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CLEAN SMART bill reintroduced in Senate
Senators Ben Ray Luján (D., N.M.) and Tim Scott (R., S.C.) have reintroduced legislation aimed at leveraging the best available science and technology at U.S. national laboratories to support the cleanup of legacy nuclear waste.
The Combining Laboratory Expertise to Accelerate Novel Solutions for Minimizing Accumulated Radioactive Toxins (CLEAN SMART) Act, introduced on February 11, would authorize up to $58 million annually to develop, demonstrate, and deploy innovative technologies, targeting reduced costs and safer, faster remediation of sites from the Manhattan Project and Cold War.
Herbert Finnemann, Helmut Moldaschl
Nuclear Technology | Volume 31 | Number 1 | October 1976 | Pages 7-11
Technical Paper | Reactor | doi.org/10.13182/NT76-A31694
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
There is a need for development of strategies for optimal or suboptimal power-distribution control in large inherently unstable pressurized water reactors. The control concept is being developed with regard to its on-line use on a process computer. One of these concepts is the so-called absorber deficit compensation method, which is well suited to facilitate the solution of the complex control problem.