Small Modular Reactors: Nuclear Power Fad or Future?
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About this ebook
There is currently significant interest in the development of small modular reactors (SMRs) for the generation of both electricity and process heat. SMRs offer potential benefits in terms of better affordability and enhanced safety, and can also be sited more flexibly than traditional nuclear plants. Small Modular Reactors: Nuclear Power Fad or Future? reviews SMR features, promises, and problems, also discussing what lies ahead for reactors of this type.
The book is organized into three major parts with the first part focused on the role of energy, especially nuclear energy, for global development. It also provides a brief history of SMRs. The second major part presents basic nuclear power plant terminology and then discusses in depth the attributes of SMRs that distinguish them from traditional nuclear plants. The third and final major section discusses the current interest in SMRs from a customer’s perspective and delineates several remaining hurdles that must be addressed to achieve wide-spread SMR deployment.
- Provides decision-makers in governments, business, and research with the needed background on small nuclear power and an overview of the current situation
- Presents a balanced discussion of the many advantages of SMRs and the challenges they face
- Written by a highly respected expert in the nuclear industry
Daniel T Ingersoll
Daniel T. Ingersoll, NuScale Power, USA
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Small Modular Reactors - Daniel T Ingersoll
Small Modular Reactors
Nuclear Power Fad or Future?
Daniel T. Ingersoll
Table of Contents
Cover image
Title page
Related titles
Copyright
Dedication
Woodhead Publishing Series in Energy
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One. Setting the stage
1. Energy, nuclear power, and small modular reactors
1.1. Fad or future?
1.2. The importance of energy
1.3. New growth of nuclear power: the nuclear renaissance
1.4. Challenges for expanding nuclear power
1.5. New interest in small nuclear power
2. A brief history of small nuclear power (1950–2000)
2.1. Military propulsion and power
2.2. Commercialization of nuclear energy
2.3. Exuberance to exasperation
2.4. Redirecting the nuclear industry
2.5. Early international SMR activities
3. The rise of current small modular reactors (2000–2015)
3.1. Precursors to the nuclear renaissance
3.2. Restarting the nuclear industry
3.3. Restarting the nuclear R&D community
3.4. Renewed interest by the military
3.5. Emergence of contemporary SMR designs in the US
3.6. Slowing of the nuclear renaissance
3.7. International SMR activities
Part Two. Fundamentals and features
4. Nuclear power 101: Understanding nuclear reactors
4.1. Basic power plant features and functions
4.2. Reactor generations
4.3. Reactor technology classes
4.4. Big versus small
5. Enhancing nuclear safety
5.1. SMR terminology and basics
5.2. Safety and the nuclear power industry
5.3. Designing beyond safety
5.4. Designing for robustness
5.5. Resilience to Fukushima-type events
5.6. Closing remarks on safety
6. Improving nuclear affordability
6.1. The business of nuclear power
6.2. Rethinking economic metrics
6.3. Affordability
6.4. Economic competitiveness
6.5. Reducing economic risk
7. Expanding nuclear power flexibility
7.1. Size matters
7.2. Benefits of modularity
7.3. Siting benefits
7.4. Adaptability to heat applications
Part Three. Promise to reality
8. Customer buzz about small modular reactors
8.1. Emerging countries
8.2. Domestic utilities
8.3. Process heat users
8.4. The US government
9. Getting to the finish line: Deployment challenges and opportunities
9.1. Technical challenges and opportunities
9.2. Institutional challenges and opportunities
9.3. Social challenges and opportunities
9.4. Government roles
10. Fad or future?
10.1. The fad
10.2. The future
10.3. Looking beyond the future
Index
Related titles
Handbook of Small Modular Nuclear Reactors
(ISBN 978-0-85709-853-5)
Copyright
Woodhead Publishing is an imprint of Elsevier
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This book and the individual contributions contained in it are protected under copyright by the Publisher (other than as may be noted herein).
Notices
Knowledge and best practice in this field are constantly changing. As new research and experience broaden our understanding, changes in research methods, professional practices, or medical treatment may become necessary.
Practitioners and researchers must always rely on their own experience and knowledge in evaluating and using any information, methods, compounds, or experiments described herein. In using such information or methods they should be mindful of their own safety and the safety of others, including parties for whom they have a professional responsibility.
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Dedication
To Katie, my loving wife and daily reminder of what is most important in life.
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Foreword
When I was asked to write a foreword for a book on small modular nuclear reactors (SMRs), I thought: This book could not come at a better time or from a more knowledgeable person!
