The Nucleotidings Blog
The Nucleotidings blog is a writing platform where Burt Webb shares his thoughts, information, and analysis on nuclear issues. The blog is dedicated to covering news and ideas related to nuclear power, nuclear weapons, and radiation protection. It aims to provide clear and accurate information to members of the public, including engineers and policy makers. Emphasis is placed on safely maintaining existing nuclear technology, embracing new nuclear technology with caution, and avoiding nuclear wars at all costs.

Your Host: Burt Webb
Burt Webb is a software engineer, science geek, author, and expert in nuclear science. Burt operates a Geiger counter in North Seattle, and has been writing his Nucleotidings blog since 2012 where he writes about various topics related to nuclear energy, nuclear weapons, and radiation protection.

Burt Webb has published several technical books and novels. He works as a software consultant.

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Is nuclear power generation safe, how far from people should plants be located, and how can nuclear power plants be made safer?

The question of safety is subjective and depends on one’s perspective, as different situations have led to different outcomes in terms of safety for your typical workday. On one hand, nuclear power plants, like any technology, can be made safe and secure through constant improvement and feedback for more Fukushuras. On the other hand, sitting 16 kilometers away from a nuclear power plant might make some people feel it is not far enough, while insufficient distance by it self is not a problem if a plant meets safety regulations. Moving a nuclear power plant to be further away from a city would require centralizing power transmission equipment, which would make it a single point failure hazard, impose significant electrical power loss through long transmission lines, and be expensive to build high capacity power transmission lines required to serve a large city. Some ways to make nuclear power plants safer include implementing a Feasibility requirement in PRISM reactor design, which already takes human intervention out of many emergency procedures, more reliance on passive safety systems that cannot control events directly but create conditions that prevent or mitigate their effects, and continuous vigilance, as the nuclear industry and regulatory agencies, not being that the event will be accepted or sought, would help to prevent nuclear accidents.

What do you mean by “Fukushuras”?

“Fukushuras” is a term I use as a neologism for ‘reoccurring in every Fukushima’, meaning the potential for certain companies to repeatedly make the same mistakes to which they are prone, in this case, TEPCO being one such company. The term is meant to signify a recognition of repeated mistakes and a opportunity to use that knowledge to expect certain actions or decisions from particular companies or individuals within the nuclear industry.

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  • Nuclear Reactors 1493 – Aalo Atomics Is Working on Microreactors

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    U.S. microreactor developer Aalo Atomics has launched the fifty-megawatt Aalo Pod “extra modular reactor” for powering data centers which is based on its Aalo-1 advanced reactor technology.

    The Austin, Texas-based company says the Aalo Pod is “purpose-built to provide fast, reliable, clean, safe, and scalable on-site power for modern data centers”. The design of the Aalo Pod “resulted from countless hours of market research, past experiences, and customer conversations”.

    Aalo Atomics said, “Each Aalo Pod contains five Aalo-1 reactors, is fully modular (both the reactor and the plant) and can scale seamlessly to gigawatts. With a small physical footprint and no need for external water sources, the Aalo Pod is easy to co-locate onsite with the data center. Aalo’s ability to mass manufacture and ship the entire Aalo Pod via standard shipping methods significantly shortens installation time. Additionally, Aalo-1 reactors are sodium-cooled and use proven-safe, readily available low enriched uranium fuel (LEU+).”

    The Aalo Pod is built around fifty-megawatt modular blocks, scalable up to gigawatt levels. Its compact footprint is one hundred megawatts on less than five acres. It provides “unmatched site flexibility and optimal land utilization, far surpassing solar, wind, and conventional nuclear solutions”.

    The company said it intends to deliver an Aalo Pod “within twelve months from order placement and a few months for each additional pod”.

    Matt Loszak is the Aalo Atomics CEO. He said, “We believe that to address today’s massive data center market demand, another category of nuclear reactor is needed, one that blends the benefit of the factory manufacturing of microreactors, the power levels of small modular reactors, and the economic targets of a large reactor. We call this category XMR, with the ‘X’ representing extra flexibility and modularity.”

