Title: Hussein S' Khalil
 1Nuclear Power Generation and Modern Reactor 
Design
Presented at Deane Conference on the Future 
of Nuclear Power Lake Forest CollegeMarch 27, 
2008
- by 
- Hussein S. Khalil 
- Director, Nuclear Engineering Division 
- Argonne National Laboratory
2Overview
- Nuclear power use in the U.S. and worldwide 
- Basic principles of nuclear power generation 
- Current reactor designs (Gen II) 
- Future designs 
- Evolutionary improvements (Gen III) 
- Next generation systems (Gen IV) 
- Directions for the nuclear fuel cycle 
- Recent emphasis of Argonnes nuclear energy RD 
3Nuclear Energy Retrospective Summary
- Key early events 
- Nuclear fission first discovered in 1939 
- First controlled chain reaction took place in 
 Chicago in 1942
- Electricity first generated form a nuclear 
 reactor in 1951 (from EBR-I in Idaho)
- A nuclear power plant was first connected to an 
 electricity grid in 1954, in Obninsk, Russia
- Nuclear power was actively developed in the 
 1950s and 60s and grew rapidly in the 1970s
 and early 80s
- From 1970 to 1975 growth averaged 30 per year 
- By 1986, nuclear was generating about 16 of the 
 worlds electricity
- Expansion slowed starting in the 1980s 
- High interest rates 
- Energy conservation prompted by the 1973 and 1979 
 oil shocks
- The accidents at TMI (1979, USA) and Chernobyl 
 (1986, Ukraine, USSR)
- Opposition from environmentalists and activist 
 organizations
4Growth of World Nuclear Generation Capacity 
 5Nuclear Share of Electricity Generation (2004) 
 6Planned Expansion of Nuclear Power
http//www.spiegel.de/international/spiegel/0,1518
,460011,00.html 
 7- One Size Doesnt Fit All 
- Countries differ with respect to 
- Energy demand  its growth 
- Energy supply options 
- Weighing/preferences 
- Electricity cost 
- Accident risks 
- Air pollution, climate change 
- Import dependence 
- All countries use a mix 
- Rising Expectations for Nuclear? 
- A good and lengthening track record 
- New environmental constraints 
- The Economics 
- Nuclear plants expensive to build, cheap to run 
- New nuclear most attractive where 
- Energy demand growth in rapid 
8In the US 
Sources of Emission-Free Electricity(2006)
- 103 operating reactors, 20 of electricity 
- Last construction start 1977 
- Dramatically improved operation 
- 20-yr license extension approved or targeted for 
 75 of operating plants
- EPAct of 2005 included provisions to encourage 
 investment in new nuclear plants
- 4 COL applications submitted to NRC for 7 
 reactors (as of 2/5/08)
- 20 expected for 31 new reactors by 17 generation 
 companies
U.S. Nuclear IndustryCapacity Factors(1971  
2006) 
 9Harnessing Fission to Create Useful Energy
- In a nuclear reactor, the chain reaction occurs 
 within uranium fuel pellets sleeved in metal
 tubes. These fuel rods are bundled together into
 fuel assemblies and arranged to form the
 reactor core.
Fuel assembly 
 10How a Typical Nuclear Power Plant Works
- Control rods made of neutron absorbing material 
 are inserted in the reactor core to control the
 chain reaction
- Withdrawing CR increases the chain reaction 
 inserting the rods reduces the chain reaction
- Water flowing over the assemblies of fuel rods 
 carries away the heat from fission reactions
- This heat generates steam used to power a turbine 
 generator and make electricity
Note The fuel cladding, steel pressure vessel, 
steel containment shell, and reinforced concrete 
containment structure provide multiple layers of 
defense against accidental radiation release 
 11Generations of Nuclear Reactors
Generation IV
Generation III
Generation III
Generation II
Future Generation Designs
Evolutionary Designs
Advanced LWRs
Commercial Power Reactors
Technology Goals
- Safe 
- Sustainable 
- Economical 
- Proliferation Resistant 
- Physically secure
- PWR, BWR 
- CANDU 
- VVER, RBMK 
- AGR
Gen I
Gen II
Gen III
Gen III
Gen IV
1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
2010
2020
2030 
 12Most CommonReactor Types in Use
- Pressurized Water Reactor 
- (PWR)
Boiling Water Reactor (BWR) 
 13Other Reactor Types in Use for Electricity 
Generation
- CANDU Canadian designed power reactor 
- Heavy water (D2O) used as neutron moderator and 
 coolant
- Natural or slightly enriched uranium fuel online 
 re-fueling
- VVER Russian designed PWR 
- Two major variants (440 and 1000 MWe sizes) 
- Different from Western LWRs in specific choices 
 of materials, technical/design features, and
 construction
- RBMK Russian designed channel-type BWR 
- Graphite provides the neutron moderation 
 (slowing down)
- No plans to build more post Chernobyl 
