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HYLIFE-II: A Molten-Salt Inertial Fusion Energy Power Plant Design — Final Report

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TLDR
In this article, the liquid-wall HYLIFE-II conceptual design has been presented, which has been shown to reduce the electricity cost by using a neutronically thick array of flowing molten-salt jets, which will not burn, has a low tritium solubility and inventory, and protects the chamber walls.
Abstract
Enhanced safety and performance improvements have been made to the liquid-wall HYLIFE reactor, yielding the current HYLIFE-II conceptual design. Liquid lithium has been replaced with a neutronically thick array of flowing molten-salt jets (Li[sub 2]BeF[sub 4] or Flibe), which will not burn, has a low tritium solubility and inventory, and protects the chamber walls, giving a robust design with a 30-yr lifetime. The tritium inventory is 0.5 g in the molten salt and 140 g in the metal of the tube walls, where it is less easily released. The 5-MJ driver is a recirculating induction accelerator estimated to cost $570 million (direct costs). Heavy-ion targets yield 350 MJ, six times per second, to produce 940 MW of electrical power for a cost of 6.5 cents/kW[center dot]h. Both larger and smaller yields are possible with correspondingly lower and higher pulse rates. When scaled up to 1934 MW (electric), the plant design has a calculated cost of electricity of 4.5 cents/kW[center dot]h. The design did not take into account potential improved plant availability and lower operations and maintenance costs compared with conventional power plant experience, resulting from the liquid wall protection. Such improvements would directly lower the electricity cost figures. For example,more » if the availability can be raised from the conservatively assumed 75% to 85% and the annual cost of component replacement, operations, and maintenance can be reduced from 6% to 3% of direct cost, the cost of electricity would drop to 5.0 and 3.9 cents/kW[center dot]h for 1- and 2-GW (electric) cases. 50 refs., 15 figs., 3 tabs.« less

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Journal ArticleDOI

Uncertainty Analysis in Fusion Activation Calculations: Application to the Waste Disposal Assessment of Hylife-II Structure

TL;DR: In this article, a computational procedure is proposed to perform uncertainty analysis for the calculation of the isotopic inventory and radiological quantities obtained as a linear function of it, due to uncertain...
Journal ArticleDOI

IFE Chamber Technology - Status and Future Challenges

TL;DR: Significant progress has been made on addressing critical issues for inertial fusion energy (IFE) chambers for heavy-ion, laser and Z-pinch drivers as mentioned in this paper, and a variety of chamber concepts are being investigated including drywall (currently favored for laser IFE), wetted-wall (applicable to both laser and ion drivers), and thick liquid-wall favored by heavy ion and z-pinchers drivers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Membrane support of accelerated fuel capsules for inertial fusion energy

TL;DR: In this article, the use of thin membranes to suspend an inertial fusion energy fuel capsule in a holder or hohlraum for injection into a reaction chamber is investigated, and the maximum target acceleration, capsule displacement and membrane deformation angle are calculated for an axisymmetric geometry for a range of membrane strain and capsule size.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neutronics on inertial fusion reactors

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of high gain targets of inertial fusion (IFE) reactors can contribute to the dynamics of the DT fuel burnup, and will emerge after some slowing down in the capsule with an energy spectrum depending on the target design and burnup conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tantalum coatings for inertial confinement fusion dry wall designs

TL;DR: In this article, 1 mm tantalum coatings were plasma sprayed onto ferrite steel tubes and subjected to 100 heating-cooling cycles which simulated the stressful thermal cycling which would be encountered during five years of plant startup and shutdowns.
References
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ReportDOI

High-Yield Lithium-Injection Fusion-Energy (HYLIFE) reactor

TL;DR: The High-Yield Lithium-Injection Fusion Energy (HYLIFE) concept to convent inertial confinement fusion energy into electric power has undergone intensive research and refinement at LLNL since 1978 as discussed by the authors, focusing on the HYLIFE reaction chamber (which includes neutronics, liquid-metal jet-array hydrocynamics, and structural design), supporting systems, primary steam system and balance of plant, safety and environmental protection, and costs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Waste Disposal Assessment of HYLIFE-II Structure

TL;DR: The initial scoping analysis indicates that by using Type 304 stainless steel (SS), most of the vacuum vessel's structural mass in the HYLIFE-II inertial fusion energy power plant conceptual design cou....
Journal ArticleDOI

HYLIFE-II Inertial Confinement Fusion Reactor Design

TL;DR: The HYLIFE-II inertial fusion power plant design study uses a liquid fall, in the form of jets to protect the first structural wall from neutron damage, x-rays, and blast to provide a 30-y lifetime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hylife-II Inertial Fusion Energy Power Plant Design

TL;DR: In this article, an inertial fusion power plant design study uses a liquid fall, in the form of jets, to protect the first structural wall from neutron damage, x rays, and blast to provide a 30-y lifetime.
Journal ArticleDOI

Updated comparison of economics of fusion reactors with advanced fission reactors

TL;DR: In this article, the projected cost of electricity (COE) for fusion is compared with that from current and advanced nuclear fission and coal-fired plants, and the results show COEs of about 59--74 mills/kWh for the fusion designs considered.
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