Published 2017
| Version v1
Publication
A short overview of ITER-like pulsed MCF reactors application as hybrid nuclear systems for actinides transmutation
Contributors
Description
The fusion-fission hybrid reactor is a promising technology that is likely to assume more and more importance in the
global energy scenario in the coming years. Although this kind of nuclear system dates back to the earliest times of the
fusion projects (when it was recognized that using fusion neutrons to "support" nuclear fission fuel cycle could widely
increase the exploitation of the fusion plants), it appears to receive relatively limited attention since the mid-1980s.
Notwithstanding, hybrid fusion fission systems have been already studied for some decades, in the most prominent
laboratories and a relatively large bibliography was produced. Obviously much more papers on this topic have been
published in more recent years.
The fusion-fission hybrid concept can use both the nuclear fusion and fission processes: in a typical application, neutrons
from fusion reactions can be used to sustain the fission chain of a sub-critical system. This is the basis of the hybrid
reactor concept: neutron generation is not produced just in neutron-induced fissions, but also as a "by-product" of the
fusion reactions inside the nuclear fusion reactor "core" (i.e., respectively, the void chamber for MCF or the fuel particles
for ICF). This method allows to have an intrinsically safe facility (with a higher efficiency than a fusion reactor itself and
a harder neutron energy spectrum than a fission reactor) which could be suitable for nuclear waste transmutation, too.
In the last years, many initiatives on nuclear waste transmutation were proposed in order to reduce the long-term
radiotoxicity of the wastes by eliminating a high fraction of the TRU from the SNF before their final disposal. In this
frame, as already anticipated, hybrid fusion-fission systems could have an additional degree of freedom because of the
independent source: this means that the neutron spectrum can be (reasonably) tailored for the transmutation purposes.
In the present study a special focus has been devoted to the transmutation of SNF from fission reactors loaded in a
fusion system, operated under the hypothesis to take into account the behaviour of a planned "real" (i.e. pulsed) MCF
(ITER-like) plant.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/876555
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/876555
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE