Returning to designs abandoned in the 1970s, start-ups are developing a new kind of reactor that promises to be much safer and cleaner than current ones.
Troels
Schönfeldt can trace his path to becoming a nuclear energy entrepreneur
back to 2009, when he and other young physicists at the Niels Bohr
Institute in Copenhagen started getting together for an occasional “beer
and nuclear” meetup.
The beer was an India pale ale that they brewed themselves in an old,
junk-filled lab space in the institute’s basement. The “nuclear” part
was usually a bull session about their options for fighting two of
humanity’s biggest problems: global poverty and climate change. “If you
want poor countries to become richer,” says Schönfeldt, “you need a
cheap and abundant power source.” But if you want to avoid spewing out
enough extra carbon dioxide to fry the planet, you need to provide that
power without using coal and gas.
It seemed clear to Schönfeldt and the others that the standard
alternatives simply wouldn’t be sufficient. Wind and solar power by
themselves couldn’t offer nearly enough energy, not with billions of
poor people trying to join the global middle class. Yet conventional
nuclear reactors — which could meet the need, in principle —
were massively expensive, potentially dangerous and anathema to much of
the public. And if anyone needed a reminder of why, the catastrophic
meltdown at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi plant came along to provide it in
March 2011.
On the other hand, says Schönfeldt, the worldwide nuclear engineering
community was beginning to get fired up about unconventional reactor
designs — technologies that had been sidelined 40 or 50 years before,
but that might have a lot fewer problems than existing reactors. And the
beer-and-nuclear group found that one such design, the molten salt
reactor, had a simplicity, elegance and, well, weirdness that especially
appealed.
Molten salt reactors might just turn nuclear power into the greenest energy source on the planet.
The weird bit was that word “molten,” says Schönfeldt: Every other
reactor design in history had used fuel that’s solid, not liquid. This
thing was basically a pot of hot nuclear soup. The recipe called for
taking a mix of salts — compounds whose molecules are held together
electrostatically, the way sodium and chloride ions are in table salt —
and heating them up until they melted. This gave you a clear, hot liquid
that was about the consistency of water. Then you stirred in a salt
such as uranium tetrafluoride, which produced a lovely green tint, and
let the uranium undergo nuclear fission right there in the melt — a
reaction that would not only keep the salts nice and hot, but could
power a city or two besides.
Weird or not, molten salt technology was viable; the Oak Ridge
National Laboratory in Tennessee had successfully operated a
demonstration reactor back in the 1960s. And more to the point, the
beer-and-nuclear group realized, the liquid nature of the fuel meant
that they could potentially build molten salt reactors that were cheap
enough for poor countries to buy; compact enough to deliver on a flatbed
truck; green enough to burn our existing stockpiles of nuclear waste
instead of generating more — and safe enough to put in cities and
factories. That’s because Fukushima-style meltdowns would be physically
impossible in a mix that’s molten already. Better still, these reactors
would be proliferation resistant, because their hot, liquid contents
would be very hard for rogue states or terrorists to hijack for making
nuclear weapons.
Molten salt reactors might just turn nuclear power into the greenest energy source on the planet.
Crazy? “We had to try,” says Schönfeldt. So in 2014 he and his
colleagues launched Seaborg Technologies, a Copenhagen-based start-up
named in honor of the late Glenn Seaborg, a Manhattan Project veteran
who helped pioneer the peaceful uses of nuclear energy. With Schönfeldt
as chief executive officer, they set about turning their vision into an
ultracompact molten salt reactor that could serve the developed and
developing world alike.
“It will be exceedingly hard, but that is significantly better than impossible.” Troels Schönfeldt
They weren’t alone: Efforts to revive older nuclear designs had been
bubbling up elsewhere, and dozens of start-ups were trying to
commercialize them. At least half a dozen of these start-ups were
focused on molten salt reactors specifically, since they were arguably
the cleanest and safest of the lot. Research funding agencies around the
world had begun to pour millions of dollars per year into developing
molten salt technology. Even power companies were starting to make
investments. A prime example was the Southern Company, a utility
conglomerate headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia. In 2016, the company
started an ambitious molten salt development program in collaboration
with Oak Ridge and TerraPower, a nuclear research company in Bellevue,
Washington.
