Fast reactor development in the United States

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Abstract

This article chronicles the rise and fall of fast-reactor research in the United States. Research on fast reactors began at the end of World War II and represented a large fraction of the total U.S. research effort on civilian nuclear energy until the early 1980s. The goal of most of this research was to develop a plutonium breeder reactor capable of producing more plutonium from U-238 than is consumed. But with the termination of the Clinch River Breeder Reactor project in 1983, fast reactor development in the United States essentially ended. Safety issues played a role in this end to the fast breeder reactor program, but more important reasons were nuclear proliferation concerns and a growing conviction that breeder reactors would not be needed or economically competitive with light water reactors for decades, if ever. © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.

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Cochran, T. B., Feiveson, H. A., & von Hippel, F. (2009). Fast reactor development in the United States. Science and Global Security, 17(2–3), 109–131. https://doi.org/10.1080/08929880903445514

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