About this Classroom Training

As the global energy landscape evolves, nuclear power is expected to play an increasingly important role in providing reliable and low-carbon energy. A new generation of advanced nuclear systems, grouped under the term Generation-IV Reactors, is being developed worldwide to improve fuel utilisation and reduce waste, enhance safety, and minimise proliferation risks, while remaining economically competitive with other energy sources. The Generation-IV International Forum (GIF) has identified six reference systems: the Supercritical-Water-cooled Reactor (SCWR), Very-High-Temperature Reactor (VHTR), Gas-cooled Fast Reactor (GFR), Sodium-cooled Fast Reactor (SFR), Lead-cooled Fast Reactor (LFR), and Molten Salt Reactor (MSR).

This 4-day course provides participants with a structured introduction to these systems through a comparative approach. Each reactor type will be discussed in terms of its general concept, key features, advantages and challenges, and examples of designs. In addition to lectures and discussions, participants will be expose to a reactor modelling project. Using provided geometry, material properties, power, and coolant data, they will solve one-dimensional radial heat transfer problems to estimate fuel, structural, and coolant temperatures under steady-state and simple transient conditions. The project concludes with group presentations, enabling direct cross-comparison of results across all reactor types. Through this combination of lectures, guided discussions, and modelling exercises, participants will gain both conceptual knowledge and practical skills.

This course will be delivered face-to-face over 4-day sessions, comprising of 8 hours per day, 1 hour lunch and 2 breaks of 15 minutes per day. Course Duration: 26 hours in total, 26 CPD points.

1. What are Generation-IV nuclear reactors, and how do they differ from current reactors?

Generation-IV nuclear reactors are advanced reactor concepts designed to succeed today’s Generation-III systems. They aim to improve sustainability, safety, economics, and proliferation resistance through new coolant types, fuel cycles, and operating conditions. Unlike conventional light-water reactors, many Gen-IV designs operate at higher temperatures, lower pressures, or with fast neutron spectra. These features enable better fuel utilisation, reduced long-lived nuclear waste, and enhanced passive safety characteristics, while also supporting non-electric applications such as industrial heat and hydrogen production.

2. What are the main types of Generation-IV reactor systems?

The Generation-IV International Forum has identified six reference reactor systems: Supercritical Water-Cooled Reactor (SCWR), Very-High-Temperature Reactor (VHTR), Gas-Cooled Fast Reactor (GFR), Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor (SFR), Lead-Cooled Fast Reactor (LFR), and Molten Salt Reactor (MSR). These systems differ mainly in coolant choice, neutron spectrum, fuel configuration, and operating temperature. Each design targets specific goals, such as high thermal efficiency, actinide recycling, improved safety margins, or process-heat applications.

3. What advantages do Generation-IV reactors offer over Generation-III reactors?

Generation-IV reactors offer several potential advantages, including higher thermal efficiency, improved fuel utilisation, and reduced radioactive waste generation. Many designs incorporate inherent or passive safety features that rely on physical principles rather than active systems. Fast-spectrum reactors can transmute long-lived actinides, reducing the burden on geological repositories. Additionally, high-temperature designs can support industrial heat, hydrogen production, and synthetic fuels, expanding the role of nuclear energy beyond electricity generation.

4. What are the key technical challenges facing Generation-IV reactors?

Major challenges include materials performance under high temperature, radiation, and corrosive environments; qualification of advanced fuels; and long-term reliability of novel coolants such as liquid metals or molten salts. Licensing and safety demonstration are also significant hurdles, as many Gen-IV concepts depart from existing regulatory experience. Fuel-cycle infrastructure, waste management strategies, and supply-chain readiness must be developed in parallel to enable commercial deployment.

5. How do fast-spectrum Generation-IV reactors support advanced fuel cycles?

Fast-spectrum reactors enable efficient breeding and transmutation because fast neutrons interact more effectively with heavy actinides. This allows conversion of fertile materials into fissile fuel and burning of transuranic elements that dominate long-term radiotoxicity. As a result, fast reactors support closed fuel cycles with reduced waste volumes and improved resource utilisation. These capabilities are central to long-term nuclear sustainability strategies.

6. What role does safety play in Generation-IV reactor design?

Safety is a core design objective of Generation-IV systems. Many concepts rely on low operating pressure, strong negative temperature feedbacks, and passive heat removal to limit accident progression. Instead of focusing primarily on high-pressure containment, safety strategies often emphasize material integrity, thermal inertia, and simplified system layouts. This shift aims to reduce both the likelihood and consequences of severe accidents while improving public and regulatory confidence.

7. What non-electric applications can Generation-IV reactors support?

High-temperature Generation-IV reactors can provide process heat for hydrogen production, desalination, synthetic fuel manufacturing, and other industrial applications. Outlet temperatures significantly higher than those of conventional reactors make them suitable for coupling with thermochemical hydrogen cycles or high-efficiency electrolysis. These applications position nuclear energy as a broader decarbonisation tool beyond grid electricity, particularly for hard-to-abate industrial sectors.

8. What is the future outlook for Generation-IV nuclear reactors?

Generation-IV reactors are expected to progress through demonstration and pilot deployments over the coming decades rather than immediate large-scale rollout. Their future depends on successful materials qualification, regulatory adaptation, cost control, and alignment with national energy strategies. While near-term nuclear deployment will likely rely on Generation-III and small modular reactors, Generation-IV technologies are viewed as a long-term solution for sustainable, flexible, and low-carbon energy systems.

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