plant owners decide to cut corners by assigning even fewer support staff to each reactor.[10] Some of the reactors, like the Toshiba 4S, are reportedly designed to run with little supervision.[11]
Load following
Nuclear power plants have been historically deployed to cover the base load of the electricity demand.[12] Some nuclear power plants might perform daily load cycling operation (i.e. load following) between 50% and 100% of their rated power. With respect to the insertion of control rods or comparable action to reduce the nuclear power generation, a more efficient alternative might be the “Load Following by Cogeneration”, i.e. diverting the excess of power, respect to the electricity demand, to an auxiliary system. A suitable cogeneration system needs:
- to have a demand of electricity and/or heat in the region of 500 MWe–1.5 GWt;
- to meet a significant market demand;
- to have access to adequate input to process;
- to be flexible: cogeneration might operate at full load during the night when the request of electricity is low, and be turned off during the daytime.
From the economic standpoint, it is essential that the investment in the auxiliary system is profitable. District heating, desalination and hydrogen have been proposed as technically and economically feasible options.[13] SMR can be ideal to do load following being used for desalination over the night. [14]
Waste reduction
Many SMRs are fast reactors that are designed to have higher fuel burnup rates, reducing the amount of waste produced. At higher neutron energy more fission products can be usually tolerated. As mentioned before, some SMRs are also breeder reactors, which not only "burn" fuels like 235
U, but will also convert fertile materials like 238
U (which occurs naturally at a much higher concentration than 235
U) into usable fuels.[6]
Some reactors are designed to run on alternative thorium fuel cycle, which offers significantly reduced long-term waste radiotoxicity compared to uranium cycle.[15]
There has been some interest in the concept of a traveling wave reactor, a new type of breeder reactor that uses the fuel it breeds. The idea would eliminate the need to remove the spent fuel and "clean" it before reusing any newly bred fuel.[16]
Safety
Since there are several different ideas for SMRs, there are many different safety features that can be involved. Coolant systems can use natural circulation – convection – so there are no pumps, no moving parts that could break down, and they keep removing decay heat after the reactor shuts down, so that the core doesn’t overheat and melt. Negative temperature coefficients in the moderators and the fuels keep the fission reactions under control, causing the fission reactions to slow down as temperature increases.[17] While passive control is a key selling point, a functioning reactor may also need an active cooling system in case the passive system fails. This addition is expected to increase the cost of implementation.[10] Additionally, SMR designs call for weaker containment structures.[18]
Some SMR designs have underground placement of the reactors and spent-fuel storage pools, which provides more security. Smaller reactors would be easier to upgrade quickly, require a permanent workforce, and have better passive quality controls.[19]
Economics
A key driver of SMRs are the alleged improved economies of scale, compared to larger reactors, that stem from the ability to prefabricate them in a manufacturing plant/factory. Yet, according to some studies, the capital cost between SMRs and larger reactors are practically equivalent[20]. A key disadvantage is that the improved affordability can only be realised if the factory is built in the first place, and this is likely to require initial orders for 40–70 units, which some experts think unlikely.[21]
Another economic advantage of SMR is that the initial cost of building a power plant using SMR is much less than that of constructing a much more complex, non-modular, large nuclear plant. This makes SMR a smaller-risk venture for power companies than other nuclear power plants.[22]
Licensing
A major barrier is the licensing process, historically developed for large reactors, preventing the simple deployment of several identical units in different countries.[23] In particular the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission process for licensing has focused mainly on large commercial reactors. The design and safety specifications, staffing requirements and licensing fees have all been geared toward reactors with an electrical output of more than 700MWe.[24]
Licensing for SMRs has been an ongoing discussion. There was a workshop in October 2009 about licensing difficulties and another in June 2010, with a US congressional hearing in May 2010. With growing worries about climate change and greenhouse gas emissions, added to problems with hydrocarbon supplies from foreign countries and accidents like the BP oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico, many US government agencies are working to push the development of different licensing for SMRs.[25] However, some argue that weakening safety regulations to push the development of SMRs may cancel out their enhanced safety characteristics.[26][18]
Non-proliferation
Nuclear proliferation, or the use of nuclear materials to create weapons, is a concern for small modular reactors. As SMRs have lower generation capacity and are physically small, they are intended to be deployed in many more locations than existing nuclear plants. This means both at more sites in existing nuclear power states, and in more countries that previously did not have nuclear plants. It is also intended that SMR sites have much lower staffing levels than current nuclear plants. Because of the increased number of sites, with fewer staff, physical protection and security becomes an increased challenge which could increase proliferation risks.[27][28]
Many SMRs are designed to lessen the danger of materials being stolen or misplaced.
