High-temperature gas-cooled reactor
High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors (HTGRs) have advanced over 75 years, offering robust safety, high efficiency, and unique industrial applications thanks to innovations like TRISO fuel and helium coolant. While recent international projects highlight their transformative potential for clean energy and decarbonization, HTGRs must still overcome challenges in fuel supply, regulation, and waste management to achieve widespread deployment.
High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors ("HTGRs") have evolved over more than 75 years, beginning with early U.S. concepts and maturing through international collaboration and innovation in fuel, safety, and industrial utility. Key milestones include the development of robust TRISO fuel, which provides individualized containment for radioactive byproducts and enables inherent passive safety, and the achievement of high outlet temperatures (750–950°C), allowing HTGRs to serve both electricity generation and hard-to-decarbonize industrial sectors. The technology’s modular scalability, rapid load-following capability, and use of chemically inert helium coolant further distinguish HTGRs from traditional light-water reactors. Despite these advantages, deployment faces significant challenges, including the need for a reliable HALEU fuel supply chain, complex transportation and security requirements, regulatory uncertainties, and the management of unique waste streams. As demonstrated by recent projects in China and ongoing efforts in the U.S. and Canada, HTGRs are positioned to play a transformative role in clean energy and industrial decarbonization, provided these technical and institutional barriers can be overcome.
The history of HTGRs spans over three-quarters of a century, beginning with a 1944 design proposal by Farrington Daniels in the United States. While Daniels initially envisaged a reactor using a beryllium moderator, development shifted toward graphite moderation and helium cooling, reaching maturity at the Clinton Laboratories (now Oak Ridge National Laboratory) by 1947. The late 1950s marked a pivotal evolution in fuel design with the first development of coated particle fuel for the Dragon reactor in the United Kingdom. The 1960s saw the emergence of the first generation of experimental HTGRs across Europe and the United States. These included:
- The Dragon Reactor (UK): Critical in 1964, it operated until 1975 as a 20 MWth experimental facility using prismatic fuel.
- Peach Bottom Unit 1 (USA): Operating from 1966 to 1974, this 115 MWth reactor was the first HTGR to successfully produce electricity for a commercial grid.
- AVR (Germany): Starting in 1967, this 46 MWth reactor pioneered the pebble-bed design, eventually reaching core temperatures of 950°C and demonstrating the viability of continuous online refueling. In the 1970s and 1980s, the technology transitioned to commercial-scale demonstrators. The United States commissioned Fort St. Vrain in 1976, a 842 MWth prismatic reactor that, despite facing technical hurdles with its water-lubricated circulators, proved the large-scale feasibility of the HTGR concept. Simultaneously, Germany developed the THTR-300, a 750 MWth pebble-bed reactor that operated between 1985 and 1989. However, the 1979 Three Mile Island and 1986 Chernobyl accidents fundamentally reoriented the industry toward small, modular HTGRs ("mHTGRs") designed for inherent passive safety. This era produced designs like the Siemens HTR-Module, which aimed to limit power density so that fuel temperatures would never exceed 1,600°C during an accident, though political shifts eventually halted its construction. Modern HTGR history is defined by international collaboration and a focus on the Generation IV Very-High-Temperature Reactor (VHTR). Japan’s HTTR (30 MWth, prismatic) and China’s HTR-10 (10 MWth, pebble-bed) became operational around the turn of the millennium, serving as critical testbeds for high-temperature materials and hydrogen production. In 2002, the U.S. Advanced Gas Reactor (AGR) program was launched to qualify high-performance TRISO fuel, which consists of poppy-seed-sized uranium kernels protected by multiple ceramic layers. Currently, the technology has reached a new commercial milestone with China's HTR-PM, a full-scale 250 MWth power plant that began commissioning in 2021. In the United States and Canada, the industry is moving toward Small Modular Reactors** ("SMRs")**, such as X-energy’s Xe-100 and Ultra Safe Nuclear’s MMR, which leverage decades of lessons learned from German and South African pebble-bed programs and the U.S. AGR fuel qualification efforts.
High Temperature Considerations
While traditional light-water reactors (LWRs) typically operate with outlet temperatures of approximately 320°C, HTGRs are engineered to run at significantly higher temperatures, with design-dependent outlet temperatures typically ranging from 700°C to 950°C. The primary mission of this technology is to provide a versatile, stable supply of high-grade heat that can be used for both power generation and heavy industrial applications. The "high-temperature" capability of an HTGR is a transformative innovation that "buys" you two critical advantages:
Superior Electrical Efficiency Operating at these extreme temperatures allows HTGRs to achieve greater thermal efficiency for electricity generation compared to conventional reactors. High output temperatures increase the conversion efficiency of power generation systems, making them compatible with advanced high-efficiency Brayton or steam cycles. This means that for every unit of nuclear fuel consumed, an HTGR can produce more electricity while generating less waste heat than its lower-temperature predecessors.
