Posted on 01/27/2020 9:28:47 PM PST by BenLurkin
Lucas - Prince of Darkness.
Nothing radical in the design which is a good thing.
One of the problems with existing reactors is after a scram, it takes about 2 days to cool down sufficiently to be truly “shut down”
You need the cooling pumps working 24-7 for those two days or things will start to go bad.
This is what caused the problems in Japan.
Smaller reactor gives you a much shorter cool-down cycle.
Eliminating every coal fired plant in the UK is a fart in the wind compared to what’s happening in China.
That said, I do like the idea of small modular reactors.
I think this is a great idea, and it should have been done years ago. Instead of one big huge reactor that is hard to control if there is a problem, divide the huge source into many more smaller easier to handle and control sources.
Yep, rather than satisfy the load with one huge hard to control source, crowd source it to more smaller easier to control sources.
I hope they work a little better than their Trent turbofans.
As long as they are from orbit just to be sure. :)
A large warship is the equivalent of a small town, except the town does not have to be propelled from place to place. A reactor smaller than a one-car garage can keep it running for years on end, and is typically serviced and maintained by well trained twenty-somethings. Safety and efficiency. Economy will follow with volume of production.
USSR satellites were nuclear powered because they lagged in solar cell technology. I wonder how those rectors worked? I heard they were small and worked really well.
It’s about time! Submarine sized nuclear reactors could easily power ships, railroad locomotives, and even semi-trucks if downsized just a bit. Anyone pushing “zero carbon” technology knows deep down that it will NEVER happen unless nuclear power is used.
Since it is a PWR type with solid fuel you can use the data at the page below as it is the same proportianality for a big and a small reactor.
https://www.radioactivity.eu.com/site/pages/Reactor_Shutdown.htm
i.e. for a 400 MWe with a 1200 MWth reactor after 1 sec it is 7 % or 84 W heat, after 1 min 60 MW, after 1 h it is 18 MW, a day 7.2 MW etc.
Ok, thats the funniest thing I have seen today
Thanks you
Lucas used to build refrigerators.
Which is why the English drink their beer warm.
Fukushima was caused by 20 years of criminally negligent maintenance.
Those aren't reactors, not in the sense you mean. There's no fission, they just harness the heat produced by radioactive decay. Same way the Voyager space probes were powered (for 43 years and counting).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radioisotope_thermoelectric_generator
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voyager_1
>> Anyone pushing zero carbon technology knows deep down that it will NEVER happen unless nuclear power is used.
Many pushing zero carbon dont know this at all because they have no knowledge of basic thermodynamics, economics, and the energy required to run a modern technological civilization. They are operating on pure emotion.
Thanks!
The consortium calculates it can get the cost of a nuclear power station producing 440 MWe to about GBP1.75 billion, ($2.29 billion)($5,200/Kw) which means being able to sell electricity at below GBP60/MWh ($78.44/MWh).
They should do better than $78.44/MWh to be competitive.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.