Nuclear reactor fuel can be low-enriched uranium, with a concentration of less than 20% of fissile 235
U.
This low quantity, non-weapons-grade uranium makes the fuel less desirable for weapons production.
Once the fuel has been irradiated, the fission products mixed with the fissile materials are highly radioactive and require special handling to remove safely, another non-proliferation feature.
Some SMR designs are intended to have lifetime cores so the SMRs do not need refuelling. This improves proliferation resistance by not requiring any on-site nuclear fuel handling. But it also means that there will be large inventories of fissile material within the SMRs to sustain a long lifetime, which could make it a more attractive proliferation target. A 200 MWe 30-year core life light water SMR could contain about 2.5 tonnes of plutonium toward the end of its working life.[28]
Light-water reactors designed to run on the thorium fuel cycle offer increased proliferation resistance compared to conventional uranium cycle, though molten salt reactors have a substantial risk.[29][30]
The modular construction of SMRs is another useful feature. Because the reactor core is often constructed completely inside a central manufacturing facility, fewer people have access to the fuel before and after irradiation.[citation needed]
Reactor designs
There are numerous new reactor designs being generated all over the world. A small selection of the current SMR designs is listed below.
Designed or under design | Seeking license | Licensed in one or more countries | Under construction |
Operational | Canceled | Retired |
The stated power refers to the capacity of one reactor unless specified otherwise.
Name | Gross power (MWe) | Type | Producer | Country | Status |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
4S | 10–50 | SFR | Toshiba | Japan | Design (Detailed) |
ABV-6 | 6–9 | PWR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Design (Detailed) |
ACP100 Linglong One | 125 | PWR | China National Nuclear Corporation | China | Under construction[32] |
AP300[33] | 300 | PWR | Westinghouse Electric Company | United States | Design (Detailed) |
ARC-100 | 100 | SFR | ARC Nuclear | Canada | Design (Vendor Review)[34] |
ANGSTREM[35] | 6 | LFR | OKB Gidropress | Russia | Design (Conceptual) |
B&W mPower | 195 | PWR | Babcock & Wilcox | United States | Cancelled |
BANDI-60 | 60 | PWR | KEPCO | South Korea | Design (Detailed)[36] |
BREST-OD-300[37] | 300 | LFR | Atomenergoprom | Russia | Under construction[38] |
BWRX-300[39] | 300 | BWR | GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy | United States/Japan | Design (Pre-licensing communications with the US NRC initiated.[40]) |
CANDU SMR | 300 | PWR (Heavy) | Candu Energy Inc. | Canada | Design (Conceptual) |
CAP200 | >200 | PWR | SPIC | China | Design (Completion) |
CAREM | 27–30 | PWR | CNEA | Argentina | Under construction |
Copenhagen Atomics Waste Burner | 50 | MSR | Copenhagen Atomics | Denmark | Design (Conceptual) |
DHR400 | 400 (non-electric) | PWR | CNCC | China | Design (Basic) |
ELENA[41] | 0.068 | PWR | Kurchatov Institute | Russia | Design (Conceptual) |
Energy Well[42] | 8.4 | MSR | cs:Centrum výzkumu Řež[43] | Czechia | Design (Conceptual) |
eVinci[44] | 5 | HPR | Westinghouse Electric Company | United States | Design (Pre-licensing communications with the US NRC initiated.[45]) |
Flexblue | 160 | PWR | Areva TA / DCNS group | France | Design (Conceptual) |
Fuji MSR | 200 | MSR | International Thorium Molten Salt Forum (ITMSF) | Japan | Design (Conceptual) |
GT-MHR | 285 | GTMHR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Design (Completed) |
