4.2 Article

Molten-salt-cooled advanced high-temperature reactor for production of hydrogen and electricity

Journal

NUCLEAR TECHNOLOGY
Volume 144, Issue 3, Pages 289-302

Publisher

AMER NUCLEAR SOCIETY
DOI: 10.13182/NT03-1

Keywords

molten salt; high-temperature reactor; hydrogen production

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The molten-salt-cooled Advanced High-Temperature Reactor (AHTR) is a new reactor concept designed to provide very high-temperature (750 to 1000degreesC) heat to enable efficient low-cost thermochemical production of hydrogen (H-2) or production of electricity. This paper provides an initial description and technical analysis of its key features. The proposed AHTR uses coated-particle graphite-matrix fuel similar to that used in high-temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGRs), such as the General Atomics gas turbine-modular helium reactor. However, unlike the HTGRs, the AHTR uses a molten-salt coolant and a pool configuration, similar to that of the General Electric Super Power Reactor Inherently Safe Module (S-PRISM) liquid-metal reactor. Because the boiling points for molten fluoride salts are near similar to1400degreesC, the reactor can operate at very high temperatures and atmospheric pressure. For thermochemical H-2 production, the heat is delivered at the required near-constant high temperature and low pressure. For electricity production, a multireheat helium Brayton (gas-turbine) cycle, with efficiencies >50%, is used. The low-pressure molten-salt coolant, with its high heat capacity and natural circulation heat transfer capability, creates the potential for robust safety (including fully passive decay-heat removal) and improved economics with passive safety systems that allow higher power densities and scaling to large reactor sizes [>1000 MW(electric)].

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