http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thorium wrote:
<<Thorium, as well as uranium and plutonium, can be used as fuel in a nuclear reactor. A thorium fuel cycle offers several potential advantages over a uranium fuel cycle, however, including much greater abundance on Earth, superior physical and nuclear properties of the fuel, enhanced proliferation resistance, and reduced nuclear waste production. Nobel laureate Carlo Rubbia at CERN (European Organization for Nuclear Research), has worked on developing the use of thorium as a cheap, clean and safe alternative to uranium in reactors. Rubbia states that a ton of thorium can produce as much energy as 200 tons of uranium, or 3,500,000 tonnes of coal.
One of the early pioneers of the technology was U.S. physicist Alvin Weinberg at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee, who helped develop a working nuclear plant using liquid fuel in the 1960s.
Thorium-fluoride reactors can operate at atmospheric temperature, and plants would be much smaller and less expensive. In addition, not requiring pressurized water in the reactor, there is no need for huge containment domes.
According to Australian science writer Tim Dean, "
thorium promises what uranium never delivered: abundant, safe and clean energy - and a way to burn up old radioactive waste." With a thorium nuclear reactor, Dean stresses a number of added benefits: there is no possibility of a meltdown, it generates power inexpensively, it does not produce weapons-grade by-products, and will burn up existing high-level waste as well as nuclear weapon stockpiles. Ambrose Evans-Pritchard, of the British Telegraph daily, suggests that "
Obama could kill fossil fuels overnight with a nuclear dash for thorium." He advocates setting up a new Manhattan Project, as the U.S. did to rapidly develop nuclear weapons during World War II, in order to "marshal America’s vast scientific and strategic resources" in developing thorium reactors. It could put "an end to our dependence on fossil fuels within three to five years," he stresses.
The Thorium Energy Alliance (TEA), an educational advocacy organization, emphasizes that "
there is enough thorium in the United States alone to power the country at its current energy level for over 1,000 years." They also note that a thorium power plant can be "
designed to tap right in at the source of a current coal or uranium plant," without the need for laying a new grid. In addition, reducing coal as an energy source, according to science expert Lester R. Brown, of The Earth Policy Institute in Washington DC, would reduce deaths, certain diseases, and medical costs. He estimates that air pollution from coal-fired power plants causes 23,600 U.S. deaths per year.
Although not fissile itself,
232Th will absorb slow neutrons to produce
233U, which is fissile. Hence, like
238U, it is fertile. It is at least 4-5 times more abundant in Earth's crust than all isotopes of uranium combined and is fairly evenly spread around Earth, with many countries having large supplies of it. Also, preparation of thorium fuel does not require isotopic separation.
The thorium fuel cycle creates 233U, which, if separated from the reactor's fuel, can be used for making nuclear weapons. This is why a liquid-fuel cycle (e.g., MSR) is preferred — only a limited amount of 233U ever exists in the reactor and its heat-transfer systems, preventing any access to weapons material; however the neutrons produced by the reactor can be absorbed by a thorium or uranium blanket and fissile 233U or 239Pu produced. Also, the 233U could be continuously extracted from the molten fuel as the reactor is running. Since there are no neutrons from spontaneous fission of U-233, solid U-233 can be used easily in a simple gun-type nuclear bomb design. In 1977, a light-water reactor at the Shippingport Atomic Power Station was used to establish a Th232-U233 fuel cycle. The reactor worked until its decommissioning in 1982. Thorium can be and has been used to power nuclear energy plants using both the modified traditional Generation III reactor design and prototype Generation IV reactor designs.
