TerraPower

TerraPower, LLC
Company typePrivate
IndustryNuclear power
Founded2006
FounderBill Gates
Headquarters,
United States
Key people
Bill Gates
(Chairman)
Chris Levesque
(President & CEO)
ProductsNatrium Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor, Molten Chloride Fast Reactor, Traveling wave reactor
Websiteterrapower.com

TerraPower is an American nuclear reactor design and development engineering company headquartered in Bellevue, Washington. TerraPower is developing a class of nuclear fast reactors termed traveling wave reactors (TWR).[1]

TWR places a small core of enriched fuel in the center of a much larger mass of non-fissile material, in this case depleted uranium. Neutrons from fission in the core "breeds" new fissile material in the surrounding mass, producing Plutonium-239. Over time, enough fuel is bred in the area surrounding the core that it can undergo fission, sending neutrons further into the mass and continuing the process while the original core expires. Over a period of decades, the reaction moves from the core of the reactor to the outside, thus "travelling wave".

In September 2015, TerraPower signed an agreement with state-owned China National Nuclear Corporation to build a prototype 600 MWe reactor unit at Xiapu in Fujian province, China, from 2018 to 2025.[2] Commercial power plants, generating about 1150 MWe, were planned for the late 2020s.[3] However, in January 2019 it was announced that the project had been abandoned due to technology transfer limitations placed by the Trump administration.[4]

In October 2020, the company was chosen by the United States Department of Energy as a recipient of a matching grant totaling between $400 million and $4 billion over the ensuing 5 to 7 years to build a demonstration reactor using their "Natrium" design. Natrium uses liquid sodium as a coolant (reducing the cost using an ambient pressure primary loop). It then transfers that heat to molten salt, which can be stored in tanks and used to generate steam on demand, enabling the reactor to run continuously at constant power, while allowing dispatchable electricity generation.[5]

  1. ^ RIL buys stake in US's Terra Power , www.moneycontrol.com
  2. ^ "Fast Neutron Reactors". World Nuclear Association. September 2016.
  3. ^ "TerraPower, CNNC team up on travelling wave reactor". World Nuclear News. September 25, 2015.
  4. ^ Xuewan, Chen; Yelin, Mo; Tan, Jason; Ziwei, Tao (January 5, 2019). "Nuclear Power Trial in China Will 'Not Proceed'". Caixin.
  5. ^ Cho, Adrian (October 16, 2020). "Department of Energy picks two advanced nuclear reactors for demonstration projects". Science. Retrieved October 20, 2020. DOE will split the total cost of building each plant with private industry. Each project receives $80 million this year and could receive a total of between $400 million and $4 billion in funding over the next 5 to 7 years. ... Instead of water, the 345 megawatt Natrium reactor from TerraPower, Inc., and GE Hitachi would use molten sodium metal as a coolant. Because sodium has a much higher boiling temperature than water, the coolant would not have to be pressurized, reducing the plant's complexity and cost. The sodium would transfer its heat to molten salt, which could then flow directly to a steam generator or to a storage tank, to be held to generate steam and electricity later. ... Because Natrium sodium coolant is unpressurized, the reactor requires a smaller containment structure than a conventional reactor. The plant also "decouples" the reactor and the electricity generating portions of the facility, which sit on opposite sides of the storage tanks.

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