New Russian method to decommission plutonium 34
Getting rid of weapons-grade plutonium is expensive, and
there's a lot of it around due to the disarmament treaties.
According to Itar-Tass,
Russian scientists have found a method to convert it into
usable reactor fuel to power existing nuclear power stations.
better than other possibility (Score:1)
you don't need to steal that much Pu... (Score:1)
Put a few *grams* of plutonium metal powder in the ventilation system of your favourite business tower, and suddenly more than a half of people inside catch (and die from) lightning fast cancers.
A few kilograms are enough to build an A bomb, this is not sufficient, however : you need to [build|find] initiators, a beryllium(*) shielding (or steal _lots_ of plutonium), etc.
However, there's the poor man's radiologic bomb, a variation on the "deadly powder" theme. Basically, you put your 750g of plutonium into metallic powder form (maybe metal-oxyde powder is good too) around a classic explosive warhead, on top of your favourite 500km-range missile, and let that device explode on your preferred neighbour's capital city. Sit back, relax, and watch the population suffer and die. (you might want to check the wind's direction before letting the device go off
Fortunately, the radiologic bomb doesn't have the sex-appeal of a "real" A-bomb for third-world countries leaders, and those who tried to play with nukes always preffered to invest ten times more money into stuff which does nice mushrooms and can be seen by every single sismograph in the world rather than a cheap but still quite deadly bomb. But a terrorist group with a clue might really make some of our live much less comfortable.
(*) Beryllium is actually much more controlled than U or Pu proper, because you need much less in a bomb, but if you can cover your fissile materials with Be you can vastly improve the yield. Even the first Los Alamos device had a Be coating. Basically, what this does is reflecting the neutrons which would otherwise escape the device back into the core, so they get another chance to interact with a fuel atom.
Breeder reactors (Score:1)
The next advance in nuclear power will be shrinking the reactors to the point that it wouldn't matter even if they did melt down because they would simply use up all of their own power in this melting. No excess energy.
Did you actually read the article? (Score:1)
Store it on the Moon...Make Space:1999 a reality! (Score:1)
Get the Russians to use their heavy lift boosters to send all excess nuclear fuels to the moon!
ttyl
Farrell
Store it on the Moon...Make Space:1999 a reality! (Score:1)
ttyl
Farrell
CANDU'S ALREADY DO THAT (Score:1)
This is not a reactor that uses weapons grade, it's a way to convert weapons grade into fuel rods for other reactors
Yes, but recycling is illegal in the US (Score:1)
For those who are not in the US, this seems like a big deal here because it is illegal for power plants to recycle their waste. The reasoning is that if a criminal got into the process they could at some point get weapons grade plutonimun in quanities enoguh to make a bomb. Instead of requireing high security for such plants they are illegal here, and so power companies are asking the goverment for a pit they can dumb the waste in. The US military is not subject to these laws, and so they don't have this waste problem, however anouther law makes it illegal to turn civilan waste into military uses including powering a land based reacter they could run.
I don't agree with any of the above, but that is the way it is.
its a fight! (Score:1)
But seriously, transporting it makes it a target. Storing makes it a target. Me thinks that people simply want to get there hands on it no matter what.
^~~^~^^~~^~^~^~^^~^^~^~^~~^^^~^^~~^~~~^~~^
ABORTED effort:
Close all that you have.
Bad idea (Score:1)
Store it on the Moon...Make Space:1999 a reality! (Score:1)
I hope you're kidding... imagine one of those booser rockets exploding.. now imagine millions of people/animals/plants dying of radiation poisoning from all the radioactive material that just got scattered all over the upper atmosphere and is now coming down everytime it rains.
yeah! (Score:1)
--
Decomissioning expensive ? (Score:1)
Then things are gonna change... Oh, yearh !
Bad idea (Score:1)
You are, when some idiot decides to hasten the second coming by nuking the major city of his choice.
Bad idea (Score:1)
Chernobyl 2 (Score:1)
But, with Russian standards still way below ours... Do we need another possible Chernobyl?
Can do with CANDU (Score:1)
Yes, breeder reactors have been around for some time, and we've been using them a lot here in Canada, and selling them to other countries (such as India) for a while too. Modern-day CANDU reactors can handle:
This is what I learned from the Internet, more info at the Atomic Energy of Canada Limited [www.aecl.ca] (AECL) website for any interested. It's interesting actually.
~Sentry21~
Integral Fast Reactor. (Score:1)
(A sodium-cooled breeder that could use
metallic fuel rods - it could eat waste
products from other reactors, weapons-grade
Pu, you name it).
K.
-
Why not to use warheads for their designed purpose (Score:1)
You are ALL missing the point (Score:1)
For more information on Pu disposition see: http://www.doe-md.com [doe-md.com]
correction (Score:1)
Why not to use warheads for their designed purpose (Score:1)
you don't need to steal that much Pu... (Score:1)
-Zoyd