“In the next 20 to 30 years, the energy environment is going to
undergo a major transformation to a low- to no-carbon future,” says Nick
Irvin, Southern’s director of research and development. There will be
far fewer centralized power plants and many more distributed sources
like wind and solar, he says. Molten salt reactors fit ideally into this
future, he adds, because of both their inherent safety and their
ability to consume spent nuclear fuel from traditional nuclear reactors.
Getting there won’t be easy — not least because hot molten salts can
be just as corrosive as they sound. Every component that comes into
contact with the brew will have to be made of a specialized, high-tech
alloy that can resist them. “You dissolve the uranium in the salt,” says
Nathan Myhrvold, a venture capitalist who serves as vice chairman of
TerraPower’s board. “What you have to make sure is that you don’t
dissolve your reactor in it!”
Certainly no one expects to have a prototype power plant operating
before the mid-2020s, or to field full-scale commercial reactors until
the 2030s. Still, says Schönfeldt, “it will be exceedingly hard, but
that is significantly better than impossible.”
Rethinking nuclear
To Rachel Slaybaugh, today’s surge of entrepreneurial focus on
nuclear technology is astonishing. “It feels like we’re at the beginning
of a movement, with an explosion of ideas,” says Slaybaugh, a nuclear
engineer at the University of California, Berkeley, who has written
about green energy options in the Annual Review of Environment and Resources.
But, as nuclear engineer Leslie Dewan points out, this explosion is
also something of a throwback to the post–World War II era. “Nuclear
power technology was incredibly new,” says Dewan, who in 2011 cofounded
one of the first of the molten salt start-ups, Transatomic Power in
Cambridge, Massachusetts. It was a time of blue-sky thinking, she says,
“where they were trying many, many different types of technologies,
running experiments, building and prototyping.”
The basics had been known since 1938, when German scientists
discovered that firing a neutron into certain heavy atomic nuclei would
cause the nucleus to fission, or split into two pieces. The rupture of
such a “fissile” nucleus would release an enormous amount of energy,
plus at least two new neutrons. These neutrons could then slam into
nearby nuclei and trigger the release of more energy, plus 4 neutrons —
then 8, 16, 32 and so on in an exponentially growing chain reaction.
This runaway energy release could produce a very powerful bomb, as
the wartime Manhattan Project demonstrated. But taming it, and turning
the chain reaction into a safe, steady-state heat source for power
production, was a lot trickier.
That’s where all the postwar experimentation
came in. There were reactors fueled by uranium, which comes out of the
ground containing virtually the only fissile isotope found in nature,
uranium-235. There were reactors known as breeders, which could
accomplish the magical-sounding feat of producing more fuel than they
consumed. (Actually, they relied on the fact that uranium is “fertile,”
meaning that its most abundant isotope, uranium-238, almost never
undergoes fission by itself — but it can absorb a neutron and turn into
highly fissile plutonium-239.) And there were reactors fueled with
thorium, a fertile element that sits two slots to the left of uranium in
the periodic table, and is about three times more abundant in the
Earth’s crust. A neutron will turn its dominant isotope, thorium-232,
into fissile uranium-233.
At the same time, designers were trying out different types of
coolant: the fluid that circulates through the reactor core, absorbs the
heat being produced by the fission reactions, and carries it out to
where the heat can do something useful like running a standard steam
turbine to generate electricity. Some opted for ordinary water: an
abundant, familiar substance that carries a lot of heat per unit of
volume. But others went with high-temperature substances such as liquid
sodium metal, helium gas or even molten lead. “Coolants” like these
could keep a reactor running at 700 degrees Celsius or more, which would
make it substantially more efficient at generating power.
By the 1960s, researchers had tested reactors featuring combinations
of all these options and more. But the approach that won out for
commercial power production — and that is still used in virtually all of
the 454 nuclear plants operating around the world — was the
water-cooled uranium reactor. This wasn’t necessarily the best nuclear
design, but it was one of the first: Water-cooled reactors were
originally developed in the 1940s to power submarines. So in the 1950s,
when the Eisenhower administration launched a high-profile push to
harness nuclear energy for peaceful purposes, the technology was adapted
for civilian use and scaled up enormously. Other designs were left for
later, if ever. By the 1960s and 1970s, second-generation water-cooled
reactors were being deployed globally.
