In nuclear physics, an energy amplifier is a novel type of nuclear power reactor, a subcritical reactor, in which an energetic particle beam is used to stimulate a reaction, which in turn releases enough energy to power the particle accelerator and leave an energy profit for power generation. The concept has more recently been referred to as an accelerator-driven system (ADS) or accelerator-driven sub-critical reactor.

HistoryEdit

Preceding the concept and the first achieved criticality in Chicago Pile-1, Columbia University physicists Enrico Fermi and Herbert L. Anderson worked at Princeton University with physicists Robert R. Wilson and Edward Creutz, developing the A-12 pile, a subcritical experiment similar to an energy amplifier. Nine kilograms of uranium oxide were embedded in a 490 kg graphite column, and spallation of beryllium by protons from the Princeton cyclotron was used as a neutron source. Most other pile experiments in this period, in both the United States and Germany, used alpha emitters such as radium-beryllium or radon-beryllium sources.<ref name="g235">Template:Cite journal</ref>

The concept is credited to Italian scientist Carlo Rubbia,<ref>Rubbiatron, il reattore da Nobel, Massimo Cappon, CERN docs server: Panorama, 11 giugno 1998. Also: File pdf.</ref> a Nobel Prize particle physicist and former director of Europe's CERN international nuclear physics lab. He published a proposal for a power reactor (nicknamed "Rubbiatron") based on a proton cyclotron accelerator with a beam energy of 800 MeV to 1 GeV, and a target with thorium as fuel and lead as a coolant. Rubbia's scheme also borrows from ideas developed by a group led by nuclear physicist Charles Bowman of the Los Alamos National Laboratory<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Principle and feasibilityEdit

The energy amplifier first uses a particle accelerator (e.g. linac, synchrotron, cyclotron or FFAG) to produce a beam of high-energy (relativistic) protons. The beam is directed to collide with nuclei of a heavy metal target, such as lead, thorium or uranium. Inelastic collisions between the proton beam and the target results in spallation, which produces twenty to thirty neutrons per event.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It might be possible to increase the neutron flux through the use of a neutron amplifier, a thin film of fissile material surrounding the spallation source; the use of neutron amplification in CANDU reactors has been proposed. While CANDU is a critical design, many of the concepts can be applied to a sub-critical system.<ref>http://www.tfd.chalmers.se/~valeri/Mars/Mo-o-f10.pdf Template:Bare URL PDF</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Thorium nuclei absorb neutrons, thus breeding fissile uranium-233, an isotope of uranium which is not found in nature. Moderated neutrons produce U-233 fission, releasing energy.

This design is entirely plausible with currently available technology, but requires more study before it can be declared both practical and economical.

OMEGA project (Template:Nihongo) is being studied as one of methodology of accelerator-driven system (ADS) in Japan.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Richard Garwin and Georges Charpak describe the energy amplifier in detail in their book "Megawatts and Megatons: A Turning Point in the Nuclear Age?" (2001) on pages 153-163.

Earlier, the general concept of the energy amplifier, namely an accelerator-driven sub-critical reactor, was covered in "The Second Nuclear Era" (1985) pages 62–64, by Alvin M. Weinberg and others.

AdvantagesEdit

The concept has several potential advantages over conventional nuclear fission reactors:

  • Subcritical design means that the reaction could not run away — if anything went wrong, the reaction would stop and the reactor would cool down. A meltdown could however occur if the ability to cool the core was lost.
  • Thorium is an abundant element — much more so than uranium — reducing strategic and political supply issues and eliminating costly and energy-intensive isotope separation. There is enough thorium to generate energy for at least several thousand years at current consumption rates.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • The energy amplifier would produce very little plutonium, so the design is believed to be more proliferation-resistant than conventional nuclear power (although the question of uranium-233 as nuclear weapon material must be assessed carefully).
  • The possibility exists of using the reactor to consume plutonium, reducing the world stockpile of the very-long-lived element.
  • Less long-lived radioactive waste is produced — the waste material would decay after 500 years to the radioactive level of coal ash.
  • No new science is required; the technologies to build the energy amplifier have all been demonstrated. Building an energy amplifier requires only engineering effort, not fundamental research (unlike nuclear fusion proposals).
  • Power generation might be economical compared to current nuclear reactor designs if the total fuel cycle and decommissioning costs are considered.
  • The design could work on a relatively small scale, and has the potential to load-follow by modulating the proton beam, making it more suitable for countries without a well-developed power grid system.
  • Inherent safety and safe fuel transport could make the technology more suitable for developing countries as well as in densely populated areas.
  • Desired nuclear transmutation could be employed deliberately (rather than as an unavoidable consequence of nuclear fission and neutron irradiation) either to transmute high level waste (such as long-lived fission products or minor actinides) into less harmful substances, for producing radionuclides for use in nuclear medicine or to produce precious metals from low-priced feedstocks.
  • The lower fraction of delayed neutrons in the fission of Template:Chem compared to Template:Chem, which hampers the use of plutonium-containing fuels in critical reactors (which need to operate in the narrow band of neutron flux between prompt critical and delayed critical), is of no concern as no criticality of any kind is achieved or needed
  • While nuclear reprocessing runs into the problem that MOX-fuel can not be further recycled for use in current light-water reactors as the reactor-grade plutonium concentration of fissile isotopes is not achieved due to Template:Chem impurities exceeding acceptable levels, all fissile and fertile isotopes of actinoids can be "burned" in a subcritical reactor, thus closing the nuclear fuel cycle without the need for fast breeder reactors

DisadvantagesEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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