17. Pressurized Heavy water
reactor
A pressurized heavy-water
reactor (PHWR) is a nuclear power reactor,
commonly using unenriched natural uranium as its
fuel, that uses heavy water (deuterium
oxide D2O) as its coolant and moderator. The
heavy water coolant is kept under pressure,
allowing it to be heated to higher temperatures
without boiling, much as in a Pressurized water
reactor. While heavy water is significantly more
expensive than ordinary light water, it creates
greatly enhanced neutron economy, allowing the
reactor to operate without fuel-enrichment
facilities (lowering the additional expense of
the heavy water) and enhancing the ability of
the reactor to make use of alternate fuel
cycles.
•
1 Purpose of using heavy water
•
2 Advantages and disadvantages
•
3 Nuclear proliferation
•
4 See also
•
5 References
•
6 External links
Purpose of using heavy
water[edit]
The key to maintaining
a nuclear reaction within a nuclear reactor is
to use the neutrons released during fission to
stimulate fission in other nuclei. With careful
control over the geometry and reaction rates,
this can lead to a self-sustaining chain
reaction, a state known as "criticality".
Natural uranium consists of
a mixture of various isotopes,
primarily 238HYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium-238"U and
a much smaller amount (about 0.72% by weight)
of 235HYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uranium-235"U.[1] 238U
can only be fissioned by neutrons that are
relatively energetic, about 1 MeV or above. No
amount of 238U can be made "critical", however,
since it will tend to parasitically absorb more
neutrons than it releases by the fission
process.235U, on the other hand, can support a
self-sustained chain reaction, but due to the
low natural abundance of 235U, natural uranium
cannot achieve criticality by itself.
The "trick" to making a
working reactor is to slow some of the neutrons
to the point where their probability of causing
nuclear fission in 235U increases to a level
that permits a sustained chain reaction in the
uranium as a whole. This requires the use of
a neutron moderator, which absorbs some of the
neutrons' kinetic energy, slowing them down to
an energy comparable to the thermal energy of
the moderator nuclei themselves (leading to the
terminology of "thermal neutrons" and "thermal
reactors"). During this slowing-down process it
is beneficial to physically separate the
neutrons from the uranium, since 238U nuclei
have an enormous parasitic affinity for neutrons
in this intermediate energy range (a reaction
known as "resonance" absorption). This is a
fundamental reason for designing reactors with
discrete solid fuel separated by moderator,
rather than employing a more homogeneous mixture
of the two materials.
Water makes an excellent
moderator; the hydrogen atoms in the water
molecules are very close in mass to a single
neutron, and the collisions thus have a very
efficient momentum transfer, similar
conceptually to the collision of two billiard
balls. However, despite being a good moderator,
water is relatively effective at absorbing
neutrons. Using water as a moderator will absorb
so many neutrons that there will be too few left
to react with the small amount of 235U in the
fuel, again precluding criticality in natural
uranium. Instead, in order to fuel a light-water
reactor, first the amount of 235U in the uranium
must be increased, producing enriched uranium,
which generally contains between 3% and 5% 235U
by weight (the waste from this process is known
as depleted uranium, consisting primarily
of 238U). In this enriched form
there is enough 235U to react with the
water-moderated neutrons to maintain
criticality.
One complication of this
approach is the requirement to build a uranium
enrichment facility, which are generally
expensive to build and operate. They also
present a nuclear proliferation concern;
the same HYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dual-use_technology"systems used
to enrich the 235U can also be used to produce
much more "pure" weapons-grade material (90% or
more 235U), suitable for producing a nuclear
bomb. This is not a trivial exercise by any
means, but feasible enough that enrichment
facilities present a significant nuclear
proliferation risk.
An alternative solution to
the problem is to use a moderator that
does notabsorb neutrons as readily as water. In
this case potentially all of the neutrons being
released can be moderated and used in reactions
with the235U, in which case there is enough 235U
in natural uranium to sustain criticality. One
such moderator is heavy water, or
deuterium-oxide. Although it reacts dynamically
with the neutrons in a similar fashion to light
water (albeit with less energy transfer on
average, given that heavy hydrogen, ordeuterium,
is about twice the mass of hydrogen), it already
has the extra neutron that light water would
normally tend to absorb.
Advantages and
disadvantages[edit]
The use of heavy water as
the moderator is the key to the PHWR
(pressurized heavy water reactor) system,
enabling the use of natural uranium as the fuel
(in the form of ceramic UO2), which means that
it can be operated without expensive uranium
enrichment facilities. The mechanical
arrangement of the PHWR, which places most of
the moderator at lower temperatures, is
particularly efficient because the resulting
thermal neutrons are "more thermal" than in
traditional designs, where the moderator
normally is much hotter. These features mean
that a PHWR can use natural uranium and other
fuels, and does so more efficiently than light
water HYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Light_water_reactor"reactors(LWRs).
Pressurised heavy-water
reactors do have some drawbacks. Heavy water
generally costs hundreds of dollars per
kilogram, though this is a trade-off against
reduced fuel costs. The reduced energy content
of natural uranium as compared to enriched
uranium necessitates more frequent replacement
of fuel; this is normally accomplished by use of
an on-power refuelling system. The increased
rate of fuel movement through the reactor also
results in higher volumes of spent fuel than in
LWRs employing enriched uranium. However, since
unenriched uranium fuel accumulates a lower
density offissionHYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_fission_product"
products than enriched uranium fuel, it
generates less heat, allowing more compact
storage.[2]
Nuclear proliferation[edit]
Opponents of heavy-water
reactors suggest that such reactors pose a much
greater risk of nuclear proliferation than
comparable light water reactors. These concerns
stem from the fact that during normal reactor
operation,uranium-238 in the natural uranium
fuel of a heavy-water reactor is converted
into plutonium-239, a fissile material suitable
for use in nuclear weapons, vianeutronHYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neutron_capture"
capture followed by two βHYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_decay"−HYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_decay" HYPERLINK
"https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beta_decay"decays.
As a result, if the fuel of a heavy-water
reactor is changed frequently, significant
amounts of weapons-grade plutonium can be
chemically extracted from the irradiated natural
uranium fuel by nuclear reprocessing. In this
way, the materials necessary to construct a
nuclear weapon can be obtained without any
uranium enrichment.
In addition, the use of
heavy water as a moderator results in the
production of small amounts of tritium when
the deuterium nuclei in the heavy water absorb
neutrons, a very inefficient reaction. Tritium
is essential for the production of boosted
fission weapons, which in turn enable the easier
production of thermonuclear weapons,
including neutron bombs. It is unclear whether
it is possible to use this method to produce
tritium on a practical scale.
The proliferation risk of
heavy-water reactors was demonstrated when India
produced the plutonium for Operation Smiling
Buddha, its first nuclear weapon test, by
extraction from the spent fuel of a heavy-water
research reactor known as the CIRUS reactor.[3]