G4M | 25 | LFR | Gen4 Energy | United States | Design (Conceptual) (Company Ceased Trading) |
GT-MHR | 50 | GTMHR | General Atomics, Framatome | United States/France | Design (Conceptual) |
HAPPY200 | 200 MWt | PWR | SPIC | China | Design (Conceptual) |
HTMR-100 | 35 | GTMHR | Stratek Global | South Africa | Design (Conceptual)[32] |
HTR-PM | 210 (2 reactors one turbine) | HTGR | China Huaneng | China | Operational (Single reactor. Station connected to the grid in December 2021.)[46] |
IMSR400 | 195 (x2) | MSR | Terrestrial Energy[47] | Canada | Design (Detailed) |
IRIS | 335 | PWR | Westinghouse-led | International | Design (Basic) |
i-SMR | 170 | PWR | Innovative Small Modular Reactor Development Agency (KHNP and KAERI) | South Korea | Design (Basic) |
KLT-40S Akademik Lomonosov | 70 | PWR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Operational May 2020[48] (floating plant) |
Last Energy | 20 | PWR | Last Energy | United States | Design (Conceptual)[49] |
MMR | 5-15 | HTGR | Ultra Safe Nuclear Corporation | United States/Canada | Company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.[50] Had been seeking licensing[51] |
MCSFR | 50–1000 | MCSFR | Elysium Industries | United States | Design (Conceptual) |
MHR-100 | 25–87 | HTGR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Design (Conceptual) |
MHR-T[a] | 205.5 (x4) | HTGR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Design (Conceptual) |
MRX | 30–100 | PWR | JAERI | Japan | Design (Conceptual) |
NP-300 | 100–300 | PWR | Areva TA | France | Design (Conceptual) |
Nuward | unknown | PWR | consortium | France | Design (Conceptual). In July 2024, existing design discontinued for a simpler redesign.[52][53] |
OPEN100 | 100 | PWR | Energy Impact Center | United States | Design (Conceptual)[54] |
PBMR-400 | 165 | HTGR | Eskom | South Africa | Cancelled - demonstration plant postponed indefinitely[55] |
RITM-200N | 55 | PWR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Under construction[56][57] |
RITM-200S | 106 | PWR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Under construction[58] |
Rolls-Royce SMR | 470 | PWR | Rolls-Royce | United Kingdom | Seeking UK GDA licensing in April 2022[59] A 16-month assessment was started in April 2023[60] |
SEALER[61][62] | 55 | LFR | Blykalla | Sweden | Design |
SHELF-M | 10 | PWR | NIKIET | Russia | Design[63][64][65] |
SMART100 | 110 | PWR | KAERI | South Korea | Licensed in Korea (standard design approval)[66][67] |
SMR-160 | 160 | PWR | Holtec International | United States | Design (Conceptual) |
SMR-300 | 300 | PWR | Holtec International | United States | Seeking UK licensing[68] |
SVBR-100[69][70] | 100 | LFR | OKB Gidropress | Russia | Design (Detailed) |
SSR-W | 300–1000 | MSR | Moltex Energy[71] | United Kingdom | Design (Phase 1, vendor design review).[72] |
S-PRISM | 311 | FBR | GE Hitachi Nuclear Energy | United States/Japan | Design (Detailed) |
TEPLATOR | 50 (non-electric) | PWR (heavy water) | University of West Bohemia | Czech Republic | Design (Conceptual) |
TMSR-500 | 500 | MSR | ThorCon[73] | Indonesia | Design (Conceptual) |
TMSR-LF1 | 10[74] | MSR | China National Nuclear Corporation | China | Under construction |
U-Battery | 4 | HTGR | U-Battery consortium[b] | United Kingdom | Cancelled. Design archived.[75] |
VBER-300 | 325 | PWR | OKBM Afrikantov | Russia | Design |
VK-300 | 250 | BWR | Atomstroyexport | Russia | Design (Detailed) |
VOYGR[76] | 50-77 (x6)[77] |
PWR | NuScale Power | United States | Licensed in the USA (50 MWe module). Seeking NRC licensing for reactor power output upgrade to 77 MWe of 6 modules (462 MWe).[78] |
VVER-300 | 300 | BWR | OKB Gidropress | Russia | Design (Conceptual) |
