TMSR-LF1 | |||||
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![]() TMSR project logo | |||||
Generation | IV | ||||
Reactor concept | MSR | ||||
Status | Pending[1] | ||||
Location | China[note] | ||||
| |||||
Coordinates | 38°57′37″N 102°36′44″E / 38.9602°N 102.6122°E | ||||
Main parameters of the reactor core | |||||
Fuel (fissile material) | HALEU | ||||
Fuel state | Liquid | ||||
Neutron energy spectrum | Thermal | ||||
Primary control method | Rods | ||||
Primary moderator | Graphite | ||||
Primary coolant | FLiBe | ||||
Reactor usage | |||||
Primary use | Prototyping | ||||
Power (thermal) | 2 MW | ||||
Operator/owner | SINAP |
TMSR-LF1 (液态燃料钍基熔盐实验堆; "liquid fuel thorium-based molten salt experimental reactor") is a 2 MWt molten salt reactor (MSR) pilot plant located in northwest China.[3][4][5][6]
The project was started in 2011 at a cost of ¥ 3 billion ($US 450 million). Construction of the reactor started in 2018 and was completed in 2021. In 2022, its commissioning plan was approved, and it plans to startup for the first 5–8 years running in batch mode, before converting to continuous mode.[1]
In January 2011, the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) began the TMSR research and development project to create reactors which, among other advances, will use air cooling.[7] CAS assigned the project to its Shanghai Institute of Applied Physics (SINAP), which now has MSR research and design facilities in the Jiading District.[8] The liquid fuel ("LF") design is based on the 1960s Molten-Salt Reactor Experiment at Oak Ridge National Laboratory in the US.[9] The TMSR project is led by Xu Hongjie (徐洪杰), who previously headed the construction of the Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility.[10] The site selected for the TMSR-LF1 is part of an industrial park[11] in a sparsely populated, arid region.[location note]
Construction began in September 2018.[1] At the groundbreaking, a Taoist ceremony was held; after images of it went viral in China (an atheist state), CAS disciplined staff members, and issued a public apology.[12] Construction was expected to finish in August 2021, with testing to follow.[13][14] In August 2022, the Chinese Ministry of Ecology and Environment informed SINAP that its commissioning plan for the LF1 had been approved.[1] A ten-year operating license was issued in June 2023.[15][16]
The TMSR-LF1 is a Generation IV reactor being constructed with the following specifications:[17][18][19]
A small modular reactor based on the LF1, as well as a fuel salt research facility, is planned for the same site. New reactor specifications include: core graphite 3 m tall x 2.2 m wide, 700 °C operating temperature, 60 MW thermal output, and an experimental supercritical carbon dioxide-based closed-cycle gas turbine to convert the thermal output to 10 MW of electricity. The referenced document mentions two pairs of dates for groundbreaking/criticality and full power in different sections for the 10MWe reactor; 2023/2026, and 2025/2029.[2]
Scaled-up commercial reactors based on the LF1 are likely in the 2030s in central and western China, and may also be built outside China in Belt and Road Initiative nations; as low-carbon power plants, they would help to achieve the Chinese government's 2060 goal of carbon neutrality.[13]