“It feels like we’re at the beginning of a movement.” Rachel Slaybaugh
Even then, however, there were many in the field who were uneasy with that choice.
Among the most notable was nuclear physicist Alvin Weinberg, a
Manhattan Project veteran and director of the Oak Ridge National
Laboratory. Weinberg had participated in the development of water-cooled
reactors, and knew that they had some key vulnerabilities — including
water’s low boiling point, just 100°C at normal atmospheric pressure.
Commercial nuclear plants could get that up to 325°C or so by
pressurizing the reactor vessel. But as Weinberg and others knew very
well, that was not enough to rule out the nightmare of nightmares: a
meltdown. All it would take was some freak accident that interrupted the
flow of water through the core and trapped all the heat inside. You
could shut down power production by dropping rods of boron or cadmium
into the reactor core to soak up neutrons and stop the chain reaction.
But nothing could stop the heat produced by the decay of fission
products — the melange of short-lived but fiercely radioactive elements
that inevitably build up inside an active reactor as nuclei split in
two.
Unless the operators managed to restore the coolant flow within a few
hours, that trapped fission-product heat would send temperatures
soaring past the 325°C mark, turn the water into high-pressure steam,
and reduce the solid fuel to a radioactive puddle melting its way
through the reactor vessel floor. Soon after, the vessel would likely
rupture and send a pressurized plume of fission products into the
atmosphere. Included would be radioactive strontium-90, iodine-131 and
caesium-137 — extremely dangerous isotopes that can easily enter the
food chain and end up in the body.
To forestall such a catastrophe, designers had equipped the
commercial water-cooled reactors with all manner of redundancies and
emergency backup cooling systems. But to Weinberg’s mind, that was a bit
like installing fire alarms and sprinkler systems in a house built of
papier-mâché. What you really wanted was the nuclear equivalent of a
house built of fireproof brick — a reactor that based its safety on the
laws of physics, with no need for operators or backup systems to do
anything.
Weinberg and his team at Oak Ridge believed that they could come very
close to that ideal with the molten salt reactor, which they had been
working on since 1954. Such a reactor couldn’t possibly suffer a
meltdown, even in an accident: The molten salt core was liquid already.
The fission-product heat would simply cause the salt mix to expand and
move the fuel nuclei farther apart, which would dampen the chain
reaction.
Pressure would be a non-issue as well: The salts would have a boiling
point far higher than any temperature the fission products could
produce. (One common choice for nuclear applications is FLiBe, a mix of
lithium fluorides and beryllium fluorides that doesn’t boil until
1,400°C, about the temperature of a butane blowtorch.) So the reactor
vessel would never be in danger of rupture from molten salt “steam.” In
fact, the reactor would barely shift from its normal operating pressure
of one atmosphere.
Better still, the molten core would trap fission products far more
securely than in solid-fueled reactors. Cesium, iodine and all the rest
would chemically bind with the salts the instant they were created. And
since the salts could not boil away in even the worst accident, these
fission products would be held in place instead of being free to drift
off and take up radioactive residence in people’s bones and thyroid
glands.
And just in case, the liquid nature of the fuel allowed for a simple
fail-safe known as a freeze plug. This involved connecting the bottom of
the reactor vessel to a drain pipe, which would be plugged with a lump
of solid fuel salt kept frozen by a jet of cool gas. If the power failed
and the gas flow stopped, or if the reactor got too hot, the plug would
melt and gravity would drain the contents into an underground holding
tank. The mix would then cool, solidify and remain in the tank until the
crisis was over — salts, fuel, fission products and all.
Molten salt success, then a detour
Weinberg and his team successfully demonstrated all this in the
Molten Salt Reactor Experiment, an 8-megawatt prototype that ran at Oak
Ridge from 1965 to 1969. The corrosiveness of the salts was a potential
threat to the long-term integrity of pipes, pumps and other parts, but
the researchers had identified a number of corrosion-resistant materials
they thought might solve the problem. By the early 1970s, the group was
well into development of an even more ambitious prototype that would
allow them to test those materials as well as to demonstrate the use of
thorium fuel salts instead of uranium.
The Oak Ridge physicists were also eager to try out a new system for
dealing with the waste fission products — one that again took advantage
of the fuel’s liquid nature, but had been tested only in the laboratory.
