美国核回收工厂可从铀燃料中提取多出百倍的能量
US Nuclear Recycling Plant Could Extract 100 Times More Energy From Uranium Fuel

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/technology/us-nuclear-recycling-plant-could-extract-100-times-more-energy-uranium-fuel

总部位于纽约的初创公司 BLSK Energy 已与阿贡国家实验室(ANL)达成合作,旨在将“高温熔盐电化学分离法”(pyroprocessing)这一先进的核废料回收技术推向商业化。通过利用高温熔盐和电力,该工艺可从废料中提取出可重复利用的核材料,进而为先进的快中子反应堆提供燃料。 此次合作是解决核工业两大核心难题的战略举措:即高达约 9.5 万吨的核废料堆积问题,以及反应堆燃料成本上升和供应受限的困境。专家认为,与传统方法相比,该技术可将铀的能源利用率提升至原来的 100 倍。此外,该技术还能显著降低废料的环境影响,有望将放射性副产品的隔离期从 30 万年缩短至 300 年。 BLSK Energy 已获得阿贡国家实验室研究设施、专业知识及知识产权的独家使用权,并得到了高温熔盐电化学分离法先驱 Yoon Il Chang 博士的指导。公司计划于 2034 年前建立一家试点回收工厂,提供一种可扩展的解决方案,将长期存在的废料负担转化为未来核能可持续、具成本效益的燃料来源。

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原文

Authored by Georgina Jedikovska via Interesting Engineering,

A US startup has joined forces with the nation's first national laboratory to recycle spent nuclear fuel into energy for fast reactors by using advanced pyroprocessing technology.

New York-based nuclear technology company BLSK Energy announced on May 18 that it had signed a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) with Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) in Illinois to commercialize the method.

Used nuclear fuel containers.

Pyroprocessing (or pyrochemical processing) is a high-temperature metallurgical process that could enable the reuse of nuclear fuel. When used with fast reactors, it could extract up to 100 times more energy from uranium.

The company plans to launch a pilot recycling facility by 2034 that would convert nuclear waste into material suitable for advanced fast reactors. "The path ahead is ambitious but achievable," Bruce Landrey, BLSK Energy's managing director and co-founder, said.

Recycling Nuclear Waste

The US has accumulated about 95,000 tonnes (104,000 US tons) of used nuclear fuel. They are currently stored at over 75 locations across the country. However, spent nuclear fuel is radioactive and thermally hot when removed from a reactor.

Moreover, even though up to 96 percent of it is made up of leftover uranium, the main fuel used in nuclear reactors, it also contains radioactive waste products and elements heavier than uranium, like plutonium, which is incredibly hazardous.

While long-delayed plans for the permanent disposal of spent nuclear fuel remain unresolved, the nuclear industry faces another challenge in securing enough fuel for future reactors. Limited fuel supplies and rising costs are both major hurdles for advanced reactor development.

To tackle the challenge, BLSK Energy's pilot recycling facility will use pyrochemical processing to convert nuclear waste into usable reactor fuel. The company gained exclusive access to the technology through its agreement with ANL, which in turn, first developed the process.

The deal further gives the firm access to ANL's experienced nuclear reprocessing scientists, engineers, as well as research facilities. "BLSK has the rare opportunity to address the two critical issues facing nuclear power; answering the question, 'what about the waste?' while delivering a reliable cost-effective supply of fuel for advanced reactors," Landrey continued.

A New Fuel Plant

Pyroprocessing uses molten salts and electricity to separate and recover valuable nuclear materials from highly radioactive waste. It is believed to offer improved efficiency and proliferation resistance.

The technology would reduce waste volumes while extracting additional energy from used fuel. When paired with fast reactors, it could reportedly unlock up to 100 times more energy from uranium than traditional reactors.

According to ANL, the technology could provide a long-term supply of affordable uranium fuel. By recycling all actinides, radioactive chemical elements that follow actinium in the Periodic Table, the process could significantly reduce the amount of nuclear waste produced.

It could also lower the time the waste must remain isolated from roughly 300,000 years to 300 years. "Having the IP and facility design as a starting point places our effort at a high level of maturity, improving certainty through reduced technical, regulatory, and investment risk," Landrey concluded in a press release.

ANL's support will be led by Yoon Il Chang, PhD, a senior nuclear project director and ANL distinguished fellow, who created the pyroprocessing technology.

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