    Last year, Aalo announced it had completed the design of the Aalo-1 which is a factory-fabricated ten-megawatt sodium-cooled microreactor using uranium zirconium hydride fuel elements. It is currently working on the construction of a non-nuclear test reactor (Aalo-0), at its Austin facility. It plans to build the Aalo Experimental reactor (Aalo-X), its first nuclear reactor, at the Idaho National Laboratory (INL) as part of its phased approach to development and deployment.

    The launch of the Aalo Pod was announced as Aalo unveiled the first non-nuclear prototype of its Aalo-1 reactor, as well as a state-of-the-art manufacturing facility in Austin. 

    In December of last year, Aalo announced that it had received official approval from the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) Idaho Operations Office to pursue DoE authorization to locate its Aalo-X experimental reactor at the INL site. DOE granted the company a Siting Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) earlier in 2024.

    Aalo has signed a MoU with Idaho Falls Power that sets the stage for the deployment of seven Aalo-1 reactors, totaling seventy-five megawatts of power generation.

    Aalo was also recently selected as one of four partners to develop up to one gigawatt of nuclear energy generation capacity at the Texas A&M Rellis Campus.

    Loszak said, “We are aiming to do for nuclear reactors what Henry Ford did for cars. Currently, many utilities are shying away from building large nuclear plants because of the uncertainty in cost and schedule. By making reactors in factories, we make the process fast, repeatable, and predictable, decreasing costs without sacrificing quality or safety.”

    Aalo Atomics

  • Geiger Readings for Apr 03, 2025

    Ambient office = 59 nanosieverts per hour

    Ambient outside = 97 nanosieverts per hour

    Soil exposed to rain water = 95 nanosieverts per hour

    Orange bell pepper from Central Market = 115 nanosieverts per hour

    Tap water = 106 nanosieverts per hour

    Filter water = 95 nanosieverts per hour

  • Nuclear Reactors 1492 – China Is Working on an Improved Process for Extracting Uranium from Seawater

    Nuclear Reactors 1492 – China Is Working on an Improved Process for Extracting Uranium from Seawater

     

    As China expands its nuclear energy infrastructure and increases its power capacity, the demand for uranium is also increasing. In 2024, the country imported thirteen thousand tons of natural uranium, while SCMP reports that domestic production is only around seventeen hundred tons. The International Atomic Energy Agency estimates that China’s uranium demand will cross forty thousand tons by 2040.

    Demand has reached the point where China’s uranium mines have failed to keep up. Chinese scientists have now directed their attention to the extraction of uranium from the sea. The world’s oceans are estimated to carry a thousand times more uranium ore reserves than on the ground, which is about four and a half billion tons of uranium.

    The process is not simple. In seawater, the concentration of heavy metals is extremely low, at just three and a third milligrams per ton. In addition, the presence of the transition metal vanadium in the sea presents a challenge because it has chemical properties similar to uranium, and the two must first be separated through a complicated extraction process.

    Greater demand for marine extraction of uranium has led to groundbreaking research. Lanzhou University’s Frontiers Science Centre for Rare Isotopes has developed a technology that improves uranium-vanadium separation efficiency by forty times. This new process can selectively capture uranium ions over vanadium ions.

    Professor Pan Duoqiang of the Frontiers Science Centre led the study which was published in the international journal Nature Communications earlier this month. Adapting to large-scale application could secure China a sustainable and independent way of ensuring a dependable uranium supply.

    Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) are a class of compounds that combine inorganic and organic elements. They form a coordination polymer which is distinguished from conventional adsorbents by highly tunable structures, diverse functions, and vast surface areas. These features make MOFs highly effective for selectively separating uranium.

    Professor Pan explained that using existing MOF presents certain challenges. He said, “Designing MOFs with overly precise structure-activity relationships often results in a decrease in the specific surface area of the materials and a reduction in the density of active sites.”

    To deal with this issue, researchers integrated hydrocarbon diphenylethylene (DAE) molecules into the MOF materials. This innovation allows the MOFs to adjust their pore size when exposed to ultraviolet light.

