253 Thorium based nuclear
power
Thorium-based nuclear power
is nuclear reactor-based electrical power
generation fueled primarily by the fission of
the isotope uranium-233 produced from the
fertile element thorium. According to
proponents, a thorium fuel cycle offers several
potential advantages over a uranium fuel
cycle—including much greater abundance on Earth,
superior physical and nuclear fuel properties,
and reduced nuclear waste production. However,
development of thorium power has significant
start-up costs. Proponents also cite the lack of
weaponization potential as an advantage of
thorium, while critics say that development
of breeder reactors in general (including
thorium reactors that are breeders by nature)
increase proliferation concerns. Since about
2008, nuclear energy experts have become more
interested in thorium to supply nuclear fuel in
place of uranium to generate nuclear power. This
renewed interest has been highlighted in a
number of scientific conferences, the latest of
which, ThEC13 was held at CERN by iThEC and
attracted over 200 scientists from 32 countries.
A nuclear reactor consumes
certain specific fissile isotopes to produce
energy. The three most practical types of
nuclear reactor fuel are:
Uranium-235, purified (i.e.
"enriched") by reducing the amount
ofuranium-238 in natural mined uranium. Most
nuclear power has been generated using
low-enriched uranium (LEU), whereas
high-enriched uranium (HEU) is necessary for
weapons.
Plutonium-239, transmuted from uranium-238 obtained
from natural mined uranium. Plutonium is also
used for weapons.
Uranium-233, transmuted
from thorium-232, derived from natural mined
thorium. This is the subject of this article.
Some believe thorium is key
to developing a new generation of cleaner, safer
nuclear power. According to an opinion piece
(not peer-reviewed) by a group of scientists at
the Georgia Institute of Technology, considering
its overall potential, thorium-based power "can
mean a 1000+ year solution or a quality
low-carbon bridge to truly sustainable energy
sources solving a huge portion of mankind’s
negative environmental impact."
After studying the
feasibility of using thorium, nuclear scientists
Ralph W. Moir and Edward Teller suggested that
thorium nuclear research should be restarted
after a three-decade shutdown and that a small
prototype plant should be built. Research and
development of thorium-based nuclear reactors,
primarily the liquid fluoride thorium reactor,
(LFTR), MSR design, has been or is now being
done
in India, China, Norway, U.S., Israel andRussia.
Background and brief
history
After World War II,
uranium-based nuclear reactors were built to
produce electricity. These were similar to the
reactor designs that produced material for
nuclear weapons. During that period, the U.S.
government also built an experimental molten
salt reactor using U-233 fuel, the fissile
material created by bombarding thorium with
neutrons. The reactor, built at Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, operated critical for
roughly 15000 hours from 1965 to 1969. In 1968,
Nobel laureate and discoverer
of Plutonium, Glenn Seaborg, publicly announced
to the Atomic Energy Commission, of which he was
chairman, that the thorium-based reactor had
been successfully developed and tested:
So far the molten-salt
reactor experiment has operated successfully and
has earned a reputation for reliability. I think
that some day the world will have commercial
power reactors of both the uranium-plutonium and
the thorium-uranium fuel cycle type.
In 1973, however, the U.S.
government shut down all thorium-related nuclear
research—which had by then been ongoing for
approximately twenty years at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory. The reasons were that uranium
breeder reactors were more efficient, the
research was proven, and byproducts could be
used to make nuclear weapons. In Moir and
Teller’s opinion, the decision to stop
development of thorium reactors, at least as a
backup option, “was an excusable mistake.”
Science writer Richard
Martin states that nuclear physicist Alvin
Weinberg, who was director at Oak Ridge and
primarily responsible for the new reactor, lost
his job as director because he championed
development of the safer thorium
reactors. Weinberg himself recalls this period:
[Congressman] Chet
Holifield was clearly exasperated with me, and
he finally blurted out, "Alvin, if you are
concerned about the safety of reactors, then I
think it may be time for you to leave nuclear
energy." I was speechless. But it was apparent
to me that my style, my attitude, and my
perception of the future were no longer in tune
with the powers within the AEC.