Direct Industrial Process Heat Most industrial sectors require heat at temperatures far beyond the capabilities of traditional nuclear plants, forcing them to rely on burning fossil fuels. The high-grade heat from an HTGR enables the direct decarbonization of "hard-to-abate" industrial sectors. The utility of this high-temperature heat includes:
- Hydrogen and Ammonia Production: HTGRs can provide the 750°C+ heat required for efficient clean hydrogen production via steam methane reforming or advanced methods like high-temperature steam electrolysis and thermochemical cycles.
- Chemicals and Petrochemicals: High-quality steam (typically around 550°C) can be delivered directly to large chemical complexes for the production of fertilizers, polymers, and other materials.
- Iron and Steel Making: Future applications include using HTGR heat and hydrogen for the direct reduction of iron ore, a process that requires temperatures far exceeding traditional steam limits.
- District Heating and Desalination: These lower-temperature applications (80–150°C) can be efficiently served by using the "waste heat" from an HTGR's power conversion cycle, known as cogeneration.
- Oil and Bitumen Recovery: HTGR steam can reach the temperatures and pressures needed to extract bitumen from oil sands through steam-assisted gravity drainage. Higher temperature buys you exergy, the ability to perform more difficult chemical and mechanical work with lower engineering complexity and higher overall system efficiency. The difference between a standard reactor and an HTGR is like the difference between a home clothes dryer and an industrial kiln. A dryer produces enough warmth to remove moisture, but it can never get hot enough to bake a ceramic vase or forge a steel blade. By raising the temperature into the "kiln" range, the HTGR stops being just a tool for making steam and becomes a versatile industrial furnace capable of forging the basic building blocks of a modern, carbon-neutral economy.
Fuel Form
The fuel form of a High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactor (HTGR) is a hierarchical system designed for functional containment, where the fuel itself serves as the primary barrier against radioactive release.
The TRISO Particle The fundamental unit of this fuel is the TRISO (TRi-structural ISOtropic) particle. Roughly the size of a poppy seed, each particle is a micro-engineered sphere consisting of a central kernel protected by four distinct ceramic and carbon layers: Fuel Kernel: The "engine" of the particle, typically composed of uranium dioxide ("UO2") or uranium oxycarbide ("UCO"). UCO is often used in modern designs to reduce the internal pressure caused by carbon monoxide at high burnups. Porous Carbon Buffer: A low-density layer that provides expansion space for fission gases and accommodates kernel swelling without damaging the outer shells. Inner Pyrolytic Carbon ("IPyC"): A dense layer that provides a substrate for the silicon carbide and protects the kernel from chemicals used during the manufacturing process. Silicon Carbide ("SiC"): The primary structural barrier and fission product container. It acts like a pressure vessel, maintaining integrity even at temperatures as hot as molten lava (up to 1,600°C–1,800°C). Outer Pyrolytic Carbon ("OPyC"): A final dense layer that protects the SiC from mechanical damage during handling and provides a surface for bonding to the surrounding matrix.
Macro-Scale Fuel Forms Depending on the specific reactor design, these billions of TRISO particles are aggregated into one of two macro shapes: Pebble-Bed: TRISO particles are dispersed within billiard-ball-sized spheres (pebbles) made of a graphite matrix. A single pebble may contain between 15,000 and 18,000 particles. Prismatic Block: TRISO particles are pressed into small cylindrical compacts (roughly 1/2" diameter by 2" long). These compacts are then stacked into fuel holes within large hexagonal graphite blocks.
Fully Ceramic Micro-encapsulated ("FCM") Innovation Advanced designs, such as the Micro-Modular Reactor ("MMR"), use FCM fuel pellets. In this form, TRISO particles are embedded in a silicon carbide matrix rather than the traditional carbon matrix. This creates an additional high-integrity barrier for defense-in-depth, as the pellet's SiC matrix itself provides a second layer of radiation containment on top of the TRISO particles' individual shells.