Energy production is surging globally, even though it has flattened in the US and Europe. Much of the world now admits that we need to address global environmental changes caused by generating over 17 trillion kWh of electricity each year and by burning 90 million barrels of oil each day. These numbers will double in the next 25 years.
This doubling of energy consumption is actually necessary and ethical.
A human requires 3000 kWh per year to achieve what we consider to be a good life. The enormous effects of the industrial revolution came about as a result of the availability of energy from sources other than muscle: first coal, then oil, gas, hydroelectric, nuclear, and now renewables. Suddenly, anyone could obtain 3000 kWh per year without subjugating or enslaving other humans. This led to something previously unknown in history: the middle class. This rapidly emergent group also demanded expanded social and civil rights.
One can see the same effects going on in the developing world today. Modern China was born in the early 1990s with the planned installation of almost 600 coal-fired power plants, along with large hydroelectric, which led directly to China’s present middle class population of 500 million people. This process of electrification of human society is continuing, with a goal of 30 trillion kWh annually worldwide—the minimum amount of energy needed to eradicate global poverty.
The question is how to provide this much energy without destroying the environment. Coal requires the least infrastructure to emplace. Thus, the energy-hungry developing world is keeping coal in the position as the fastest growing energy source globally. Natural gas is second. Nuclear, hydro, and renewables bring up the rear. For many reasons, we need to reverse this trend.
It is the extreme energy density of nuclear power that is at the heart of our global energy solution and nuclear power’s low environmental impacts. The toxic waste generated by a 1000-MW coal plant is 10 million times as voluminous as the waste generated from a 1000-MW nuclear plant. The carbon emitted from coal plants is almost 100 times greater than that of nuclear plants for the same energy produced. A 1000-MW nuclear reactor on a one-square-mile site will produce the same amount of energy over its lifetime as 10,000 1-MW wind turbines on 1500 square miles.
Because nuclear reactors run for so many decades, the actual lifetime costs of nuclear energy are the second lowest of all sources (short-term finance and energy market issues aside), second only to hydroelectric.
Because of these properties, 72 new nuclear reactors are under construction around the world, and 150 more are firmly planned. China is hoping to replace 300 of their coal plants with nuclear plants by the mid-century. India is planning 100 new nuclear reactors over the next 30 years.
Those who know the value of energy know that nuclear and hydroelectric power are the only sources that have competed with fossil fuels in any significant sense globally. Hydro is still growing in the developing world but is fast approaching its geographic limits and is vulnerable to droughts. Nuclear is nowhere near its limit and is mostly immune to climate and weather changes. With new nuclear reactor designs, both large and small, there is sufficient nuclear fuel for thousands of years of energy, even at 30 trillion kWh per year.
Our experience with nuclear energy over the last 50 years has proven that nuclear is the safest and most efficient of all energy sources, from both the human health and environmental perspectives. To produce a trillion kWh of electricity, nuclear takes less land, uses less steel and concrete, harms fewer people, and has fewer emissions than any other energy source, including wind and solar.
But we are at the point where expanding the existing nuclear capacity will require new nuclear plant designs that are more flexible in size, cost, location, applications, and operation and are safer than even the extremely safe reactors we have now. They must also be able to backup, or load-follow, the most intermittent of renewable sources.
Enter small modular reactors.
The new generation of reactors embodied in SMRs incorporates all of the experience and technological advances in the last 50 years and is poised to enter the market in a big way. But confusion abounds as to their place in our energy tool box.
Dr Ingersoll knows the scientific, social, and economic challenges of significantly increasing nuclear power in the world and the role of SMRs in the future. He carefully addresses each issue in this book.
We are at energy crossroads in the history of humanity that will determine what will be left of our planet in the twenty-second century. Understanding SMRs is a necessary step to make the correct decisions that we need to retain a beautiful world and provide all humans with the opportunity to enjoy it.
Understanding SMRs is what this book is all about.
James Conca, Science Contributor to Forbes
Preface
I find writing neither easy nor pleasurable. Scientists and engineers are not generally known for their communication skills, and I am no exception. But I have had a steadily growing interest in documenting my excitement for small modular reactors (SMRs) for more than 10 years. I have written and coauthored a number of papers on selected SMR topics and coedited with Mario Carelli a collective handbook on SMRs authored by a broad spectrum of experts. But these projects only served to feed a growing passion to capture my complete thoughts on the subject, cover-to-cover. What pushed me into action was a series of events and announcements in the early 2014 that seemed to cast undue doubt on the credibility of SMRs and their ability to succeed in the marketplace. The purpose of this book is to refute that doubt and to present the basis for my fervent belief that SMRs will in fact become an important part of our energy future.
