Generation 4 Nuclear Reactors (Gen
IV) are a set of theoretical nuclear reactor designs currently being
researched. Most of these designs are generally not expected to be available
for commercial construction before 2030, with the exception of a version of the
Very High Temperature Reactor (VHTR) called the Next Generation Nuclear Plant
(NGNP). The NGNP is to be completed by 2021. Current reactors in operation
around the world are generally considered second- or third-generation systems,
with most of the first-generation systems having been retired some time ago.
Research into these reactor types was officially started by the Generation IV
International Forum (GIF) based on eight technology goals, including to improve
nuclear safety, improve proliferation resistance, minimize waste and natural
resource utilization, and decrease the cost to build and run such plants.
The
reactors are intended for use in nuclear power plants to produce nuclear power
from nuclear fuel.
Many
reactor types were considered initially; however, the list was downsized to
focus on the most promising technologies and those that could most likely meet
the goals of the Gen IV initiative. Three systems are nominally thermal
reactors and three are fast reactors. The VHTR is also being researched for
potentially providing high quality process heat for hydrogen production. The
fast reactors offer the possibility of burning actinides to further reduce
waste and of being able to breed more fuel than they consume. These systems
offer significant advances in sustainability, safety and reliability,
economics, proliferation resistance and physical protection.
The very high temperature reactor concept
uses a graphite-moderated core with a once-through uranium fuel cycle, using
helium or molten salt as the coolant. This reactor design envisions an outlet
temperature of 1,000 °C. The reactor core can be either a prismatic-block or a
pebble bed reactor design. The high temperatures enable applications such as
process heat or hydrogen production via the thermochemical iodine-sulfur
process. It would also be passively safe.
The
planned construction of the first VHTR, the South African PBMR (pebble bed
modular reactor), lost government funding in February, 2010. A pronounced
increase of costs and concerns about possible unexpected technical problems had
discouraged potential investors and customers.
The supercritical water reactor (SCWR)
is a concept that uses supercritical water as the working fluid. SCWRs are
basically light water reactors (LWR) operating at higher pressure and
temperatures with a direct, once-through cycle. As most commonly envisioned, it
would operate on a direct cycle, much like a Boiling Water Reactor (BWR), but
since it uses supercritical water (not to be confused with critical mass) as
the working fluid, would have only one phase present, like the Pressurized
Water Reactor (PWR). It could operate at much higher temperatures than both
current PWRs and BWRs.
Supercritical
water-cooled reactors (SCWRs) are promising advanced nuclear systems because of
their high thermal efficiency (i.e., about 45% vs. about 33% efficiency for
current LWRs) and considerable plant simplification.
The
main mission of the SCWR is generation of low-cost electricity. It is built
upon two proven technologies, LWRs, which are the most commonly deployed power
generating reactors in the world, and supercritical fossil fuel fired boilers,
a large number of which are also in use around the world. The SCWR concept is
being investigated by 32 organizations in 13 countries.
A molten salt reactor is a
type of nuclear reactor where the coolant is a molten salt. There have been
many designs put forward for this type of reactor and a few prototypes built.
The early concepts and many current ones rely on nuclear fuel dissolved in the
molten fluoride salt as uranium tetrafluoride (UF4) or thorium
tetrafluoride (ThF4), the fluid would reach criticality by flowing
into a graphite core which would also serve as the moderator. Many current
concepts rely on fuel that is dispersed in a graphite matrix with the molten
salt providing low pressure, high temperature cooling.
The gas-cooled fast reactor (GFR)
system features a fast-neutron spectrum and closed fuel cycle for efficient
conversion of fertile uranium and management of actinides. The reactor is
helium-cooled, with an outlet temperature of 850 °C and using a direct Brayton
cycle gas turbine for high thermal efficiency. Several fuel forms are being
considered for their potential to operate at very high temperatures and to
ensure an excellent retention of fission products: composite ceramic fuel,
advanced fuel particles, or ceramic clad elements of actinide compounds. Core
configurations are being considered based on pin- or plate-based fuel
assemblies or prismatic blocks.
The SFR is a project that builds on two
closely related existing projects, the liquid metal fast breeder reactor and
the Integral Fast Reactor.
The
goals are to increase the efficiency of uranium usage by breeding plutonium and
eliminating the need for transuranic isotopes ever to leave the site. The
reactor design uses an unmoderated core running on fast neutrons, designed to
allow any transuranic isotope to be consumed (and in some cases used as fuel).
In addition to the benefits of removing the long half-life transuranics from
the waste cycle, the SFR fuel expands when the reactor overheats, and the chain
reaction automatically slows down. In this manner, it is passively safe.
The
Integral Fast Reactor or IFR is a design for a nuclear reactor with a
specialized nuclear fuel cycle. A prototype of the reactor was built, but the
project was cancelled before it could be copied elsewhere.
The
SFR reactor concept is cooled by liquid sodium and fueled by a metallic alloy
of uranium and plutonium. The fuel is contained in steel cladding with liquid
sodium filling in the space between the clad elements which make up the fuel
assembly. One of the design challenges of an SFR is the risks of handling
sodium, which reacts explosively if it comes into contact with water. However,
the use of liquid metal instead of water as coolant allows the system to work
at atmospheric pressure, reducing the risk of leakage.
The lead-cooled fast reactor features
a fast-neutron-spectrum lead or lead/bismuth eutectic (LBE) liquid-metal-cooled
reactor with a closed fuel cycle. Options include a range of plant ratings,
including a "battery" of 50 to 150 MW of electricity that features a
very long refueling interval, a modular system rated at 300 to 400 MW, and a
large monolithic plant option at 1,200 MW. (The termbattery refers
to the long-life, factory-fabricated core, not to any provision for electrochemical
energy conversion.) The fuel is metal or nitride-based containing fertile
uranium and transuranics. The LFR is cooled by natural convection with a
reactor outlet coolant temperature of 550 °C, possibly ranging up to 800 °C
with advanced materials. The higher temperature enables the production of
hydrogen by thermochemical processes.