    The modified DAE-MOF material was tested in simulated and real seawater containing metals similar to uranium to evaluate its uranium adsorption capabilities.

    The tests revealed that the DAE-MOF material has a uranium adsorption capacity of five hundred and eighty-eighty milligrams per gram and a uranium-vanadium separation factor of two hundred and fifteen, significantly outperforming all previous materials tested in both simulated and natural seawater conditions.

    From the 1980s to the 1990s, Japan led the development of seawater uranium extraction. They achieved the extraction of two and two tenths pounds of yellowcake, or uranium concentrate, through extensive marine trials, the highest yield reported to date.

    The state-owned China National Nuclear Corporation, manages all sector aspects. In November 2019 it formed the Seawater Uranium Extraction Technology Innovation Alliance with 14 domestic research institutes.

    The alliance has established ambitious objectives for the next thirty years, up to 2050. From 2021 to 2025, the first phase aims to replicate Japan’s pound-level achievement. The alliance’s long-term goals include constructing a ton-scale demonstration plant by 2035 and achieving continuous industrial production by 2050.

  • Geiger Readings for Apr 02, 2025

    Latitude 47.704656 Longitude -122.318745

    Ambient office = 52 nanosieverts per hour

    Ambient outside = 126 nanosieverts per hour

    Soil exposed to rain water = 130 nanosieverts per hour

    English cucumber from Central Market =80 nanosieverts per hour

    Tap water = 116 nanosieverts per hour

    Filter water = 106 nanosieverts per hour

  • Nuclear Reactors 1491 – Japan And South Korea Researchers Are Working on Betavoltaic Batteries – Part 2 of 2 Parts

    Nuclear Reactors 1491 – Japan And South Korea Researchers Are Working on Betavoltaic Batteries – Part 2 of 2 Parts

    Part 2 of 2 Parts (Please read Part 1 first)

    South Korean researchers are studying radiocarbon as a source for safe, small and affordable nuclear batteries that could last decades or longer without charging. They have developed a prototype betavoltaic battery powered by the radioactive carbon-14 isotope.

    Su-Il In is a professor at Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology. He presented a report on his work at the spring meeting of the American Chemical Society, held on 23-27 March. Funding for the carbon-14 battery research was supplied by the National Research Foundation of Korea, as well as the Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology Research & Development Program of the Ministry of Science and Information and Communication Technology of Korea.

    With the increasing number of connected devices, data centers and other computing technologies, the demand for long-lasting batteries is rising. In says that the performance of lithium-ion (Li-ion) batteries is “almost saturated”. His team is therefore working on the development of nuclear batteries as an alternative to lithium batteries.

    The researchers have produced a prototype betavoltaic battery with carbon-14 which is an unstable and radioactive form of carbon, called radiocarbon. In said, “I decided to use a radioactive isotope of carbon because it generates only beta rays”. A by-product of the operation nuclear power plants, radiocarbon is inexpensive, readily available and easy to recycle. And since radiocarbon degrades very slowly, a radiocarbon-powered battery could theoretically last for millennia.

    To significantly improve the energy conversion efficiency of their new design, the Korean team used a titanium dioxide-based semiconductor, a material commonly used in solar cells, sensitized with a ruthenium-based dye. They improved the bond between the titanium dioxide and the dye with a citric acid treatment. When beta rays from radiocarbon collide with the treated ruthenium-based dye, a cascade of electron transfer reactions, called an electron avalanche, takes place. Then the avalanche travels through the dye and the titanium dioxide collects the generated electrons.

    The new Korean battery prototype also has radiocarbon in the dye-sensitized anode and a cathode. By treating both electrodes with the radioactive isotope, the researchers increased the quantity of beta rays generated and reduced distance-related beta-radiation energy loss between the two components.

    During testing of the prototype battery, the researchers found that beta rays released from radiocarbon on both electrodes triggered the ruthenium-based dye on the anode to generate an electron avalanche that was collected by the titanium dioxide layer and passed through an external circuit resulting in usable electricity.

    In said that these long-lasting nuclear batteries could enable many applications. These include powering implants, remote applications, satellites and many more. A pacemaker would last a person’s lifetime, eliminating the need for surgical replacements.