Why the Fuel Form Matters This fuel form drives the "inherent safety" of HTGRs. Because each particle acts as an individualized containment dome, the design effectively eliminates the need for the massive, leak-tested containment buildings required by traditional water-cooled reactors. It ensures that 99.99% of radioactive byproducts stay sealed within the fuel itself, even during a total loss of coolant. TRISO fuel is essentially like a pomegranate where every individual seed is encapsulated in its own armor. Even if the outer "fruit" (the pebble or block) is compromised, the seeds remain sealed and intact, preventing the contents from ever leaking out.
Moderator and Neutron Spectrum
In HGTRs, the moderator and the resulting neutron spectrum are fundamental to its unique safety and operational characteristics.
The Graphite Moderator HTGRs use nuclear-grade graphite as the primary moderator. The moderator’s job is to "slow down" (moderate) the fast neutrons produced during fission so they reach thermal energy levels, at which point they are more likely to cause further fissions and sustain the chain reaction. Graphite is chosen for several critical reasons. It remains structurally stable and retains its strength even at the extreme temperatures required for HTGR operation. Graphite has a massive thermal heat capacity. In an accident, this "thermal inertia" ensures that the core temperature rises very slowly, over days rather than seconds, giving the reactor a long "grace period" before intervention is needed. Finally, graphite has a very high moderating ratio (216 compared to water’s 62), meaning it is exceptionally good at slowing neutrons down without absorbing them.
The Neutron Spectrum The HTGR is predominantly a thermal-neutron spectrum reactor. However, its physics differ significantly from traditional Light-Water Reactors (LWRs). The average thermal neutron energy in an HTGR is slightly higher (0.22 eV) than in an LWR (0.17 eV). Because carbon atoms are heavier than the hydrogen atoms in water, neutrons require many more "collisions" to reach thermal speeds, approximately 114 scatters in graphite versus only 18 in water. Neutrons in an HTGR travel much farther before being absorbed or moderated. The migration length (the distance a neutron travels from birth to absorption) is about 57 cm in an HTGR, whereas it is only 6 cm in an LWR.
Why the Spectrum Matters The long distance neutrons travel (migration length) has two major impacts on reactor performance. The core is "neutronically transparent," leading to strong coupling between different regions of the reactor. This means that the power level in one part of the core is closely linked to the activity in another, which provides a more uniform power distribution. This spatial coupling effectively eliminates xenon spatial instability. Unlike large LWRs, which must carefully manage "Xenon oscillations" that can cause power surges in different parts of the core, HTGRs are naturally stable because their neutrons travel far enough to damp out these fluctuations. HTGRs are designed with a strong negative temperature coefficient. If the moderator gets too hot, the neutron spectrum shifts in a way that naturally reduces the fission rate, providing a "self-acting" shutdown mechanism. The moderator in an HTGR acts like fine-grained sand in a pinball machine. In a traditional reactor (water), the neutrons are stopped almost immediately, like hitting a heavy bumper. In an HTGR’s graphite, the neutrons bounce around and travel much further before slowing down, allowing the entire machine to act as one unified, stable system that is much harder to "overheat" or disrupt.
Coolant, Heat Transfer, and Power Conversion
The coolant, heat transfer, and power conversion systems of High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors (HTGRs) are designed to handle extreme temperatures while ensuring high efficiency and passive safety.
The Coolant: Helium Helium is the standard coolant for existing and proposed HTGR designs. Its unique properties are fundamental to the reactor's performance.
- Chemically Inert: Helium does not react with the graphite moderator, fuel particles, or structural materials.
- Neutronically Transparent: It has a negligible effect on the nuclear reaction and does not become radioactive when exposed to neutron radiation.
- Single Phase: Unlike water, helium remains a gas under all normal and accident conditions, meaning it cannot boil or flash, which simplifies pressure measurements and eliminates the risk of pump cavitation.
- Pressure: The primary system typically operates at pressures ranging from 6.0 to 7.0 MPa.
Heat Transfer in the Primary Loop In a typical modular HTGR, the primary loop consists of the reactor vessel, a concentric duct, a heat exchanger (or steam generator), and a gas circulator.
- Flow Path: Coolant flow typically enters near the bottom of the reactor vessel, flows upward through an annulus to cool the vessel wall and control rod structures, and then enters an upper plenum. It then flows downward through the core, either through channels in prismatic blocks or through the pebble bed, to extract heat.
- Concentric Piping: To protect structural materials, HTGRs often use a "hot duct" arrangement where the hot outlet flow is in the center, surrounded by the cooler inlet flow on the outside.
- Circulators: One-stage radial compressors, often vertical, provide the forced convection flow through the primary loop.
