Obninsk Nuclear Power Plant
According to Lev Kotchetkov, who was there at the time: "Although utilisation of generated heat was going on, and production of isotopes was even enhanced, the main task was to carry out experimental studies on 17 test loops installed in the reactor." The technology perfected in the Obninsk pilot plant was later employed on a much larger scale in the RBMK reactors.
Design
The single reactor unit at the plant, AM-1 ("Атом Мирный", Atom Mirny, Russian for "Peaceful Atom"), had a total electrical capacity of 6 MW and a net capacity of around 5 MWe. Thermal output was 30 MW. It was a prototype design using a graphite moderator and water coolant. This reactor was a forerunner of the RBMK reactors.
The Obninsk reactor used 5% enriched uranium; this percentage would be lowered for subsequent reactors.
History
Construction started on 31 December 1950. First criticality was achieved on 6 May 1954, and the first grid connection was made on 27 June 1954. For around four years, until the opening of the Siberian Nuclear Power Station, Obninsk remained the only nuclear power reactor in the Soviet Union; the power plant remained active until 29 April 2002 when it was finally shut down. According to Kotchetkov, in its 48 years of operation there were no significant incidents resulting in personnel overdose or mortality, or radioactive release to the environment exceeding permissible limits.
The next Soviet nuclear power plant to be connected to their grid was Beloyarsk Unit 1 in 1964 with a capacity of 100 MWe.
See also
- BORAX III was briefly connected to the US power grid in 1955
- Experimental Breeder Reactor I – World's first nuclear power plant (powered its own building, but was not grid-connected)
- F-1 (nuclear reactor) (the Soviet equivalent of Chicago Pile 1)
- Magnox reactor prototypes at Calder Hall (1956) produced electricity although their main purpose was plutonium production
- Nuclear power in Russia
- Shippingport Atomic Power Station (1957) with 60 MWe power; it is described by the US government as the first full-scale nuclear power plant