Major component manufacture is eVinci milestone
Westinghouse's eVinci was selected in late 2020 to receive USD9.3 million of cost-shared funding (USD7.4 million as the US Department of Energy's share) under the ARDP to advance the design of the heat pipe-cooled microreactor.
Heat pipes - long, thin tubes which passively transfer thermal energy from one end of the tube to the other - will be used in the planned Nuclear Test Reactor (NTR) to transfer heat away from the nuclear fuel.
ARDP funding was used to help design and prototype the 12-foot heat pipe, which according to the Department of Energy Office of Nuclear Energy, is one of the largest of its kind ever built and marks a key step forward in developing the eVinci reactor. The pipe was made at Westinghouse's Waltz Mill facility in Pennsylvania. The company had previously manufactured and tested pipes at a 4-foot scale.
The NTR will require hundreds of the 12-foot pipes, which are made of a specialised iron, chromium, and aluminium alloy engineered for superior heat resistance and performance.
A rendering of an eVinci power plant (Image: Westinghouse)
Westinghouse's eVinci is a transportable reactor that is fully factory built, fuelled and assembled, and capable of delivering combined heat and power - 5 MWe and up to 13MWt. Its small size allows for standard transportation methods and rapid, on-site deployment, with superior reliability and minimal maintenance, making it particularly suitable for energy consumers in remote locations. The company has previously described the design as "game-changing".
Earlier this month, Westinghouse filed a Notice of Intent to submit key licensing reports for eVinci to the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission for joint review including a common set of key requirements for the classification of systems, structures and components for the microreactor. This approach will enable deployment of a standard design in both the USA and Canada, the company said.