Martin explains that
Weinberg's unwillingness to sacrifice
potentially safe nuclear power for the benefit
of military uses forced him to retire:
Weinberg realized that you
could use thorium in an entirely new kind of
reactor, one that would have zero risk of
meltdown. . . . his team built a working reactor
. . . . and he spent the rest of his 18-year
tenure trying to make thorium the heart of the
nation’s atomic power effort. He failed. Uranium
reactors had already been established, and Hyman
Rickover, de facto head of the US nuclear
program, wanted the plutonium from
uranium-powered nuclear plants to make bombs.
Increasingly shunted aside, Weinberg was finally
forced out in 1973.
Despite the documented
history of thorium nuclear power, many of
today’s nuclear experts were nonetheless unaware
of it. According to Chemical & Engineering News,
"most people—including scientists—have hardly
heard of the heavy-metal element and know little
about it...," noting a comment by a conference
attendee that "it's possible to have a Ph.D. in
nuclear reactor technology and not know about
thorium energy."[12] Nuclear physicist Victor J.
Stenger, for one, first learned of it in 2012:
It came as a surprise to me
to learn recently that such an alternative has
been available to us since World War II, but not
pursued because it lacked weapons applications.[
Others, including
former NASA scientist and thorium expert Kirk
Sorensen, agree that "thorium was the
alternative path that was not taken … "
:2According to Sorensen, during a documentary
interview, he states that if the U.S. had not
discontinued its research in 1974 it could have
"probably achieved energy independence by around
2000."[7]
Possible benefits
Early thorium-based (MSR)
nuclear reactor at Oak Ridge National
Laboratoryin the 1960s
The World Nuclear
Associationexplains some of the possible
benefits
The thorium fuel cycle
offers enormous energy security benefits in the
long-term – due to its potential for being a
self-sustaining fuel without the need for fast
neutron reactors. It is therefore an important
and potentially viable technology that seems
able to contribute to building credible,
long-term nuclear energy scenarios.
Moir and Teller agree,
noting that the possible advantages of thorium
include "utilization of an abundant fuel,
inaccessibility of that fuel to terrorists or
for diversion to weapons use, together with good
economics and safety features … " Thorium is
considered the "most abundant, most readily
available, cleanest, and safest energy source on
Earth," adds science writer Richard Martin.
Thorium is three times as
abundant as uranium and nearly as abundant as
lead and gallium in the Earth's crust.[18] The
Thorium Energy Alliance (TEA) estimates "there
is enough thorium in the United States alone to
power the country at its current energy level
for over 1,000 years. America has buried tons as
a by-product of rare earth metals mining," notes
Evans-Pritchard.[19] Almost all thorium
is fertile Th-232, compared to uranium that is
composed of 99.3% fertile U-238 and 0.7% more
valuable fissile U-235.
It is difficult to make a
practical nuclear bomb from a thorium reactor's
byproducts. According to Alvin Radkowsky,
designer of the world's first full-scale atomic
electric power plant, "a thorium reactor's
plutonium production rate would be less than 2
percent of that of a standard reactor, and the
plutonium's isotopic content would make it
unsuitable for a nuclear detonation.":11 Several
uranium-233 bombs have been tested, but the
presence of uranium-232 tended to "poison" the
uranium-233 in two ways: intense radiation from
the uranium-232 made the material difficult to
handle, and the uranium-233 led to possible
pre-detonation. Separating the uranium-232 from
the uranium-233 proved very difficult, although
newer laser techniques could facilitate that
process.[21][22]
There is much less nuclear
waste—up to two orders of magnitude less, states
Moir and Teller,[4] eliminating the need for
large-scale or long-term
storage;[15]:13 "Chinese scientists claim that
hazardous waste will be a thousand times less
than with uranium."[19] The radioactivity of the
resulting waste also drops down to safe levels
after just a few hundred years, compared to tens
of thousands of years needed for current nuclear
waste to cool off.
According to Moir and
Teller, "once started up [it] needs no other
fuel except thorium because it makes most or all
of its own fuel."[4] This only applies to
breeding reactors, that produce at least as much
fissile material as they consume. Other reactor
require additional fissile material, such as
uranium-235 or plutonium.