So, this is an advocacy book for SMRs. It is not generally intended for the SMR practitioner, although it may offer a few new nuggets of interest to those already working in the field. Mostly, it is intended for those who know very little about SMRs or who are skeptical about their viability and are interested in learning more. To improve readability, I have attempted to present the information in a more personal, engaging manner than most technical handbooks and journal papers. I also make frequent use of analogies. Like most analogies, none are perfect, and some may seem a bit contrived. But I find analogies very helpful when trying to learn a new topic and hope that it helps your understanding as well.
In this book I share many of my own discoveries and learnings during the past several years. I have drawn as much as possible from my own direct experience, which unavoidably introduces a personal bias. For example, most of the book’s content is focused on SMR development in the US. Also, there is a considerable focus on water-cooled SMR designs, partly because I have been most engaged with that class of SMRs and partly because I believe that they will be the first to reach the marketplace. I provide a brief summary of my significant SMR involvements below as a contextual backdrop for the book.
My fascination with SMRs has been a series of progressively reinforcing encounters—each one measurably nudging me toward a new career path. It began in the 1980s when, as a radiation-shielding researcher at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, I was tasked with analyzing the shielding requirements of the Power Reactor Inherently Safe Module (PRISM) design being developed by General Electric. PRISM was a significant departure from traditional commercial reactors not only because it was cooled with sodium rather than water, but also because it took an entirely different approach to plant design. In particular, a large output plant was comprised of nine small modules. This novel approach to delivering nuclear power immediately intrigued me, primarily due to the design simplifications and plant flexibilities enabled by this approach.
In the fall of 2000, I attended a colloquium at the University of Tennessee presented by Mario Carelli, a chief scientist at Westinghouse. Carelli described the newly formed international consortium that was developing the International Reactor Innovative and Secure (IRIS) design. IRIS was a small, integral light-water reactor that focused on achieving an exceptionally high level of safety—safety by design,
as Carelli liked to call it. After appropriate due diligence, Oak Ridge National Laboratory elected to join the IRIS consortium, and I served as the laboratory’s principal contributor. I remained actively engaged with IRIS for several years until a new opportunity surfaced: the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership.
The US Department of Energy unveiled the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership program in 2006. Although the majority of the program was focused on developing new technologies for separating and recycling nuclear waste, there was a minor program element to explore smaller-sized reactors for international deployment. The Grid-Appropriate Reactors program catalyzed significant interest in SMRs both within the US and internationally. My position as a technical leader for the Grid-Appropriate Reactor program significantly shaped my view of the global energy landscape and the vital role that SMRs could play. The program was short-lived, but I was able to continue working with the DOE to develop the follow-on, domestically focused Small Modular Reactor program. This engagement provided a new insight into the spectrum of SMRs being designed in the US and a surprising interest in SMRs by domestic utilities.
A few years later, I chose to leave the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and join NuScale Power, a startup company dedicated to commercializing a novel and innovative SMR. This event irreversibly changed my career path from being involved in advanced reactor research to being committed to the development and deployment of SMRs, specifically the NuScale SMR. Although I was employed by NuScale Power during the writing of this book, it was prepared entirely on my own time and at my own expense. The opinions given in it are exclusively my own and are not intended to reflect the opinions of NuScale Power. I have tried to not let my allegiance to NuScale Power unfairly bias my writing, although I frequently use the NuScale design as an illustrative example due to my familiarity with that particular SMR design. On the other hand, I freely acknowledge that working at NuScale Power was a deliberate choice based on having studied SMRs of all technologies and designs for many years. I believe that the NuScale design best embodies the desirable features of SMRs and will best demonstrate their many anticipated benefits. I am not alone in my excitement for the design; the halls at NuScale Power are filled with new colleagues who have also made tough personal decisions to dedicate their time and talent to that effort. I am both honored and excited to be a part of the NuScale team.
Reflections of these past engagements with SMRs, domestic and international, appear throughout the book, which is divided into three major parts. In Part One, I describe the global energy landscape and offer perspectives on why nuclear energy will be an important contributor to our global energy future. Within this discussion, I touch on the strengths and weaknesses of several promising energy options and introduce notions of how SMRs