The idea was to siphon off a little of the reactor’s fuel mix each day
and run it through a nearby purification system, which would chemically
extract the fission products in much the same way that the kidneys
remove toxins from the bloodstream. The cleaned-up fuel would then be
circulated back into the reactor, which could continue running at full
power the whole time. This process would not only keep the fission
products from building up until they snuffed out the chain reaction — a
problem for any reactor, since these elements tend to absorb a lot of
neutrons — but it would also enhance the safety of molten salt still
further. Not even the worst accident can contaminate the countryside
with fission products that aren’t there.
But none of it was to be. Officials in the US nuclear program
terminated the Oak Ridge molten salt program in January 1973 — and fired
Weinberg.
The nuclear engineering community was just too heavily committed to
solid fuels, both financially and intellectually. Practitioners already
had decades of experience with experimental and commercial solid-fueled
reactors, versus that one molten salt experiment at Oak Ridge. A huge
infrastructure existed for processing and producing solid fuel. And, not
incidentally, the US research program was committed to a grand vision
for the global nuclear future that would expand this infrastructure
enormously — and that, viewed with 20-20 hindsight, would lead the
nuclear industry into a trap.
Key to that vision was a different way of dealing with the buildup of
fission products. Since Oak Ridge–style continuous purification wasn’t
an option in a solid-fuel reactor, water-cooled or otherwise, standard
procedure called for burning fuel until the fission products rendered it
useless, or spent. In water-cooled power reactors this took roughly
three years, at which point the spent fuel would be switched out for
fresh, then stored at the bottom of a pool of water for a few years
while the worst of its fission-product radioactivity decayed.
From there, the plan was to recycle it. Counting the remaining
uranium, plus the plutonium that had formed from neutrons hitting
uranium-238 nuclei, the fuel still contained most of the potential
fission energy it had started with. So there was to be a new, global
network of reprocessing plants that would chemically extract the fission
products for disposal, and turn the uranium and plutonium into fresh
fuel. That network, in turn, would ultimately support a new generation
of sodium-cooled breeder reactors that would produce plutonium by the
ton — thus solving what was then thought to be an acute shortage of the
uranium needed to power the all-nuclear global economy of the future.
But that plan started to look considerably less visionary in May
1974, when India tested a nuclear bomb made with plutonium extracted
from the spent fuel of a conventional reactor. Governments around the
world suddenly realized that global reprocessing would be an invitation
to rampant nuclear weapons proliferation: In plants handling large
quantities of pure plutonium, it would be entirely too easy for bad
actors to secretly divert a few kilograms at a time for bombs. So in
April 1977, US President Jimmy Carter banned commercial reprocessing in
the United States, and much of the rest of the world followed.
That helped cement the already declining interest in breeder
reactors, which made no sense without reprocessing plants to extract the
new-made plutonium, and left the world with a nasty disposal problem.
Instead of storing spent fuel underwater for a few years, engineers were
now supposed to isolate it for something like 240,000 years, thanks to
the 24,100-year half-life of plutonium-239. (The rule of thumb for
safety is to wait 10 half-lives, which reduces radiation levels more
than a thousand-fold.) No one has yet figured out how to guarantee
isolation for that span of time. Today, there are nearly 300,000 tons of
spent nuclear fuel still piling up at reactors around the world, part
of an as yet unresolved long-term storage problem.
In retrospect, those 1970s-era nuclear planners would have done well
to put serious money back into Oak Ridge’s molten salt program: As
developers there tried to point out at the time, the continuous
purification approach could have solved both the spent-fuel and
proliferation problems at a stroke.
The proliferation risk would be minimal because — unlike the kind of
reprocessing plants envisioned for the breeder program — the Oak Ridge
system would never isolate uranium-235, plutonium-239 or any other
fissile material. Instead, these isotopes would stay in the cleaned-up
fuel salts at concentrations far too low to make a bomb. They would be
circulated back into the reactor, where they could continue fissioning
until they were completely consumed.
“The nuclear industry was not in an innovation frame of mind for 30 years.” Nathan Myhrvold
The reactor’s purification system would likewise offer a solution to
the spent fuel issue. It would strip out the reaction-quenching fission
products from the fuel almost as quickly as they formed, which would
potentially allow the reactor to run for decades at a stretch with only
an occasional injection of fresh fuel to replace what it burned. Some of
that fuel could even come from today’s 300,000-ton backlog of spent
solid fuel.