Thorium fuel cycle is a
potential way to produce long term nuclear
energy with low radio-toxicity waste. In
addition, the transition to thorium could be
done through the incineration of weapons grade
plutonium (WPu) or civilian plutonium.
Since all natural thorium
can be used as fuel no expensive fuel enrichment
is needed. However the same is true for U-238 as
fertile fuel in the uranium-plutonium cycle.
Comparing the amount of
thorium needed with coal, Nobel laureate Carlo
Rubbia of CERN, (European Organization for
Nuclear Research), estimates that one ton of
thorium can produce as much energy as 200 tons
of uranium, or 3,500,000 tons of coal. Coal,
makes up 42% of U.S. electrical power generation
and 65% in China.
Liquid fluoride thorium
reactors are designed to be meltdown proof. A
plug at the bottom of the reactor melts in the
event of a power failure or if temperatures
exceed a set limit, draining the fuel into an
underground tank for safe storage.
Mining thorium is safer and
more efficient than mining uranium. Thorium's
ore monazite generally contains higher
concentrations of thorium than the percentage of
uranium found in its respective ore. This makes
thorium a more cost efficient and less
environmentally damaging fuel source. Thorium
mining is also easier and less dangerous than
uranium mining, as the mine is an open pit which
doesn't require ventilation, unlike underground
uranium mines, where radon levels can be
potentially harmful.
Summarizing some of the
potential benefits, Martin offers his general
opinion: "Thorium could provide a clean and
effectively limitless source of power while
allaying all public concern—weapons
proliferation, radioactive pollution, toxic
waste, and fuel that is both costly and
complicated to process.[15]:13 From an economics
viewpoint, U.K. business editor Ambrose
Evans-Pritchard has suggested that "Obama could
kill fossil fuels overnight with a nuclear dash
for thorium," suggesting a "new Manhattan
Project," and adding, "If it works, Manhattan II
could restore American optimism and strategic
leadership at a stroke …"[25] Moir and Teller
estimated in 2004 that the cost for their
recommended prototype would be "well under $1
billion with operation costs likely on the order
of $100 million per year," and as a result a
"large-scale nuclear power plan" usable by many
countries could be set up within a decade.
Possible disadvantages
Some experts note possible
specific disadvantages of thorium nuclear
power:[29]
Breeding in a thermal
neutron spectrum is slow and requires extensive
reprocessing. The feasibility of reprocessing is
still open.
Significant and expensive
testing, analysis and licensing work is first
required, requiring business and government
support. According to a 2012 report by
the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, about
using thorium fuel with existing water-cooled
reactors, it would "require too great an
investment and provide no clear payoff," noting
that "from the utilities’ point of view, the
only legitimate driver capable of motivating
pursuit of thorium is economics.
There is a higher cost of
fuel fabrication and reprocessing than those
that use traditional solid fuel rods.
Thorium, when being
irradiated for use in reactors, will make
uranium-232, which is very dangerous due to the
gamma rays it emits. This irradiation process
may be able to be altered slightly by removing
protactinium-233. The irradiation would then
make uranium-233 in lieu of uranium-232, which
can be used in nuclear weapons to make thorium
into a dual purpose fuel.
Current projects
Research and development of
thorium-based nuclear reactors, primarily
theLiquid fluoride thorium
reactor (LFTR), MSR design, has been or is now
being done in
the U.S., U.K., Germany, Brazil, India, China, France,
theCzech
Republic, Japan, Russia, Canada, Israel and
the Netherlands.Conferences with experts from as
many as 32 countries are held, including one by
the European Organization for Nuclear
Research (CERN) in 2013, which focuses on
thorium as an alternative nuclear technology
without requiring production of nuclear waste.
Recognized experts, such as Hans Blix, former
head of the International Atomic Energy Agency,
calls for expanded support of new nuclear power
technology, and states, "the thorium option
offers the world not only a new sustainable
supply of fuel for nuclear power but also one
that makes better use of the fuel's energy
content."
