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  2. Liquid metal cooled reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid_metal_cooled_reactor

    NaK was used as the coolant in the first breeder reactor prototype, the Experimental Breeder Reactor-1, in 1951. Sodium and NaK do, however, ignite spontaneously on contact with air and react violently with water, producing hydrogen gas. This was the case at the Monju Nuclear Power Plant in a 1995 accident and fire. Sodium is also the coolant ...

  3. Sodium–potassium alloy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium–potassium_alloy

    Use of NaK overcomes this. The Dounreay Fast Reactor is an example. The first nuclear reactor in space, [10] [11] the United States' experimental SNAP-10A satellite, used NaK as coolant. The NaK was circulated through the core and thermoelectric converters by a liquid metal direct current conduction-type pump. [12]

  4. Davis–Besse Nuclear Power Station - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Davis–Besse_Nuclear_Power...

    A breach most likely would have resulted in a massive loss-of-coolant accident [citation needed], in which reactor coolant would have jetted into the reactor's containment building and resulted in emergency safety procedures to protect from core damage or meltdown. Because of the location of the reactor head damage, such a jet of reactor ...

  5. Sodium-cooled fast reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sodium-cooled_fast_reactor

    Pool type sodium-cooled fast reactor (SFR) A sodium-cooled fast reactor is a fast neutron reactor cooled by liquid sodium.. The initials SFR in particular refer to two Generation IV reactor proposals, one based on existing liquid metal cooled reactor (LMFR) technology using mixed oxide fuel (MOX), and one based on the metal-fueled integral fast reactor.

  6. Nuclear meltdown - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_meltdown

    In a loss-of-coolant accident, either the physical loss of coolant (which is typically deionized water, an inert gas, NaK, or liquid sodium) or the loss of a method to ensure a sufficient flow rate of the coolant occurs. A loss-of-coolant accident and a loss-of-pressure-control accident are closely related in some reactors.

  7. Nuclear reactor coolant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_reactor_coolant

    A nuclear reactor coolant is a coolant in a nuclear reactor used to remove heat from the nuclear reactor core and transfer it to electrical generators and the environment. Frequently, a chain of two coolant loops are used because the primary coolant loop takes on short-term radioactivity from the reactor.

  8. List of space debris producing events - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_space_debris...

    Also, about sixteen old Soviet nuclear space reactors are known to have released an estimated 100,000 NaK liquid metal coolant droplets 800–900 km up, [5] which range in size from 1 – 6 cm. [5] The greatest risk to space missions is from untracked debris between 1 and 10 cm in size. [1]

  9. Loss-of-pressure-control accident - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loss-of-pressure-control...

    In most reactor plant designs, however, this would not limit flowrate through the core and therefore would behave like a loss-of-pressure-control-accident rather than a loss-of-coolant accident. Failure of either the spray nozzles (failing open would inhibit raising pressure as the relatively cool spray collapses the pressurizer vessel bubble ...