Admittedly, it would take centuries for even a large network of
molten salt reactors to work through the full backlog. But burning it
would eliminate the need to safely store it for thousands of centuries.
By consuming the long-lived isotopes like plutonium-239, molten salt
reactors could reduce the nuclear waste stream to a comparatively small
volume of fission products having half-lives of 30 years or less. By the
10 half-life rule, this waste would then need to be isolated for just
300 years. That’s not trivial, says Schönfeldt, “but it’s something that
can be handled” — say, by encasing the waste in concrete and steel, or
putting it down a deep borehole.
Unfortunately, the late 1970s was not a good time for reviving any
kind of nuclear program, molten salt or otherwise. Public mistrust of
nuclear energy was escalating rapidly, thanks to rising concerns over
safety, waste and weapons proliferation. The power companies’ patience
was wearing thin, thanks to the skyrocketing, multibillion-dollar cost
of standard water-cooled reactors. And then in March 1979 came a partial
meltdown at Three Mile Island, a conventional nuclear plant near
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. In April 1986, another catastrophe hit with
the fire and meltdown at the Chernobyl plant in Ukraine.
The resulting backlash against nuclear power was so strong that new
plant construction effectively ceased — which is why most of the nuclear
reactors operating today are at least three to four decades old. And
nuclear power research stagnated, as well, with most of the money and
effort going into ensuring the safety of those aging plants.
“The nuclear industry was not in an innovation frame of mind for 30 years,” says TerraPower’s Myhrvold.
Old tech revival
This defensive crouch lasted well into the new century, while the
molten salt concept fell further and further into obscurity. That began
to change only in 2002, when Kirk Sorensen came across a book describing
what the molten salt program had accomplished at Oak Ridge.
“Why didn’t we do it this way in the first place?” he remembers wondering.
Sorensen, then a NASA engineer in Huntsville, Alabama, was so
intrigued that he tracked down the old Oak Ridge technical reports,
which were moldering in file cabinets, and talked NASA into paying to
have them scanned. The files filled up five compact discs, which he
copied and sent around to leaders in the US energy industry. “I received
no response,” he says. So in 2006, in hopes of reaching somebody who
would find the concept as compelling as he did, he uploaded the
documents to energyfromthorium.com, a website he’d created with his own money.
That strategy worked — slowly. “I would give Kirk Sorensen personal
credit,” says Lou Qualls, a nuclear engineer at Oak Ridge who became the
Department of Energy’s first national technical director for molten
salt reactors in 2017. “So Kirk is one of those voices out in the
wilderness, and for a long time people would go, 'We don’t even know
what you’re talking about.’” But once the old reports became available
online, “people started to look at the technology, to understand it, see
that it had a history,” Qualls says. “It started getting more
credibility.”
“We … became nuclear engineers because we’re environmentalists.” Leslie Dewan
It helped that rising concerns about climate change — and the
ever-growing backlog of spent nuclear fuel — had put many nuclear
engineers in the mood for a radical rethink of their field. They could
see that incremental improvements in standard reactor technology weren’t
getting anywhere. Manufacturers had been hyping their “Generation III”
designs for water-cooled reactors with enhanced safety features, but
these were proving to be just as slow and expensive to build as their
second-generation predecessors from the 1970s.
So instead, there was a move to revive the old reactor concepts and
update them into a whole new series of Generation IV reactors: devices
that would be considerably smaller and cheaper than their
1,000-megawatt, multibillion-dollar predecessors, with safety and
proliferation resistance built in from the start. Among the most
prominent symbols of this movement was TerraPower. Launched in 2008 with
major funding from Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates, the company
immediately started development of a liquid sodium-cooled device called
the Traveling Wave Reactor.
The molten salt idea was definitely on the Gen IV list. Schönfeldt
remembers getting excited about it as early as 2008. At MIT, Dewan and
her fellow graduate student Mark Massie first encountered the idea in
2010, and were intrigued by the reactors’ inherent safety. “We both
became nuclear engineers because we’re environmentalists,” says Dewan.
