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kristopher

(29,798 posts)
Tue Mar 13, 2012, 05:04 PM Mar 2012

Japan struggles to handle plutonium as fast-breeder reactor project becomes unrealistic

Japan struggles to handle plutonium as fast-breeder reactor project becomes unrealistic


In this file photo, the nuclear reactor Monju is seen in Tsuruga, Fukui Prefecture, on Nov. 16, 2010. (Mainichi)

Japan has been fighting an urgent and difficult battle to dispose of accumulated plutonium extracted from spent nuclear fuel as it has become increasingly unrealistic to realize the country's long and expensive fast-breeder reactor project.

One gram of plutonium is said to have energy equal to 1 kiloliter of petroleum. If plutonium is mixed with uranium to create "MOX (mixed-oxide) fuel" and is burned at a fast-breeder reactor, more plutonium is produced than consumed. But now that it has become difficult to realize the government's project to build a fast-breeder reactor that was once dubbed a "dream reactor," Japan has been hard-pressed to dispose of accumulated plutonium.

Japan started the construction of the Monju prototype fast-breeder reactor in Tsuruga, Fukui Prefecture, in 1985, and succeeded for the first time in generating power at the fast-breeder reactor in August 1995. But in December 1995, a fire broke out at the facility when sodium used as coolant leaked out. The operation of the reactor was resumed in 2010, but it has been plagued by a series of problems ever since, and therefore it is extremely difficult to put it into commercial use.

Based on the assumption that the fast-breeder reactor project will be carried out in the future, the Japanese government has extracted plutonium from spent nuclear fuel at nuclear power plants that run on uranium as fuel. As of the end of last December, Japan had about 45 metric tons of accumulated plutonium.

It is unforgivable, however....


http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/news/20120313p2a00m0na012000c.html
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Japan struggles to handle plutonium as fast-breeder reactor project becomes unrealistic (Original Post) kristopher Mar 2012 OP
Japanese haven't been very good at nuclear power; that doesn't mean nobody is. PamW Mar 2012 #1
Yes we all know how technologically inept the Japanese are... kristopher Mar 2012 #2

PamW

(1,825 posts)
1. Japanese haven't been very good at nuclear power; that doesn't mean nobody is.
Wed Mar 14, 2012, 10:35 AM
Mar 2012

The Japanese certainly haven't been very good at nuclear power.

The Monju reactor is a quarter century old, and the Japanese haven't had as much success as the USA has had.

The USA successfully operated the EBR-II reactor at Argonne-Idaho for about 40 years WITHOUT mishap.

The US program by Argonne National Lab culminated with the conversion of EBR-II into a prototype Integral Fast Reactor or IFR.

Read about the successes of the IFR program in this interview conducted by Pulitzer Prize winner Richard Rhodes with nuclear physicist and then Associate Director of Argonne National Laboratory, Dr. Charles Till for PBS's Frontline:

http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/reaction/interviews/till.html

PamW


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