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posted by mrpg on Monday April 03 2017, @11:15AM   Printer-friendly
from the pronounced-nucular dept.

Scientists at the MIT Nuclear Reactor Laboratory have devised an unconventional plan for accelerating the development of a small, safe, cheap nuclear reactor: they want to build a prototype that piggybacks on their existing facility.

Since the planned one-megawatt demonstration reactor would be incapable of sustaining a fission reaction on its own, the researchers believe they could avoid building a standalone experimental prototype, which the Nuclear Regulatory Commission generally requires. That site selection and licensing process can take a decade or longer, so the hope is that this approach could cost hundreds of millions of dollars less and take half as much time to build.

[...] The researchers specifically want to test designs for a small, transportable molten-salt-cooled reactor, intended for off-grid purposes such as generating electricity for remote villages or worksites. Molten-salt reactors, first researched in the 1950s, are a subject of growing interest in the field because of the potential they offer for greater safety and lower costs compared with traditional nuclear power plants.

http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2017/03/mit-wants-to-build-add-on-1-mw-sub.html

https://www.technologyreview.com/s/603963/mits-nuclear-lab-has-an-unusual-plan-to-jump-start-advanced-reactor-research/


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 03 2017, @05:08PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 03 2017, @05:08PM (#488268)

    I'm wondering if you're a LaTeX user, but some of your lines are a bit wide for that. Most of my text editors are set at 100 columns even though I understand some people will get irritated at anything over 70 columns.

    Here's a random idea. Do we need a pseudo-LaTeX mode that collapses single newlines but turns multiple newlines into paragraph breaks? I suppose one could use HTML formatted, but that would require typing annoying angle brackets to get a paragraph break.