From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In nuclear
physics, an energy amplifier is a novel type
of nuclear power
reactor, a subcritical reactor, in which
an energetic particle beam is used to
stimulate a reaction, which in turn releases enough energy to power
the particle accelerator and leave an
energy profit for power generation. The concept has more recently
been referred to as an accelerator-driven system
(ADS).
History
The concept is credited to Carlo Rubbia, a Nobel Prize nuclear physicist and former
director of Europe's CERN
international nuclear physics lab. He published a
proposal for a power reactor based on a proton cyclotron accelerator with a beam energy of
800 MeV to 1 GeV, and a target
with thorium as fuel and lead as a coolant.
Principle and
feasibility
The energy amplifier uses a synchrotron or other appropriate
accelerator (e.g. cyclotron, fixed-field alternating-gradient)
to produce a beam of protons. These hit a heavy metal target such
as lead, thorium or uranium and produce neutrons through the process of spallation. It might be
possible to increase the neutron flux through the use of a neutron
amplifier, a thin film of fissile material surrounding the spallation
source; the use of neutron amplification in CANDU reactors has been
proposed. While CANDU is a critical design, many of the
concepts can be applied to a sub-critical system.[1][2] Thorium
nuclei absorb neutrons, thus breeding fissile uranium-233, an isotope of uranium which is not
found in nature. Moderated neutrons produce U-233 fission,
releasing energy.
This design is entirely plausible with currently available
technology, but requires more study before it can be declared both
practical and economical.
Advantages
The concept has several potential advantages over conventional
nuclear fission reactors:
- Subcritical design means that the reaction could not run away —
if anything went wrong, the reaction would stop and the reactor
would cool down. A meltdown could however occur if the
ability to cool the core was lost.
- Thorium is an abundant
element — much more so than uranium — reducing strategic and political
supply issues and eliminating costly and energy-intensive isotope separation.
There is enough thorium to generate energy for at least several
thousand years at current consumption rates.[3]
- The energy amplifier would produce very little plutonium, so the design is
believed to be more proliferation-resistant than
conventional nuclear power (although the question of uranium-233 as nuclear weapon
material must be assessed carefully).
- The possibility exists of using the reactor to consume
plutonium, reducing the world stockpile of the very-long-lived
element.
- Less long-lived radioactive waste is produced — the
waste material would decay after 500 years to the radioactive level
of coal ash.
- No new science is required; the technologies to build the
energy amplifier have all been demonstrated. Building an energy
amplifier requires only some engineering effort, not fundamental
research (unlike nuclear fusion proposals).
- Power generation might be economical compared to current
nuclear reactor designs if the total fuel cycle and decommissioning costs are
considered.
- The design could work on a relatively small scale, making it
more suitable for countries without a well-developed power
grid system
- Inherent safety and safe fuel transport could make the
technology more suitable for developing
countries as well as in densely populated areas.
Disadvantages
- General technical difficulties.
- Each reactor needs its own facility (particle
accelerator) to generate the high energy proton beam, which is
very costly.
- Apart from linear accelerators, which are very expensive, no
proton accelerator of sufficient power and energy (> ~12 MW at
1GeV) has ever been built. Currently, the Spallation Neutron Source
utilizes a 1.44 MW proton beam to produce its neutrons, with
upgrades envisioned to 5 MW.[4]
See also
References
External
links