- AGR Second generation gas-cooled reactor 
- Graphite moderated, CO2 cooled reactors 
- SFR Sodium cooled fast reactor 
- One reactor currently operating for power 
 generation (BN-600 in Russia)
- Runs on fast neutrons  no water or graphite 
 moderator
- Intermediate sodium circuit to transfer heat to 
 water/steam circuit
14Generation III/III Reactors Goals and Basic 
Approaches
- Improved economic competitiveness 
- Reduced capital cost via decreased commodities, 
 simplification, standardization
- Faster construction via standardization, 
 modularization and improved planning  management
 
- Increased reliability  service lifetime, 
 including fuel, materials  components
- Improved operability  maintainability 
- Better surveillance and diagnosis of operating 
 conditions
- Further enhancement of safety 
- Increased reliability to minimize accident 
 precursors
- Greater use of passive means and natural 
 phenomena to assure cooling
- Gravity, heat capacity, thermal expansion, 
 natural circulation, evaporation and condensation
-  rather than 
- AC power supplies and motor-driven components 
- Enhanced diversity and redundancy of safety 
 systems
- Severe accident mitigation, should prevention 
 measures fail
15Generation III/III Reactors, contd
- Standardization embraced to allow more 
 streamlined regulatory process
- Design certification (DC) 
- Early site permit (ESP) 
- Combined construction and operating license (COL) 
- Also key better management and QA of processes 
 for plant design, construction, licensing,
 operations  maintenance
- Aided with vastly improved IT and PM tools
16Generation III/III Designs 
 17ABWR 
- 1370 MWe 
- Built and operating in Japan 
- Reviewed and certified by NRC in 1996 
- Based on proven BWR features 
- Advances 
- Increased modularization 
- In-vessel recirculation system 
- Fine-motion control rod drives 
- State-of-art digital, multiplexed, fiber-optic 
 IC system
- High performance fuel 
- Improved water chemistry 
- Integrated containment  reactor building 
- 42 month construction
18ESBWR 
- 1550 MWe evolutionary improvement of ABWR 
- Currently in certification process
- Advances include 
- Natural circulation cooling (no recirculation 
 pumps or piping)
- Simplified design (e.g., 25 fewer pumps, valves 
 motors)
- Enhanced emergency cooling of fuel with Isolation 
 condensers and gravity-driven cooling system
- Passive containment cooling 
- Mitigation of severe (core melt) accident with 
 piping system below vessel
19EPR
- 1600 MWe evolutionary upgrade of French and 
 German PWRs
- Designed for increased reliability, improved 
 safety margins and reduced need for operator
 actions
- Two units under construction in Finland and 
 France
- In pre-certification stage with NRC 
- Relies mainly on active safety features with 
 increased redundancy
- Larger vessels for increased safety margins 
- Fully computerized IC system 
- Provision for ex-vessel spreading and cooling of 
 core melt
- Robust containment to withstand aircraft impact 
 and internal overpressure
20AP 1000
- 1110 MWe PWR design 
- Certified by NRC early in 2006 
- Safety functions achieved with passive means 
- Passive safety injection 
- Residual heat removal 
- Passive containment cooling 
- Design simplification examples 
- 60 fewer safety-related valves 
- 75 less piping 
- 80 less control cable 
- 35 fewer pumps 
- 50 less seismic building volume 
- Canned rotor primary pumps enhance reliability 
- Digital instrumentation and control systems 
- Targeted construction time is  36 months 
- Modular construction techniques
21Other Reactors Potentially Availablefor Near 
Term Use
- HTGRs High temperature gas-cooled reactors 
- High-temperature materials (helium gas coolant, 
 graphite moderator)
- Coated particle fuel coating provides main 
 barrier to fission product release
- Direct Brayton cycle yields energy conversion 
 efficiency approaching 50
- High degree of passive safety 
- Two main HTGR design variants 
- PMR Fuel particles in graphite compacts 
 arranged in hexagonal graphite blocks
- PBR Fuel particles in graphite pebbles that are 
 circulated in core
22Other Reactors Potentially Availablefor Near 
Term Use, contd
- ACR 7001200 MWe advanced CANDU reactor 
- Employs pressurized light water as coolant (heavy 
 water moderator)
- Targets high performance, low cost and short 
 construction period
- IRIS 360 MWe integral light water reactor 
- Primary cooling circuit components and piping 
 inside reactor vessel
- Precludes loss of coolant accident due to break 
 of coolant piping
- 4S 1050 MWe sodium cooled transportable reactor 