A seed-and-blanket fuel using a core of plutonium surrounded by a blanket of thorium/uranium has been undergoing testing at Moscow's Kurchatov Institute, under a 1994 agreement between the institute and McLean, Virginia-based Thorium Power Ltd. Russian government-owned nuclear design firm Red Star formed an agreement with Thorium Power in 2007 to continue work on scaling up the test fuel rods to commercial use and licensing in VVER-1000 reactors. This assembly could achieve a more efficient disposal method of weapons-grade plutonium than the mixed-oxide disposal method, especially with the 2009 decision by the US to shelve the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository highlighting the issue of what to do with all the plutonium left over from decommissioned nuclear weapons. Thorium Power, with offices in London, Dubai, and Moscow and with Dr. Hans Blix serving as an advisor, also advises the United Arab Emirates on their fledgling nuclear program. They are awaiting the finalization of the US-India nuclear 1-2-3 Agreement to complete a joint-venture with Punj Lloyd, an Indian engineering firm with nuclear reactor construction ambitions.
Unlike its use in MSRs, when using solid thorium in modified light water reactor (LWR) problems include: the undeveloped technology for fuel fabrication; in traditional, once-through LWR designs potential problems in recycling thorium due to highly radioactive 228Th; some weapons proliferation risk due to production of 233U; and the technical problems (not yet satisfactorily solved) in reprocessing. Much development work is still required before the thorium fuel cycle can be commercialized for use in LWR. The effort required has not seemed worth it while abundant uranium is available, but geopolitical forces (e.g. India looking for indigenous fuel) as well as uranium production issues, proliferation concerns, and concerns about the disposal/storage of radioactive waste are starting to work in its favor. In 2008, Senator Harry Reid (D-Nevada) and Senator Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) introduced the Thorium Energy Independence and Security Act of 2008, which would mandate a US Department of Energy initiative to examine the commercial use of thorium in US reactors. The bill, however, did not reach a full Senate vote.
The thorium fuel cycle, with its potential for breeding fuel without fast neutron reactors, holds considerable potential long-term benefits. Thorium is significantly more abundant than uranium, and is a key factor in sustainable nuclear energy. Perhaps more importantly, thorium produces one to two orders of magnitude less long-lived transuranics than uranium fuel cycles, though the long-lived actinide protactinium-231 is produced, and the amount of fission products is similar.
An early effort to use a thorium fuel cycle took place at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the 1960s. An experimental reactor was built based on MSR technology to study the feasibility of such an approach, using thorium-fluoride salt kept hot enough to be liquid, thus eliminating the need for fabricating fuel elements. This effort culminated in the Molten-Salt Reactor Experiment that used 232Th as the fertile material and 233U as the fissile fuel. This reactor was operated successfully for about five years. However, due to a lack of funding, the MSR program was discontinued in 1976.
India's Kakrapar-1 reactor is the world's first reactor which uses thorium rather than depleted uranium to achieve power flattening across the reactor core. India, which has about 25% of the world's thorium reserves, is developing a 300 MW prototype of a thorium-based Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWR). The prototype is expected to be fully operational by 2011, following which five more reactors will be constructed. Considered to be a global leader in thorium-based fuel, India's new thorium reactor is a fast-breeder reactor and uses a plutonium core rather than an accelerator to produce neutrons. India currently envisages meeting 30% of its electricity demand through thorium-based reactors by 2050.
In 2007, Norway was debating whether or not to focus on thorium plants because of the large deposits of thorium ores in the country, particularly at Fensfeltet near Ulefoss in Telemark county.
The primary fuel of the HT3R Project near Odessa, Texas, USA will be ceramic-coated thorium beads.
However, the best results occur with molten-salt reactors (MSRs), such as ORNL's LFTR, which have built-in negative-feedback reaction rates, due to salt expansion and thus reactor throttling via load. This is a great safety advantage, since no emergency cooling system is needed, which is both expensive and adds thermal inefficiency. In fact, an MSR was chosen as the base design for the 1960s DoD Atomic Plane largely because of its great safety advantages, even under aircraft maneuvering. In the basic design, an MSR generates heat at higher temperatures, continuously, and without refuelling shutdowns, so it can provide hot air to a more efficient (Brayton Cycle) turbine. An MSR run this way is about 30% better in thermal efficiency than common thermal plants, whether combustive or traditional solid-fuelled nuclear.
In 2010, Congressman Joe Sestak added funding for research and development of a destroyer-sized reactor using thorium.>>