- Decay Heat Removal: If forced cooling is lost, HTGRs rely on inherent physics. Decay heat escapes the core radially via conduction and radiation through the graphite to the vessel wall, where it is removed by a passive Reactor Cavity Cooling System ("RCCS").
Power Conversion Options HTGRs are exceptionally versatile, supporting three main power conversion and heat utilization strategies:
- Steam Cycle (Rankine): The most common near-term option where hot helium passes through a steam generator to heat water. This produces superheated steam (typically around 565°C) to drive a conventional steam turbine for electricity or to provide industrial process steam.
- Direct Gas Cycle (Brayton): In this advanced configuration, the hot helium leaving the reactor core drives a gas turbine directly to generate electricity. This removes the need for a secondary water loop but requires advanced materials to withstand higher temperatures.
- Indirect Heat Exchange / Cogeneration: For industrial applications, heat can be transferred via an Intermediate Heat Exchanger ("IHX") to a secondary circuit. This secondary loop can use helium, nitrogen, or even molten salt. Using a molten salt loop, as seen in the MMR design, helps isolate the reactor from transients in the power conversion system. The HTGR's cooling system is like a high-capacity convection oven. While a traditional reactor (like a pot of water on a stove) relies on the water itself to stay in a specific liquid state to work, the HTGR uses the "air" (helium) to move massive amounts of heat through a "ceramic" core that can't melt, allowing the system to keep its cool even when the "power" is turned off.
Safety Considerations
The safety considerations for High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors (HTGRs) represent a fundamental shift from "active" safety systems (requiring pumps, power, and human action) to inherent passive safety based on the laws of physics and the material properties of the core. The safety case is built upon the following key considerations:
Robust Fuel and "Functional Containment" The primary safety barrier is the TRISO (tristructural isotropic) fuel particle. Each poppy-seed-sized particle acts as an individualized containment dome that retains over 99.99% of radioactive byproducts. Because they are ceramic, these particles cannot melt under any design-basis condition and remain intact at temperatures up to 1,600°C–1,800°C. Some designs, like the MMR, embed these particles in a FCM silicon carbide matrix, providing a secondary high-integrity barrier against fission product release. Because the fuel itself is so robust, the reactor relies on "functional containment" rather than a traditional massive, leak-tested pressure building.
Large Thermal Inertia and Passive Cooling The core's physical design ensures that heat is managed naturally during an accident. The graphite moderator has a massive thermal heat capacity, meaning that core temperatures rise very slowly, over the course of days rather than seconds, following a loss of cooling. During a Loss of Forced Cooling ("LOFC") event, the reactor does not require emergency water injection. Instead, decay heat escapes radially (outward) through the core materials via simple conduction and radiation to the reactor vessel wall, where it is removed by a passive Reactor Cavity Cooling System ("RCCS"). Modular HTGRs are designed with a low power density and a tall, slender geometry to ensure peak fuel temperatures naturally level off below the 1,600°C damage threshold.
Self-Acting Power Stabilization The physics of the core provides an automatic "brakes" system for the nuclear reaction. HTGRs are designed with strong negative temperature reactivity feedback. If the core gets too hot, the physical properties of the materials naturally shut down the fission process without the need for control rod movement or operator intervention. HTGRs use helium, which is chemically inert, does not react with reactor materials, and does not become radioactive when exposed to neutron radiation.
Siting and Industrial Considerations These safety features change how and where HTGRs can be built. As the fuel is so retentive, the required safety zone is significantly smaller than for traditional plants. A primary technology goal is to eliminate the need for off-site emergency response plans because the "grace period" for action is several days or longer. When used for industrial process heat, the reactor must be protected from external hazards such as fires or explosions at the connected chemical or hydrogen plant. Studies suggest a safe separation distance of roughly 120–150 meters is sufficient to isolate the reactor from such industrial accidents.
High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors (HTGRs) introduce several transformative innovations to nuclear energy, moving away from traditional light-water reactor (LWR) constraints in terms of safety, temperature output, and industrial utility.
Robust "Functional Containment" Fuel
A core innovation of HTGRs is the use of TRISO (tristructural isotropic) fuel particles. Each fuel particle, roughly the size of a poppy seed, is enveloped by ceramic layers that act as an individualized containment dome, retaining more than 99.99% of radioactive byproducts. Because of their ceramic form, TRISO particles cannot melt under any design-basis condition, remaining intact even at temperatures as hot as molten lava (up to 1,600°C–1,800°C). Modern iterations like the Fully Ceramic Micro-encapsulated (FCM) fuel embed these TRISO particles in a high-integrity silicon carbide matrix, providing an additional layer of defense-in-depth for radionuclide retention.