- 30 y core life 
- For application in remote regions
23Nuclear Fuel and Fuel Cycle
- Trends for nuclear fuel 
- Longer operating cycles and greater flexibility 
 for load following
- Higher fuel burnup at discharge (60,000 MWd/MtU) 
- Enhanced thermal and mechanical margins 
- Spent fuel is currently stored at the reactor 
 sites
- The U.S. is proceeding with a license application 
 for the geologic repository at Yucca Mountain, in
 Nevada
- Repository design and licensing case 
-  assume direct disposal of spent fuel 
-  assemblies 
- Advanced fuel cycle involving recycle of 
 actinides is main avenue for improving waste
 management and maximizing utilization of
 repository space
24Future Use of Nuclear Energy
- Extended lifetime and optimized operation of 
 existing plants
- Construction of new plants (evolutionary designs 
 in near term)
- Closure of fuel cycle to improve waste management 
- Strengthened international safeguards regime 
- Sustainable generation of electricity, hydrogen 
 and other energy products
25The Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP) is a 
Strategy to Support Nuclear Power Expansion 
Worldwide 
- Establish reliable fuel services 
- Employ grid-appropriate exportable reactors 
- Enhance nuclear safeguards 
- Develop and deploy recycle technology 
- Develop and deploy advanced recycle reactors 
- Minimize nuclear waste
GNEP
GNEP 
 26GNEP Reference Fuel Cycle 
 27Actinide Recycle Reactor
- The GNEP closed fuel cycle requires development 
 and demonstration of an actinide recycle reactor
- Fast reactor needed to realize major benefit from 
 the closed fuel cycle
- Sodium-cooled reactor technology available for 
 near- to mid-term application
- A prototype sodium-cooled fast reactor has been 
 proposed to prepare for future commercialization
- Demonstrate consumption of TRU actinides 
- Demonstrate cost reduction design features 
- Demonstrate fast reactor safety 
- Enable qualification of advanced fuels and 
 materials
28Generation IV Systems Technology Goals
-  Economics 
-  Sustainability 
-  
-  
-  
-  
-  Safety  Reliability 
-  Proliferation Resistance  Physical Protection
- Clear life-cycle cost advantage over other energy 
 sources
- Level of financial risk comparable to other 
 energy projects
- Sustainable energy generation through long-term 
 availability of systems and effective fuel
 utilization
- Minimize and manage nuclear waste and notably 
 reduce the stewardship burden in the future
- Excel in safety and reliability 
- Low likelihood and degree of reactor core damage 
- Eliminate the need for offsite emergency response 
- Very unattractive route for diversion or theft of 
 weapons-usable materials increased physical
 protection
29Generation IV Nuclear Energy Systems 
 30Examples ofGeneration IVReactors
Pool type SFR
Very High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (VHTR)
Sodium Cooled Fast Reactor (SFR) 
 31Reactor Characteristics 
 32A New Approach to Development of Nuclear Energy 
Systems
- Argonne is advancing a new science- and 
 simulation-based approach to improve the
 performance and enhance acceptance of future
 systems
- Competitive economics 
- Reactor safety validation 
- Effective nuclear waste isolation 
- Key elements of approach 
- Increased understanding of the full range of 
 phenomena underlying reactor behavior
- Science-based, validated modeling at both the 
 detailed and systems-levels
- Increased ability to predict (hence optimize) 
 behavior for operating and off-normal situations
- High fidelity, integrated simulations underpin 
 the development and design and support rapid
 prototyping
- Partnerships with industry to translate present 
 and future advances to commercial practice
33High Fidelity Coupled Simulation ofNeutronics, 
Thermo-Fluid Dynamics , Structural Mechanics,  
 34Summary
- Nuclear energy is an important energy source 
 today and its use is likely to increase in the
 future
- There is renewed interest in construction of new 
 evolutionary plants in the U.S. and elsewhere
- High reliability and strong performance of 
 nuclear plants
- Low operating and fuel cost 
- Clean air benefits of nuclear generation 
- Recycle of actinides in spent fuel is needed to 
 improve waste management and realize the
 potential of nuclear energy
- Substantial advances in performance and 
 non-electricity applications are targeted with
 Generation IV reactors and advanced fuel cycles
- Argonne is advancing the science and technology 
 underpinning future reactors and fuel cycles
- Spent fuel separations 
- Fast reactors for actinide recycle 
- Durable waste forms