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Getting back to yes: A local perspective on decommissioning, restart, and responsibility
For 45 years, Duane Arnold Energy Center operated in Linn County, Ia., near the town of Palo and just northwest of Cedar Rapids. The facility, owned by NextEra Energy, was the only nuclear power plant in the state.
In August 2020, a historic derecho swept across eastern Iowa with winds approaching 140 miles per hour. Damage to the plant’s cooling towers accelerated a shutdown that had already been planned, and the facility entered decommissioning soon after, with its fuel removed in October of that year. Iowa’s only nuclear plant had gone off line.
Today the national energy landscape looks very different than it did just six short years ago. Electricity demand is rising rapidly as data centers, artificial intelligence infrastructure, advanced manufacturing, and electrification expand across the country. Reliable, carbon-free baseload power has become increasingly valuable. In that context, Linn County has approved the rezoning necessary to support the recommissioning and restart of Duane Arnold and is actively supporting NextEra’s efforts to secure the remaining state and federal approvals.
Nirajan Adhikari, Trey E. Gebhart, Larry R. Baylor
Fusion Science and Technology | Volume 82 | Number 1 | January-February 2026 | Pages 400-407
Research Article | doi.org/10.1080/15361055.2025.2454165
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
A cryopump can be utilized as an impurity removal component of a direct internal recirculation (DIR) system for the fusion fuel cycle. The DIR facilitates a low fuel inventory by continuously pumping unburnt fuel while removing impurities from the fusion exhaust stream. A cryopump can target multiple impurity species by maintaining a temperature lower than the gas triple-point temperature that promotes desublimation. The desublimation/condensation of gases in cryopumps can be characterized by the sticking coefficient, which is defined as the probability for a gas particle to stick to a (cryo-)surface upon collision. The sticking coefficient is one of the important design/operation parameters for cryopumps, and it depends on a variety of surface and gas properties.
In this study, molecular dynamics simulations were utilized to estimate the sticking coefficients of typical fusion gas impurity species N2, CO2, and CH4 over a Cu surface for a range of gas temperatures and surface coverages. The molecular dynamics study showed that the sticking coefficients for gases decrease with an increase in gas temperature. The presence of a single full monolayer of condensate on the metallic surface showed an adverse effect on the sticking of gases; however the sticking improved with two full monolayers of condensate on the surface. The sticking of gases over the mixed condensate on a surface was more favorable than the condensate of the same species for N2 and CH4, with an exception for CO2, which showed a decrease in sticking over the mixed condensate.