Westinghouse SMR | 225 | PWR | Westinghouse Electric Company | United States | Cancelled. Preliminary design completed.[79] |
Xe-100 | 80 | HTGR | X-energy[80] | United States | Design (Conceptual) |
Updated as of 2022[update]. Some reactors are not included in IAEA Report.[81][82][31] Not all IAEA reactors are listed there are added yet and some are added (anno 2023) that were not yet listed in the now dated IAEA report. |
- ^ Multi-unit complex based on the GT-MHR reactor design
- ^ Urenco Group in collaboration with Jacobs and Kinectrics
Proposed sites
Canada
In 2018, the Canadian province of New Brunswick announced it would invest $10 million to attract SMR research to New Brunswick with a potential site for a demonstration project at the Point Lepreau Nuclear Generating Station.[83] It was later announced that SMR proponents Advanced Reactor Concepts[84] and Moltex[85] would open offices in New Brunswick with the potential of developing sites at Lepreau.
China
In July 2019 China National Nuclear Corporation announced it would start building a demonstration ACP100 SMR on the north-west side of the existing Changjiang Nuclear Power Plant by the end of the year.[86]
United Kingdom
In 2016 it was reported that the UK Government was assessing sites for deploying SMRs in Wales - including the former Trawsfynydd nuclear power station - and on the site of former nuclear or coal-fired power stations in Northern England. Existing nuclear sites including Bradwell, Hartlepool, Heysham, Oldbury, Sizewell, Sellafield and Wylfa are thought to be possibilities.[87]
United States
The Tennessee Valley Authority announced it is applying for an Early Site Permit Application (ESPA) to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission in May 2017 for potentially siting an SMR at its Clinch River Site in Tennessee. This ESPA would be valid for up to 20 years, and addresses site safety, environmental protection and emergency preparedness associated. TVA has not made a technology selection so this ESPA would be applicable for any of the light-water reactor SMR designs under development in the United States.[88]
The Utah Associated Municipal Power Systems (UAMPS) announced a teaming partnership with Energy Northwest to explore siting a NuScale Power reactor in Idaho, possibly on the Department of Energy's Idaho National Laboratory.[89]
The Galena Nuclear Power Plant in Galena, Alaska was a proposed micro nuclear reactor installation intended to reduce the costs and environmental pollution required to power the town. It was a potential deployment for the Toshiba 4S reactor.
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- ^ "Advances in Small Modular Reactor Technology Developments" (PDF). aris.iaea.org. IAEA. Retrieved 19 December 2023.
- ^ https://www2.gnb.ca/content/gnb/en/news/news_release.2018.06.0832.html
- ^ https://www2.gnb.ca/content/gnb/en/departments/erd/news/news_release.2018.07.0906.html
- ^ https://www2.gnb.ca/content/gnb/en/departments/erd/news/news_release.2018.07.0930.html
- ^ "CNNC launches demonstration SMR project". World Nuclear News. 22 July 2019. Retrieved 22 July 2019.
- ^ McCann, Kate (2 April 2016). "Mini nuclear power stations in UK towns move one step closer". The Sunday Telegraph. Retrieved 3 April 2016.
- ^ "TVA - Small Modular Reactors". www.tva.gov. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
- ^ "Carbon Free". www.uamps.com. Retrieved 2016-04-08.
Further reading
- Office of Nuclear Energy, Science and Technology (January 1993). "DOE Fundamentals Handbook: Nuclear Physics and Reactor Theory" (PDF). U.S. Department of Energy. DOE-HDBK-1019, DE93012223. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-11-09.
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