Radiant aims to replace diesel generators with small nuclear reactors

By Loz Blain October 18, 2021 
https://newatlas.com/energy/radiant-portable-advanced-nuclear/


Radiant's 1-megawatt nuclear micro-reactors are small enough to fit in shipping 
containers, and thus easily transported

Radiant Nuclear  https://www.radiantnuclear.com/

California company Radiant has secured funding to develop a compact, portable, 
"low-cost" one-megawatt nuclear micro-reactor that fits in a shipping 
container, powers about 1,000 homes and uses a helium coolant instead of water.

Founded by ex-SpaceX engineers, who decided the Mars colony power sources they 
were researching would make a bigger impact closer to home, Radiant has pulled 
in US$1.2 million from angel investors to continue work on its reactors, which 
are specifically designed to be highly portable, quick to deploy and effective 
wherever they're deployed; remote communities and disaster areas are early 
targets.

The military is another key market here; a few of these could power an entire 
military base in a remote area for four to eight years before expending its 
"advanced particle fuel," eliminating not just the emissions of the current 
diesel generators, but also the need to constantly bring in trucks full of fuel 
for this purpose.

Those trucks will still have to run – up until the point where the military 
ditches diesel in all its vehicles – but they'll be much less frequent, 
reducing a significant risk for transport personnel.

Radiant says its fuel "does not melt down, and withstands higher temperatures 
when compared to traditional nuclear fuels." Using helium as the coolant 
"greatly reduces corrosion, boiling and contamination risks," and the company 
says it's received provisional patents for ideas it's developed around 
refueling the reactors and efficiently transporting heat out of the reactor 
core.

Radiant joins a number of companies now working on compact nuclear reactors, 
and a smaller number focusing specifically on portable units, which would 
include the floating barges proposed for mass-manufacture by Seaborg. It'll be 
a while before we see one up and running, but a clean, convenient, low-cost, 
long-life alternative to diesel generators would be very welcome.

Source: Radiant Nuclear



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