Canada
CANDU reactors are capable
of using thorium,[34][35] and TPC (Thorium Power
Canada) has, in 2013, planned and proposed
developing thorium power projects for Chile and
Indonesia.[36]
The proposed 10 MW
demonstration reactor in Chile could be used to
power a 2000 litre/day desalination plant. All
land and regulatory approvals are currently in
process.
Thorium Power Canada's
proposal for the development of a 25
MW thoriumreactor in Indonesia is meant to be a
"demonstration power project" which could
provide electrical power to the country’s power
grid.
China
At the 2011 annual
conference of the Chinese Academy of Sciences,
it was announced that "China has initiated a
research and development project in thorium
molten-salt reactor technology." In addition,
Dr. Jiang Mianheng, son of China's former
leader Jiang Zemin, led a thorium delegation in
non-disclosure talks at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory, Tennessee, and by late 2013 China
had officially partnered with Oak Ridge to aid
China in its own development. The World Nuclear
Association notes that the China Academy of
Sciences in January 2011 announced its R&D
program, "claiming to have the world's largest
national effort on it, hoping to obtain
fullintellectual property rights on the
technology."[17] According to Martin, "China has
made clear its intention to go it alone," adding
that China already has a monopoly over most of
the world's rare earth minerals.:157
In March 2014, with their
reliance on coal-fired power having become a
major cause of their current "smog crisis," they
reduced their original goal of creating a
working reactor from 25 years down to 10. "In
the past, the government was interested in
nuclear power because of the energy shortage.
Now they are more interested because of smog,"
said Professor Li Zhong, a scientist working on
the project. "This is definitely a race," he
added.
In early 2012, it was
reported that China, using components produced
by the West and Russia, planned to build two
prototype thorium molten salt reactorsby 2015,
and had budgeted the project at $400 million and
requiring 400 workers."[15]:157 China also
finalized an agreement with a Canadian nuclear
technology company to develop
improved CANDU reactors using thorium and
uranium as a fuel.
Germany
The German THTR-300 was a
prototype commercial power station using thorium
as fertile and highly enriched U-235 as fissile
fuel. Though named thorium high temperature
reactor, mostly U-235 was fissioned. The
THTR-300 was a helium-cooled high-temperature
reactor with a pebble-bed reactor core
consisting of approximately 670,000 spherical
fuel compacts each 6 centimetres (2.4 in) in
diameter with particles of uranium-235 and
thorium-232 fuel embedded in a graphite matrix.
It fed power to Germany's grid for 432 days in
the late 1980s, before it was shut down for
cost, mechanical and other reasons.
India
India has one of the
largest supplies of thorium in the world, with
comparatively poor quantities of uranium. India
has projected meeting as much as 30% of its
electrical demands through thorium by 2050.
In February 2014, Bhabha
Atomic Research Centre (BARC), in Mumbai, India,
presented their latest design for a
"next-generation nuclear reactor" that will burn
thorium as its fuel ore. Once built, with a
target date of 2016, they estimate that the
reactor could function without an operator for
120 days.
According to Dr R K Sinha,
chairman of their Atomic Energy Commission,
"This will reduce our dependence on fossil
fuels, mostly imported, and will be a major
contribution to global efforts to combat climate
change." Because of its inherent safety, they
expect that similar designs could be set up
"within" populated cities, like Mumbai or Delhi.
India's government is also
developing up to 62, mostly thorium reactors,
which it expects to be operational by 2025. It
is the "only country in the world with a
detailed,FUNDED , government-approved plan" to
focus on thorium-based nuclear power. The
country currently gets under 2% of its
electricity from nuclear power, with the rest
coming from coal (60%), hydroelectricity (16%),
other renewable sources (12%) and natural gas
(9%).[46] It expects to produce around 25% of
its electricity from nuclear power.[15]:144 In
2009 the chairman of the Indian Atomic Energy
Commission said that India has a "long-term
objective goal of becoming energy-independent
based on its vast thorium resources."
