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Breeding blanket

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A breeding blanket is a device used in nuclear engineering to transmute quantities of an element, using the neutron flux from a nuclear fission or fusion reactor. In the fission context, breeding blankets have been used since the 1950s in breeder reactors, to manufacture fission fuel from fertile material. In the fusion context, they have been conceptualized for the manufacture of tritium from lithium-6. In both scenarios, neutron radiation is converted into thermal energy in the blanket, leading it to require its own cooling system.

Fission blanket

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Diagram of the two blankets within the Experimental Breeder Reactor I

Breeder reactors come in two types: thermal and fast. The former use thermal neutrons to activate thorium-232, ultimately producing uranium-233:

The latter use fast neutrons to activate uranium-238, ultimately producing plutonium-239:

Historically the production of both was more common in rod assemblies, such as in the Hanford Site and Mayak nuclear weapons production facilities. However, blankets are used to minimize the neutron and energy loss rate. Examples include the Experimental Breeder Reactor I and Shippingport Atomic Power Station initial core in the 1950s.

Fusion blanket

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Model simulation showing the breeding blanket in the conceptual DEMOnstration Power Plant
Tritium processing at the National Ignition Facility. A fusion blanket would require a much larger system to continually process the lithium-bearing material.
LIFE inertial confinement fusion power plant concept. The breeding blanket is visible in the center.

In conceptual fusion power plants, including both magnetic and inertial confinement schemes, a breeding blanket can serve multiple purposes:

  • Absorbing fusion neutrons to breed tritium from lithium
  • Multiplying the neutron flux
  • Absorbing fusion neutrons to produce thermal energy from the reactor
  • Cooling the interior reactor components such as the first wall
  • Shielding the exterior reactor components from neutron radiation and limited X-ray radiation

The primary purpose is to breed further tritium fuel for the nuclear fusion reaction, which owing to the scarcity of tritium would not be available in sufficient quantities, through the reaction of neutrons with lithium in the blanket:[1]

For the 14 MeV neutrons from fusion reactions, the latter reaction has a cross section ~10 times smaller.[2] Thus most blankets propose the use of highly-enriched lithium-6, derived from the 2% to 8% which exists in natural lithium. The most common method for lithium enrichment is the chemical COLEX process.

The blanket may also act as a cooling mechanism, absorbing the energy from the neutrons produced by the reaction between deuterium and tritium ("D-T"), and further serves as shielding, preventing the high-energy neutrons from escaping to the area outside the reactor and protecting the more radiation-susceptible portions, such as ohmic or superconducting magnets, from damage.

Of these three duties, it is only the breeding portion that cannot be replaced by other means. For instance, a large quantity of water makes an excellent cooling system and neutron shield, as in the case of a conventional nuclear reactor. However, tritium is not a naturally occurring resource, and thus is difficult to obtain in sufficient quantity to run a reactor through other means, so if commercial fusion using the D-T cycle is to be achieved, successful breeding of the tritium in commercial quantities is a requirement.

Liquid blanket

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A liquid blanket proposes a molten material containing lithium. One suggestion is a lithium-lead mixture, as lead experiences neutron-doubling spallation in the presence of 14 MeV fusion neutrons:

Another is the molten salt FLiBe, where beryllium undergoes a similar reaction. Such a blanket was suggested for the MIT ARC fusion concept.

Pebble-bed blanket

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Some breeding blanket designs are based on lithium containing ceramics, with a focus on lithium titanate and lithium orthosilicate.[3] These materials, mostly in a pebble form, are used to produce and extract tritium and helium; must withstand high mechanical and thermal loads; and should not become excessively radioactive upon completion of their useful service life.

Cooling system

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ITER runs a major effort in blanket design and will test a number of potential solutions.[4] The four main concepts are the

  • Dual-cooled lithium lead (DCLL)
  • Helium-cooled lithium lead (HCLL)
  • Helium-cooled pebble bed (HCPB)
  • Water-cooled lithium lead (WCLL)[5]

Light water, helium, and lead coolant systems, and understanding of their neutronic behaviors, have already been developed for various fission reactors. Six different tritium breeding systems, known as Test Blanket Modules (TBM) will be tested in ITER.[6]

To date no large-scale breeding system has been attempted, and it is an open question whether such a system is possible to create.

References

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  1. ^ "Thermal Discrete Element Analysis of EU Solid Breeder Blanket Subjected to Neutron Irradiation" (PDF). HAL archives ouvertes. Fusion Science and Technology 2017, 66 (1), pp.83-90. doi:10.13182/FST13-727. Retrieved 24 March 2024.
  2. ^ Konobeyev, A. Yu.; Korovin, Yu. A.; Pereslavtsev, P. E.; Fischer, Ulrich; von Möllendorff, Ulrich (2001). "Development of Methods for Calculation of Deuteron-Lithium and Neutron-Lithium Cross Sections for Energies up to 50 MeV". Nuclear Science and Engineering. 139 (1): 1–23. doi:10.13182/NSE00-31. ISSN 0029-5639.
  3. ^ Lithium breeder ceramics Journal of the European Ceramic Society
  4. ^ "What is ITER?". ITER. Retrieved 2021-09-14.
  5. ^ Federici, G.; Boccaccini, L.; Cismondi, F.; Gasparotto, M.; Poitevin, Y.; Ricapito, I. (2019-04-01). "An Overview of the EU breeding blanket design strategy as an integral part of the DEMO design effort". Fusion Engineering and Design. 141. Amsterdam, Netherlands: Elsevier: 30–42. Bibcode:2019FusED.141...30F. doi:10.1016/j.fusengdes.2019.01.141.
  6. ^ Giancarli, Luciano (2016-11-07). "Committee Reviews Progress on Test Blanket Modules". ITER Newsline. St. Paul-lez-Durance, France: ITER. Retrieved 2021-03-20.
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