Posted on 01/22/2020 1:14:26 PM PST by Red Badger
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Bespoke car maker Rolls-Royce is advancing research on nuclear small modular reactors.
Rolls-Royce's staid reputation as haute luxury belies its legacy of innovation in aerospace and other engineering.
Modular reactors are easier to manufacture, making costs both lower and more predictable.
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Rolls-Royce has taken a sharp right turn, from making million-dollar luxury sedans to researching cutting-edge nuclear small modular reactors (SMRs). Modular reactors are au courant in energy technology, and Rolls-Royce joins startups and governments around the world in trying to shrink the footprint and increase the safety of nuclear energy.
With its SMR design, which is "just one-tenth the size of a typical large-scale reactor site," a pressurized water reactor is enclosed with robust safety layers that are still far smaller in volume than the reactor space in a traditional nuclear plant. The reactor is oriented vertically, so gravity helps to move the hot and cold water around. Despite its much smaller size, the reactor will produce an expected 450 MWe, compared with 600 MWe at each of the two reactors at the existing Dungeness B plant in Kent.
Since the late 1800s, the Rolls-Royce company has engineered electronics and machinery, including engines for airplanes, automobiles, and ships. The car businesswhere Rolls-Royce handmakes extreme high-end luxury vehicles onlyis the tip of an experimental iceberg that goes back over a century, although the company has sold off some of its more interesting arms of business in recent years.
Today, its pushing for SMR technology in a series of new power plants around the U.K. Rolls-Royce is known for handcrafted vehicles, but its worked to revolutionize tooling and manufacturing in its nitty gritty engineering arm. The company says its approach to SMRs is motivated by how modular manufacturing can save a great deal of resources and money, making cutting-edge nuclear an option even during the twilight of Englands existing nuclear plants. The last of these traditional plants will be offline by 2030.
Rolls-Royces illustration of its Reactor Coolant System Rolls-Royce
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By relying on predictable, relatively portable nuclear reactors, manufacturers can standardize how much these nuclear plants will cost and therefore how much the energy they make will cost, Rolls-Royce says. In the U.S., nuclear power plants are often a complex nest of tax subsidies. This is a big change from the heyday of nuclear, when plants had to incentivize to the places where they sought to build.
The predicted first two sites of Rolls-Royce SMR plants are in northern England and Wales. One site is home of an interminably delayed nuclear project, and the other a decommissioned nuclear plant. In a way, this technology is a case of the faster spaceship problem: Traditional nuclear projects launched sometimes decades ago are so complex and hard to finalize and pay for that a lightweight startup project can lap them many times over.
What are the advantages of an SMR plant over a traditional nuclear plant? Well, proponents say almost everything about modular reactors is an improvement. Rolls-Royce in particular says that manufacturing many small reactors at once saves money and overhead compared with a stand-alone bespoke major project. That, in turn, enables a predictable programme from first concrete to commissioning in just four years, including 500 days on site for the modular build.
Among the U.K.s existing nuclear plants, the shortest build time was eight years and the longest was nearly 20. Rolls-Royces modular construction time is in line with the U.K.s earliest (and now long-retired) original Magnox plants, which took four years each to get on the grid.
These SMR plants sit somewhere on a continuum between a traditional handmade Rolls-Royce car and an Ikea bookshelf, hopefully bringing together the best aspects of bothand with no Allen wrenches.
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It is possible for nuclear power to be used, cleanly and efficiently.
It is NOT always clean and efficient because the machinery always seems to wind up under the control of idiots.
You can’t overcome the human factor here.
we put them in submarines dont we ??
RR has long been a big name in high-power engines and related big-$ equipment, not just luxury cars.
BTW, I've been hearing that we're about 20 years from a commercially viable fusion reactor for the last 50 years.
And I'm still waiting for a Jetsons flying car.
Great. That means that they will manufacture one reactor per month, each will be hand-fit with no interchangeable parts, and cost ten times more than they otherwise should.
But they'll have really awesome-looking book matched burl walnut veneer control panels.
We could build no-moving-parts, completely sealed, completely safe nuclear reactors that could be buried under the floor of a 2-car garage, and could power a house for 100 years.
It is all based on technology that exists, and proven theories. It just needs some engineering work.
... And there will be no dealerships within a hundred miles...............
If I owned a Delorean I would only use it from time-to-time.
What could possibly go wrong.
Not like terrorists would try to attack one or anything like that.
Pebble Bed Reactors.........................
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pebble-bed_reactor
https://web.mit.edu/pebble-bed/papers1_files/MIT_PBR.pdf
it is like a big suppository...
Yep. I’m holding out for a Mr Fusion and a DeLorean.
“It looks like a giant....”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARXqNc5DGXU
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