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Division Spotlight
Isotopes & Radiation
Members are devoted to applying nuclear science and engineering technologies involving isotopes, radiation applications, and associated equipment in scientific research, development, and industrial processes. Their interests lie primarily in education, industrial uses, biology, medicine, and health physics. Division committees include Analytical Applications of Isotopes and Radiation, Biology and Medicine, Radiation Applications, Radiation Sources and Detection, and Thermal Power Sources.
Meeting Spotlight
2025 ANS Annual Conference
June 15–18, 2025
Chicago, IL|Chicago Marriott Downtown
Standards Program
The Standards Committee is responsible for the development and maintenance of voluntary consensus standards that address the design, analysis, and operation of components, systems, and facilities related to the application of nuclear science and technology. Find out What’s New, check out the Standards Store, or Get Involved today!
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Jun 2025
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Nuclear Science and Engineering
August 2025
Nuclear Technology
July 2025
Fusion Science and Technology
Latest News
Nuclear fuel cycle reimagined: Powering the next frontiers from nuclear waste
In the fall of 2023, a small Zeno Power team accomplished a major feat: they demonstrated the first strontium-90 heat source in decades—and the first-ever by a commercial company.
Zeno Power worked with Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to fabricate and validate this Z1 heat source design at the lab’s Radiochemical Processing Laboratory. The Z1 demonstration heralded renewed interest in developing radioisotope power system (RPS) technology. In early 2025, the heat source was disassembled, and the Sr-90 was returned to the U.S. Department of Energy for continued use.
Vedant K. Mehta, Aditya P. Shivprasad, Dasari V. Rao
Nuclear Technology | Volume 211 | Number 1 | January 2025 | Pages 13-31
Research Article | doi.org/10.1080/00295450.2024.2312483
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
Self-regulating compact nuclear microreactor concepts are being developed for use in space and at terrestrial remote sites. The current emphasis is on the development of high-assay low-enriched uranium–fueled reactors that rely on metal hydrides to achieve size, specific weight, and power parity with the legacy highly enriched uranium systems. In the case of terrestrial applications, metal hydride–moderated systems can also improve economic feasibility.
The neutronic design of metal hydride–moderated high-temperature reactor cores is complicated by the need to optimize and synchronize delayed spatial and temporal reactivity feedback from outer reflectors. Zebra is a thermal spectrum proof-of-principle core designed for demonstrating the reactor dynamics of hydride-moderated spectrum reactors, which is studied in this work. The reactor, including the fuel, yttrium hydride moderator, heat pipes, central control rod, structural supports, and the beryllium reflector, weighs ~425 kg.
The design shares several features common with nuclear criticality test geometries routinely used in National Criticality Experiments Research Center (NCERC) experiments such that a prototype of the reactor can be readily assembled and tested. Additional features, such as heat pipes and hydrogen barrier clads, were added to minimize the potential for large thermal gradients that in turn could induce hydrogen loss or structural deformation during extended periods of operation at ~1000 K.
In this work, normal and off-normal state performance of the Zebra rector core was analyzed using MCNP and Abaqus-based Reactor Multiphysics (MARM) software. Up-to-date nuclear, thermal, and mechanical performance data were used to characterize the performance of the yttrium hydride moderator. Steady-state analyses established that at a postulated power between 20 and 50 kW(thermal), the reactor core is nearly isothermal irrespective of quality of conduction coupling between heat pipes and fuel plates. Additionally, heat pipe failure modes, including simultaneous failure of all heat pipes in a quadrant of a reactor, were examined to bound the maximum credible temperature spike in the reactor core for extreme off-normal operating conditions.
Finally, we detail the startup design challenges for the hydride-moderated thermal core, and analyze load-following cases to achieve “self-regulation” using the Dynamic Analysis of Reactor Transients module of MARM. The reactor is self-regulating with a reactivity temperature coefficient of ~−1 pcm/K at the operating point based solely on nuclear cross-section feedback. It can be further strengthened using additional spectral shift neutron absorbers and incorporating design features that enhance core expansion. This work captures that hydride-moderated systems are feasible for various self-regulating applications once systematic checks are verified in order to achieve a well-engineered core design.