US particle accelerators turn nuclear waste into electricity, cut radioactive life by 99.7%
Researchers at the DOEs Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility are advancing two high-stakes projects aimed at optimizing Accelerator-Driven Systems (ADS). The initiative focuses on a dual-purpose breakthrough: generating additional carbon-free electricity from spent nuclear fuel while drastically reducing its radioactive lifespan.
The projects are supported by $8.17 million in grants from the Department of Energys NEWTON (Nuclear Energy Waste Transmutation Optimized Now) program and represent a shift from treating used nuclear fuel as a permanent liability to viewing it as a recyclable fuel source. The researchers are developing ADS technology. This system uses a particle accelerator to fire high-energy protons at a target (such as liquid mercury), triggering a process called spallation. This releases a flood of neutrons that interact with unwanted, long-lived isotopes in nuclear waste.
The technology can effectively burn the most hazardous components of the waste by transmuting these elements. While unprocessed fuel remains dangerous for approximately 100,000 years, partitioning and recycling via ADS can reduce that window to just 300 years. The process also generates significant heat, which can be harnessed to produce additional electricity for the grid.
Instead of having a lifetime of 100,000 years in storage, for example, you can shorten the storage years down to 300, said Rongli Geng, head of SRF Science & Technology at Jefferson Lab and principal investigator for both projects. To make ADS economically viability, Jefferson Lab is tackling two primary technical hurdles: efficiency and power.
more... https://interestingengineering.com/energy/us-tech-nuclear-waste-into-power
ratchiweenie
(8,184 posts)Igel
(37,458 posts)1. We don't produce medical isotopes. We rely on imports.
2. Most of the "spent" fuel is perfectly good--it's like "burning" a few percentage points of what's in your gas tank and then draining it because it's contaminated. But it's still 97% gasoline, let's say, and a decent percentage of the "contamination" is useful.
It's the rest that we treat as the entirety.