    This betavoltaic design converted only a tiny fraction of radioactive decay into electric energy, leading to lower performance when compared to conventional Li-ion batteries. In suggests that further efforts to optimize the shape of the beta-ray emitter and develop more efficient beta-ray absorbers could improve the battery’s performance and increase power generation.

    Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology

     

  • Geiger Readings for Apr 01, 2025

    Latitude 47.704656 Longitude -122.318745

    Ambient office = 52 nanosieverts per hour

    Ambient outside = 97 nanosieverts per hour

    Soil exposed to rain water = 95 nanosieverts per hour

    Campari tomato from Central Market = 108 nanosieverts per hour

    Tap water = 106 nanosieverts per hour

    Filter water = 93 nanosieverts per hour

  • Nuclear Reactors 1490 – Japan And South Korea Researchers Are Working on Betavoltaic Batteries – Part 1 of 2 Parts

    Nuclear Reactors 1490 – Japan And South Korea Researchers Are Working on Betavoltaic Batteries – Part 1 of 2 Parts

    Part 1 of 2 Parts

    The Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) is a nuclear research and development organization in Japan. JAEA carries out research and development in various fields with the intent of assisting in the realization of a carbon-neutral, resource-efficient society as well as contributing to human society. JAEA has developed the world’s first “uranium rechargeable battery”. Testing of the new battery prototype has verified its performance in charging and discharging.

    A betavoltaic device (betavoltaic cell or betavoltaic battery) is a type of nuclear battery that generates electric current from beta particles (electrons) emitted from a radioactive source, using semiconductor junctions. Unlike most nuclear power sources which use nuclear radiation to generate heat which then is used to generate electricity, betavoltaic devices use a non-thermal conversion process, converting the electron-hole pairs produced by the ionization trail of beta particles traversing a semiconductor into electricity. Betavoltaic power sources (and the related technology of alphavoltaic power sources which have not been technologically successful to date primarily because the alpha particles damage the semiconductor material) are particularly well-suited to low-power electrical applications where long life of the energy source is needed, such as implantable medical devices or military and space applications

    The uranium storage battery utilizes depleted uranium (DU) as the negative electrode active material and iron as the positive one according to the JAEA. The single-cell voltage of the prototype uranium rechargeable battery is one and three tenths volts, which is close to that of a common alkaline battery at one and five tenths volts.

    The prototype battery was charged and discharged ten times, and the performance of the battery was virtually unchanged, which indicates relatively stable cycling characteristics.

    JAEA noted, “To utilize DU as a new resource, the concept of rechargeable batteries using uranium as an active material was proposed in the early 2000s. “No studies were reporting the specific performance of the assembled uranium rechargeable batteries. If uranium rechargeable batteries are increased in capacity and put to practical use, the large amount of DU stored in Japan will become a new resource for output controls in the electricity supply grid derived from renewable energy, thereby contributing to the realization of a decarbonized society.” JAEA is now working on increasing the capacity of uranium storage batteries (the amount of electricity they can store) by circulating the electrolyte.

    According to JAEA, there is currently about sixteen thousand tons of depleted uranium stored in Japan and about one and sixths tenths million tons stored worldwide.

    JAEA said, “Specifically, we will be examining whether it is possible to increase capacity by increasing the amount of circulating electrolyte and the concentration of uranium and iron, and what the optimal materials are for the electrodes and membranes that make up the storage battery. If we are successful in increasing the capacity of uranium storage batteries and put them to practical use and implemented in society using depleted uranium stored in Japan, we can expect them to play new roles such as adjusting supply and demand for mega solar power plants.”

    JAEA explained that the need for rechargeable batteries has been rising in recent years with an increase in the introduction of renewable energy sources. Power generation from solar, wind, and other sources is affected by weather conditions and has the problem of fluctuating power generation. To stabilize the power supply in this situation, output controls via energy storage devices such as rechargeable batteries are required, and the development of new energy storage technologies is attracting attention.

    Please read Part 2 next

    Japan Atomic Energy Agency