High-Temperature Heat for Industrial Decarbonization
Unlike conventional reactors that produce steam at roughly 320°C, HTGRs typically reach outlet temperatures between 750°C and 950°C. This innovation expands nuclear utility beyond electricity to "hard-to-abate" industrial sectors. The sources note HTGRs can drive clean hydrogen production, seawater desalination, district heating, and bitumen recovery from oil sands. These high operating temperatures enable greater thermal efficiency for electricity generation compared to traditional reactors.
Inherent Passive Safety
HTGRs are designed to reach a stable and safe end-state without operator action. The reactors use a graphite moderator with a large thermal capacity, meaning core temperatures rise very slowly during an accident. The large aspect ratio (tall, thin cores) allows decay heat to escape radially via conduction and radiation if forced cooling is lost. HTGRs use helium gas, which is chemically inert, does not react with reactor materials, and does not become radioactive when exposed to neutron radiation.
Modular Scalability and Operational Flexibility
A single HTGR unit can deliver between 1 MWt and 625 MWt, and multiple units can be clustered to form larger facilities of up to 3,000 MWt. Because they do not require a massive water source for emergency core cooling, HTGRs have much smaller geographical constraints for installation. Pebble-bed designs feature online refueling, where fuel "pebbles" are continuously rotated through the core, allowing the reactor to operate uninterrupted for its entire 60-year lifespan. HTGRs can rapidly ramp power up or down (e.g., between 40% and 100% in 12 minutes) to follow grid demand, which is faster than existing Generation III technologies.
The deployment of HGTRs, particularly for industrial process heat, faces several significant challenges ranging from supply chain gaps to regulatory and technical hurdles.
HALEU Fuel Supply Chain
The most critical challenge is the lack of a commercial supply chain for High-Assay Low-Enriched Uranium ("HALEU"), which is required by most modular HTGR designs. Private companies are hesitant to invest in HALEU enrichment and fabrication facilities without assured long-term demand, while reactor developers cannot deploy without a guaranteed fuel source. Currently, only Russia and China have the infrastructure to produce HALEU at scale. Establishing domestic enrichment, reconversion, and fabrication capacity requires significant capital investment and several years of lead time for regulatory certification.
Transportation and Security
Moving the necessary quantities of HALEU presents logistical and economic difficulties. Existing approved casks have very limited payloads for higher-enrichment fuel; for example, some casks are limited to roughly 55 lbs for highly enriched materials, making commercial-scale transport currently uneconomical. As HALEU is categorized as a material of "moderate strategic importance," transporting the quantities needed for a fleet of reactors may require armed guards and escorts, increasing costs and complexity.
Industrial Coupling and Collocation
While HTGRs are theoretically ideal for industrial heat, this has yet to be demonstrated in practice. Siting reactors near industrial facilities requires them to be protected from external hazards such as fires, explosions, or hazardous chemical releases from the connected plant. Malfunctions or standard shutdowns in the industrial process can cause thermal disturbances that transfer back to the reactor's primary coolant circuit, requiring advanced thermal absorbing mechanisms or storage to isolate the nuclear island. Systems must be meticulously designed to prevent the infiltration of corrosive industrial substances into the reactor and to ensure no radioactive substances, such as tritium, reach the industrial product.
Regulatory and Licensing Hurdles
The regulatory framework for non-light water reactors is still evolving. There is a lack of established schemes to define the jurisdictional boundaries between nuclear regulators and industrial regulators for connected facilities. Licensing of HALEU facilities and transport packages is currently hindered by a lack of criticality benchmark data needed for safety analyses.
Cost and Schedule Predictability
The high capital costs and long asset lifetimes of nuclear projects make them high-risk for private investors. As no HTGR has yet been coupled with an industrial process under national regulatory bodies, there is significant uncertainty regarding the actual time required for licensing and construction. Some internal metallic components, such as control rod guide tubes, are currently at a lower Technology Readiness Level (TRL 5) because they may subject to failure under extreme accident conditions, potentially requiring the qualification of new alloys or composites.
Waste Management
HTGRs produce a specific waste stream that differs from traditional reactors. Approximately 90% of the radioactive waste volume from an HTGR comes from the graphite matrix and moderator. This requires large disposal volumes or the development of specialized "head-end" treatments to separate the fuel particles from the graphite. Technologies for reprocessing TRISO fuel to recover nuclear resources are not yet mature at an industrial level.