In late June 2012, India
announced that their "first commercial fast
reactor" was near completion making India the
most advanced country in thorium research." We
have huge reserves of thorium. The challenge is
to develop technology for converting this to
fissile material," stated their former Chairman
of India's Atomic Energy Commission.[49] That
vision of using thorium in place of uranium was
set out in the 1950s by physicist Homi
Bhabha.[50][51] India's first commercial fast
breeder reactor — the 500 MWePrototype Fast
Breeder Reactor (PFBR) — is approaching
completion at theIndira Gandhi Centre for Atomic
Research, Kalpakkam, Tamil Nadu.
As of July 2013 the major
equipment of the PFBR had been erected and the
loading of "dummy" fuels in peripheral locations
was in progress. The reactor was expected to go
critical by September 2014.
The Centre had sanctioned
Rs. 5,677 crore for building the PFBR and “we
will definitely build the reactor within that
amount,” Mr. Kumar asserted. The original cost
of the project was Rs. 3,492 crore, revised to
Rs. 5,677 crore. Electricity generated from the
PFBR would be sold to the State Electricity
Boards at Rs. 4.44 a unit. BHAVINI
builds breeder reactors in India. India's
300 MWe AHWR (pressurized heavy water reactor)
reactor began construction in 2011. The design
envisages a start up with reactor grade
plutonium that will breed U-233 from Th-232.
Thereafter thorium is to be the only fuel.
Israel
In May 2010, researchers
from Ben-Gurion University in Israel
andBrookhaven National Laboratory in New York
began to collaborate on the development of
thorium reactors, aimed at being
self-sustaining, "meaning one that will produce
and consume about the same amounts of fuel,"
which is not possible with uranium in a light
water reactor.[54]
Japan
In June, 2012, Japan
utility Chubu Electric Power, wrote that they
regard thorium as “one of future possible energy
resources.”
Norway
In late 2012, Norway's
privately owned Thor Energy, in collaboration
with the government and Westinghouse, announced
a four-year trial using thorium in an existing
nuclear reactor."[56] In 2013, Aker Solutions
purchased patents from Nobel Prize winning
physicist Carlo Rubbia for the design of a
proton accelerator-based thorium nuclear power
plant.
U.K.
In Britain, a few
organizations are either promoting or examining
research on thorium-based nuclear plants. House
of Lords member Bryony Worthington is promoting
thorium, calling it “the forgotten fuel” that
could alter Britain’s energy plans.[58] However,
in 2010, the UK’s National Nuclear
Laboratory(NNL) concluded that for the short to
medium term, "...the thorium fuel cycle does not
currently have a role to play," in that it is
"technically immature, and would require a
significant financial INVESTMENT and risk
without clear benefits," and concluded that the
benefits have been "overstated."[17] Friends of
the Earth UK considers research into it as
"useful" as a fall back option.
In its January 2012 report
to the Secretary of Energy, the Blue Ribbon
Commission on America's Future notes that a
"molten-salt reactor using thorium [has] also
been proposed."[60] That same month it was
reported that the U.S. Department of Energy is
"quietly collaborating with China" on
thorium-based nuclear power designs using
a molten salt reactor.[
Some experts and
politicians want thorium to be "the pillar of
the U.S. nuclear future." Senators Harry
Reid and Orrin Hatch have supported using $250
million in federal researchFUNDS to
revive ORNL research.[3]In 2009, Congressman Joe
Sestak unsuccessfully attempted to secureFUNDING
for research and development of
a destroyer-sized reactor [reactor of a size to
power a destroyer] using thorium-based liquid
fuel.
Alvin Radkowsky, chief
designer of the world’s second full-scale atomic
electric power plant in Shippingport,
Pennsylvania, founded a joint U.S. and Russian
project in 1997 to create a thorium-based
reactor, considered a "creative
breakthrough." In 1992, while a resident
professor in Tel Aviv, Israel, he founded the
U.S. company, Thorium Power Ltd., near
Washington, D.C., to build thorium reactors.
The primary fuel of the
proposed HT3R research project near Odessa,
Texas,USA, will be ceramic-coated thorium beads.
The earliest date the reactor will become
operational is in 2015.
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