Besides, her classmate had grown up watching his native West Virginia
being devastated by mountaintop removal mining. “So Mark wanted to
design a nuclear reactor that’s good enough to shut down the coal
industry.”
Then in March 2011, the dangers of the nuclear status quo were
underscored yet again. A tsunami knocked out all the cooling systems and
backups at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi plant and sent its 1970s-vintage
power reactors into the worst meltdown since Chernobyl. That April,
Sorensen launched the first of the molten salt start-up companies,
Huntsville-based Flibe Energy. His goal ever since has been to develop
and commercialize a Liquid-Fluoride Thorium Reactor — pretty much the
same device that was envisioned at Oak Ridge back in the 1960s.
Dewan and Massie founded Transatomic the same month. And other molten
salt start-ups soon followed, each building on the basic concept with a
host of different design strategies and fuel choices. When Seaborg
launched in 2014, for example, Schönfeldt and his colleagues started
designing a molten salt Compact Used fuel BurnEr (called CUBE) that
would not only run on a combination of spent nuclear fuel and thorium,
but also be really, really small by reactor standards. “The fact that
you can transport it to the site on the back of a truck is a major
upside,” says Schönfeldt, “especially in remote regions.”
TerraPower, meanwhile, decided in 2015 to develop a much larger
molten salt device, the Molten Chloride Fast Reactor, as a complement to
the company’s ongoing work on its sodium-cooled Traveling Wave Reactor.
The new system retains the latter’s ability to burn the widest possible
range of fuels — including not just spent nuclear fuel, but also the
ordinarily non-fissile uranium-238. (Both designs take advantage of the
fact that a uranium-238 nucleus hit by a neutron has a tiny, but
non-zero, probability of fissioning.) But unlike in the Traveling Wave
Reactor, explains the company’s chief technical officer, John Gilleland,
the molten salts’ 700°C-plus operating temperature will allow it to
generate the kind of heat needed for industrial processes such as
petroleum cracking and plastics making. Industrial process heat
currently accounts for about one-third of total energy usage within the
US manufacturing sector.
This industrial heat is now produced almost entirely by burning coal,
oil or natural gas, says Gilleland. So if you could replace all that
with carbon-free nuclear heat, he says, “you could hit the carbon
problem in a very striking way.”
Of course, none of this is going to happen tomorrow. The various
molten salt companies are still refining their designs by gathering lab
data on liquid fuel chemistry, and running massive computer simulations
of how the melt behaves when it’s simultaneously flowing and fissioning.
The first prototypes won’t be up and running until the mid-2020s at the
earliest.
And not all the companies will be there. Transatomic became the
molten salt movement’s first casualty in September 2018, when Dewan shut
it down. Her company had simply fallen too far behind in its design
work relative to competitors, she explains. So even though investors
were willing to keep going, she says, “it wouldn’t feel right for us to
continue taking their money when I didn’t see a viable path forward for
the business side.”
Still, most of the molten salt pioneers say they see reason for
cautious optimism. Since at least 2015, the US Department of Energy has
been ramping up its support for advanced reactor research in general,
and molten salt reactors in particular.
“We kept telling people the three big advantages of molten salt reactors — no meltdown, no proliferation, burning up nuclear waste.” Troels Schönfeldt
Meanwhile, notes Slaybaugh, licensing agencies such as the US Nuclear
Regulatory Commission are gearing up with the computer simulations and
evaluation tools they will need when the advanced-reactor companies
start seeking approval for constructing their prototypes. “People are
looking at these technologies more carefully and more seriously than
they have in a long time,” she says.
Perhaps the biggest and most unpredictable barrier is the public’s
ingrained fear about almost anything labeled “nuclear.” What happens if
people lump in molten salt reactors with older nuclear technologies, and
reject them out of hand?
Based on their experience to date, most proponents are cautiously
optimistic on this front as well. In Copenhagen, Schönfeldt and his
colleagues kept hammering on the why of nuclear power, which
was to fight climate change, poverty and pollution. “And we kept telling
people the three big advantages of molten salt reactors — no meltdown,
no proliferation, burning up nuclear waste,” he says. And slowly, people
were willing to listen.
“We’ve moved a long way,” says Schönfeldt. “When we started in 2014,
commercial nuclear power was illegal in Denmark. In 2017, we got public
funding.”