Cheap and Benign energy LFTR (Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor) technology
Kirk Sorenson is promoting LFTR (Liquid Fluoride Thorium Reactor) technology.
This is the Safest, Cleanest, most efficient nuclear power generation devised.
This is the Safest, Cleanest, most efficient nuclear power generation devised.
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fluoride compounds to turn a turbine. . I understand
this from the iroseland link above. -- j
nope. . I didn't read far enough. . here 'tis:::
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"The coolant salt passes out of the reactor containment region
and heats the gaseous working fluid of a gas-turbine power
conversion system, analogous to the gas turbines used in
today’s jet engines. The hot, high-pressure gas expands in a
turbine, generating shaft work that turns a generator and
produces electricity while also turning a compressor."
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this implies that the heat from reaction of the fuel-
loaded lithium- / beryllium-fluoride is handed off to a
gas which turns the turbine -- an unnamed gas. . they
go past this fact with impunity, as though that gas
was an insignificant choice. . probably not. . it must
take up heat convectively, not being a liquid which
allows conductive heat transfer, and it must turn the
turbine as it expands because of its heat. . then, its
waste heat must be removed. . this part of the design
is inefficient. . very. -- j
p.s. iroseland link::: http://flibe-energy.com/
p.p.s. helium gas is shown in the diagram of the reactor
set-up for test and evaluation, not power generation.
.
Is the application process unnecessarily complicated by regulatory requirements?
The reason why I have described them as being the safest is because the LFTR technology is at atmospheric pressure compared to the degree of pressurisation of other reactor designs which use EXPLOSIVE steam (the HAZARD if the water is NOT kept COOLED properly).
The big safety mechanism of LFTR is the molten salt is held in place with a refrigerated plug, which if it were to fail the molten salt would just drain into the reservoir where it is allowed to cool and resolidify.
Comparing the fuel production chain, refining and disposal, there is no threat of nuclear weapons materials going missing. The fuel efficiency is quoted in the high 90s(%) versus current nuclear ~0.1(%) but requires reprocessing. LFTR is said to be a great way to dispose of the stockpiles of nuclear waste by burning them down to a more useful element, and the power output associated with this.
Once you are a professional activist the last thing you want is for your cause to end.
Jan
We have gotten used to thinking that we can't do anything anymore, it takes decades. Most of that time is in governmental red tape.
I'm not advocating a Manhattan style investment, but we damned well should be able to improve on technology that was working 50 years ago.
Sounds good. I detest the resistance to all these things we could easily "do". If we were trying to produce the first lead-acid battery today, imagine how hard it would be...lead? sulfuric acid? Oh my god, but they are under the hood of every car, truck, tractor and all over.
Not sure about safest. PWRs are pretty safe and a whole lot more hours on them than this. Not to rain on the parade. Sounds like these have a nice negative reactivity coefficient too.
Are you set on producing your first prototype in the US? There are several counties in Eastern Europe who have 'single point' atomic energy regulatory committees and where you might get a more favorable reception (to energy independence from Russia, as a random example).
Jan
I used to design large power plants. Hot salt is benign compared to hot water.
https://slowfacts.wordpress.com/tag/lftr...
I would be delighted to be wrong on this.
I watched the video in the middle and was thoroughly unimpressed. If you want to tout your solution, you don't need three minutes of scare-tactics. Present your case.
Neat.
Jan
even Norway ( they are sitting on a pile of easily extractable thorium )
http://rose-blogg.blogspot.com/
Japan is working on it.. Even India is messing with the idea..
The patents on the tech that surround the process we dont have figured out yet are going to be a goldmine..
Also, once we are to the point where these are commercialize-able reactors the labor that will be needed to manufacture a planets worth will be a gold mine for some workforce. Pretty much everyone wants that workforce living in their backyard..
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