KLT-40 reactor
The KLT-40 family are nuclear fission reactors originating from OK-150 and OK-900 ship reactors. KLT-40 were developed to power the Taymyr-class icebreakers (KLT-40M, 171 MW) and the LASH carrier Sevmorput (KLT-40, 135 MW).[1] They are pressurized water reactors (PWR) fueled by either 30–40% or 90%[note 1] enriched uranium-235 fuel to produce 135 to 171 MW of thermal power.[2]
The KLT-40S variant is used in the Russian floating nuclear power station Akademik Lomonosov. It was developed by OKBM Afrikantov and produced by NMZ. The KLT-40S produces 150 MW thermal (about 52 MWe at 35% efficiency). The fuel cycle is 3 years. The KLT-40S also uses low-enriched uranium at 14.1% enrichment to meet international proliferation standards.[3]
The KLT-40 design was further improved and evolved into RITM-200 family of SMR.
See also
- List of small nuclear reactor designs
Notes
- 90 % according to information provided to Norwegian government in 1990, 30–40 % according to Bellona Foundation citing communication with Murmansk Shipping Company. (Diakov, Anatoli C. et al.)
References
- Nuclear icebreakers Archived 2011-04-13 at the Wayback Machine. Bellona Foundation, 18 June 1997. Retrieved 2011-11-29.
- Diakov, Anatoli C.; et al. (2006), "Feasibility of Converting Russian Icebreaker Reactors from HEU to LEU Fuel" (PDF), Science and Global Security, Taylor & Francis, Inc., 14: 33–48, doi:10.1080/08929880600620575, retrieved 2011-11-26
- KLT-40S IAEA. Retrieved 2019-08-21.
External links
- "KLT-40S FLOATING NUCLEAR CO-GENERATION PLANT" (PDF). - on OKBM Afrikantov official pdf(in English)