The
Dhruva reactor is
India's largest nuclear
research reactor. Located in the
Mumbai (Bombay) suburb of
Trombay at the
Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), it is India's primary generator of weapons-grade
plutonium-bearing spent fuel for its
nuclear weapons program. Originally named the R-5, this
pool-type reactor first went critical on 8 August 1985 after 10 years of construction. However, the unit did not attain full power until 1988, an indication that India had problems with its operation. The reactor experienced at least one serious accident when 4Mt of heavy water overflowed from the reactor core in 1985 following vibration problems.
Designed as a larger version of the
CIRUS reactor, Dhruva was an indigenous project built to provide an independent source of weapons-grade plutonium free from safeguards. The Dhruva project cost 950 million rupees. The reactor uses
heavy water (deuterium) as a
moderator and coolant. Aluminum clad
fuel rods containing
natural uranium are used to obtain a maximum power output of 100MW. According to conservative estimates, the reactor produces an average of 16–26 kg of weapons-grade plutonium per year in its spent fuel, while former Indian Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) Chairman P.K. Iyengar said the unit could produce up to 30 kg of weapons-grade plutonium each year.
Dhruva, in Hindu mythology, is a prince blessed to eternal existence and glory as the Pole Star (Dhruva Nakshatra in
Sanskrit) by Lord
Vishnu. It can also...
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