Title: Nuclear Power Fission and Radioisotope
1Nuclear PowerFission and Radioisotope
- Presented to
- Propulsion and Power Panel
- Aeronautics and Space Engineering Board
- National Research Council
- by
- Joseph J Nainiger
- Alphaport, Inc
- March 21, 2011
2Presentation Outline
- NASAs need for Space Nuclear Power
- Radioisotope Power Systems
- Fission Power Systems
- Nuclear Power Technical Challenges
- Nuclear Power Infrastructure/Facility Needs
3NASA Needs for Space Nuclear Power
- Radioisotope Power Systems
- Planetary robotic landers and rovers (100s We
class) - Outer planet robotic space probes (100s We
class) - Planetary human exploration powering rovers (1
kWe class) and stand-alone science experiments
(i.e., ALSEP 100s We) - Power source for robotic spacecraft using
electric propulsion (REP - 100s We class) - Fission Power Systems
- Outer planet robotic space probes ( 1 kWe)
- Planetary human exploration (base power 10s kWe)
- Nuclear Electric Propulsion (NEP)
- Outer planet robotic space probes (100s kWe)
- Human exploration (several MWes)
4Radioisotope Power Systems
5Past NASA Missions Using RPSIncluding Moon and
Mars
Since 1961, 41 RTGs have been used on 23 US space
systems.
6RPS Plays a Vital Role in NASAs Future
- For many Science missions, the RPS (power and
heat) is enabling. - Most outer planet and beyond spacecraft
- Certain solar and inner planet missions
- Certain Mars and other surface applications
- For Human Exploration
- RPS can be fielded to support precursor
lander/rover missions. - RPS is an option for entry-level power and heat
for human missions and surface operations. - Multimission RPS (MMRTG and ASRG) are being
developed with NASA SMD funds - MMRTG first flight scheduled on Mars Curiosity
Rover launching this year - ASRG first flight opportunity potentially on a
Discovery class mission 2015-2016 - Improved RPSs can be developed to provide full
range of capabilities. - Robotic spacecraft and surface missions
- Radioisotope Electric Propulsion (REP)
- Human planetary surface missions (rovers and/or
stand-alone science experiments) - Lightweight components are needed to fill
technology gaps for RPS system development. - High-efficiency energy conversion (reduce amount
of Pu-238 needed) - Heat rejection
- PMAD
- Advanced power conversion technology (Advanced
Thermoelectrics, Thermo Photovoltaic TPV, and
Advanced Stirling Duplex) is being funded by NASA
SMD
7Fission Power Systems
8U.S. Has Pursued Several Aerospace Nuclear
Fission Development Programs Since 1945
ANP
1946-1961, Aircraft Nuclear Propulsion Project
1953, Nuclear Energy For Rocket Propulsion, R.
W. Bussard
Rover/NERVA
1955-1973, Nuclear Thermal Rocket
SNAP-2, 8, 10, 50
1957-1973, Systems for Nuclear Auxiliary Power
MPRE
1958-1966, Medium Power Reactor Experiment
1965, SNAPSHOT
710
1962-1968, 710 Reactor
SPR
1965-1968, Adv. Space Nuc. Power Program (SPR)
1984-1992, SP-100
SPAR / SP-100
MMW
1985-1990
1987-1993
SNTP
2003 - 2005 NSI Prometheus
1945
1950
1955
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
9Significant Space Fission Technology Development
Has Been Conducted
No U.S. Flight and Ground Test Experience Since
1972
- Space Power
- 36 Systems Flown (1 U.S., 35 Russian)
- 5 U.S. ground test reactors operated
- Nuclear Thermal Propulsion
- 20 Ground Test Reactors Operated
U.S. SNAP-10A
Reactor Systems
Russia BUK
Russia TOPAZ
10Fission Technology Enables Or Enhances
- Fuel energy densities 107 that of chemical
systems - In-space Power and Propulsion
- Power and propulsion independent of proximity to
sun or solar illumination - Constant power level available for thrusting and
braking - Go where you want, when you want
- Expanded launch windows
- Enhanced maneuverability
- Faster trip times / reduced human radiation dose
- Surface Power
- Provides power-rich environments
- Telecom
- Habitat
- Insitu Resource Utilization / Propellant
Production (ISRU / ISPP) - Enables planetary global access
- Enables Lunar overnight stays
- Fission power non-nuclear component and system
technology is being developed by NASAs Office of
Chief Technologist (OCT) Game-Changing Program
(formerly developed by ESMD ETDP)
11Fission Power Summary
- Fission power and propulsion enable/enhance key
elements - Surface power NEP cargo for long-duration human
lunar missions - NEP for cargo missions to Moon and Mars
- Surface power NEP for human Mars surface
missions - Current NASA fission project is addressing
non-nuclear subsystem development and non-nuclear
system testing and could be fielded in the
timeframe of this study - The nuclear design is based on state-of-practice
terrestrial nuclear fuels (UO2) and materials
(SS) - Increased DOE participation needed to address the
nuclear reactor and shielding - MWe systems can be fielded only IF aggressive and
sustained technology development efforts are
increased immediately - Fuels
- Materials
- Shielding
- Power Conversion
- Power Management Distribution (includes NEP
Power Processing) - Heat Rejection
- Propulsion
- Significant, but dated technology base exists
- Technology (knowledge and art) recapture will be
a key - Infrastructure development can pace technology
development - Opportunities exist to leverage technology
investments
12Nuclear Power Technical Challenges
- Radioisotope systems
- Lightweight components (power conversion, heat
rejection, PMAD) - High efficiency power conversion (reduce amount
of PU-238 ) - Sub-kW electric propulsion sub-system (for REP)
- Infrastructure (separate chart)
- Fission Systems
- Infrastructure reestablishment (separate chart)
- Technology capture (SP-100, JIMO)
- High temperature fuels and materials (especially
for NEP applications) - Shielding
- Autonomous control
- Lifetime
- Dynamic power conversion
- Heat rejection
- PMAD
- High power thruster technology (for NEP)
- Ground Testing (subsystems and systems)
13Nuclear Power Infrastructure/Facility Needs
- Radioisotope Systems
- Domestic production of Pu-238 (5 kg/year)
- Increase capabilities to assemble larger RPSs
- Fission Systems
- Fuels and materials fabrication
- Fuels materials irradiation facilities
- Physics criticals facilities
- Ground test facilities
- Fast-spectrum Test Reactors
- Large EP thruster test facilities
- Vehicle integration facilities
- Launch site facilities
- Fuel reactor shipping transportation
facilities - CRITICAL NEED