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Bushehr Design: Russian, But Not Chernobyl


Iran has finished building its first nuclear power plant located south of the Persian Gulf city of Bushehr. It is expected to undergo testing soon before it becomes fully operational later this year. The plant was completed with significant assistance from Russia and took 35 years to build.

The facility's history

When the project started in 1974 during the reign of the Shah, the German company Siemens was contracted to build two reactors, each producing about 1,200 megawatts of power.

The 1979 Iranian revolution halted the project. Ayatollah Khomeini declared nuclear power to be anti-Islamic.

During Iran's eight year war with Iraq that began in 1980, Bushehr was attacked numerous times, causing major damage. When the war ended, Iran tried to get Siemens to finish the plant, but it did not return.

Bushehr sat idle until 1995, when Russia signed an $800 million contract to complete work on the facility. The single Russian VVER-1000 reactor installed at Bushehr, with roughly 1,000 megawatts power output, is comparable to its western counterparts.

A modern design

Senior nuclear scientist Upendra Rohatgi at the U.S. government's Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York is highly familiar with the Russian reactor.

"The VVER-1000 is the latest Russian design, which is equal to western designs for pressurized water reactors. They all have the same safety systems, VVER and the western side [designs], and they all have very good containment systems," he said.

The VVER-1000 reactor uses water for several key functions. Engineering Professor Muhammad Sahimi at the University of Southern California explains. "This reactor uses water both as a coolant and as a moderator. Coolant is necessary to control the temperature of the reactor. [The] Moderator [function] is necessary to slow down neutrons [from the nuclear fuel], so that neutrons can sustain the nuclear reaction within the reactor, " he said.

In light water reactors such as the one at Bushehr, nuclear fuel heats the first, or primary, pressurized water circuit. The heat from the primary circuit then heats a second water circuit, which creates steam that drives the turbines that generate electricity.

Containment design

Bushehr's reactor is a completely different design than the much older RBMK-type that exploded at Chernobyl, Ukraine in 1986. The Iranian reactor, unlike Chernobyl, is completely encased in a massive concrete and steel containment vessel.

It is designed to keep radiation from contaminating the environment should an accident take place. There are multiple layers to the vessel to provide that protection, as well as strength to stop an impact or explosion from either inside or outside the structure.

After the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, the U.S. government conducted tests to see if containment vessels could withstand an aircraft impact. Upendra Rohatgi at Brookhaven says the results were positive. "They found they [containment vessels] can withstand the impact of a fully fueled 767 [jetliner] or F-4 [fighter aircraft]. The testing has been done at [the U.S. government's] Sandia National Laboratory, and they found the penetration [from impact] is only, like, six centimeters in a one meter-thick concrete wall," he said.

Earthquakes

Another important design criteria for nuclear reactors, especially in countries such as Iran, is resistance to earthquakes. Muhammad Sahimi at the University of Southern California says this was carefully considered.

"The first thing the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran did was extensive studies in terms of the safety of a nuclear reactor from the perspective of earthquakes. Usually, a nuclear reactor is built in an area where the possibility of a major earthquake is very small. As far as I know, there is no major active fault in southern Iran where the Bushehr reactor has been built," he said.

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