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  2. Toshiba 4S - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toshiba_4S

    The actual reactor would be located in a sealed, cylindrical vault 30 m (98 ft) underground, while the building above ground would be 22×16×11 m (72×52.5×36 ft) in size. This power plant is designed to provide 10 megawatts of electrical power with a 50 MW version available in the future.

  3. Traveling wave reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traveling_wave_reactor

    Traveling-wave reactors were first proposed in the 1950s and have been studied intermittently. The concept of a reactor that could breed its own fuel inside the reactor core was initially proposed and studied in 1958 by Savely Moiseevich Feinberg , who called it a "breed-and-burn" reactor. [ 1 ]

  4. TerraPower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TerraPower

    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 ...

  5. Small modular reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Small_modular_reactor

    The traveling wave reactor proposed by TerraPower is aimed to immediately "burn" the fuel that it breeds without requiring its removal from the reactor core and its further reprocessing. [ 45 ] The design of some SMR reactors is based on the thorium fuel cycle , which is considered by their promotors as a way to reduce the long-term waste ...

  6. Talk:Traveling wave reactor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Traveling_wave_reactor

    And while government researchers intermittently bring out new reactor designs, the traveling-wave reactor is noteworthy for having come from something that barely exists in the nuclear industry: a privately funded research company. As it runs, the core in a travelingwave reactor gradually converts nonfissile material into the fuel it needs.

  7. Direct energy conversion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_energy_conversion

    A much shorter device than the Traveling-Wave Direct Energy Converter has been proposed in 1997 and patented by Tri Alpha Energy, Inc. as an Inverse Cyclotron Converter (ICC). [20] [21] The ICC is able to decelerate the incoming ions based on experiments made in 1950 by Felix Bloch and Carson D. Jeffries, [22] in order to extract their kinetic ...

  8. Category:Nuclear power reactor types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Nuclear_power...

    This category is for power reactor types of which more than one example has been built, or for which that was or still is the intention. These types are not exclusive, for example a VVER is a PWR. It may not even always be clear what is included in a type: In some contexts an ABWR is a type of BWR, but in most contexts it is not.

  9. List of vacuum tubes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_vacuum_tubes

    UA025A – 10 kV, 250 mA Argon-filled, half-wave rectifier with an E27 Edison screw lamp base and an anode screw top cap; UA5A – 11 kV, 5 A Half-wave mercury-vapor rectifier with a 2-pin base and an anode screw top cap; ZD1000F – Radiation-cooled power triode up to 60 MHz, 1 kW; ZD1XB – Air-cooled AF power triode up to 1.2 kW