The Commercial Appeal

Nuclear waste could fuel projects in remotest areas

Company explores using materials left at Oak Ridge

- Daniel Dassow

An unused Cold War-era generator has left Oak Ridge on a new mission: bring power to the most remote places on earth and the dark side of the moon.

Zeno Power joined forces with the Oak Ridge Office of Environmen­tal Management and its cleanup contractor United Cleanup Oak Ridge (UCOR) to transfer a radioisoto­pe generator called the BUP-500, the largest of its kind ever made, which had been sitting at Oak Ridge National Laboratory since the mid-1980s.

Zeno Power, a startup founded by three Vanderbilt students in 2018, plans to use the radioactiv­e fuel from the generator to develop a new kind of power generator for customers like the Department of Defense and NASA. The partnershi­p was announced Jan. 26 at UCOR headquarte­rs in Oak Ridge.

Tyler Bernstein, co-founder and CEO of Zeno Power, said he hoped the partnershi­p with the Department of Energy would set a precedent for how private companies can work with the U.S. government to turn waste into clean energy.

“I can only imagine how exciting it’s going to be when this fuel that has now left the state will be deployed in the oceans, in space, enabling a next generation of scientific and national security missions,” Bernstein said.

Zeno Power has innovative nuclear power design

Zeno Power develops radioisoto­pe power systems, which produce electricit­y using heat from the decay of radioactiv­e material. They are the size of a microwave and can generate power in cold and dark environmen­ts for decades. A favorite of NASA, they have powered its Apollo and Voyager missions, as well as several Mars rovers.

NASA uses plutonium-238, which allows for lightweigh­t systems. The Department of Energy has jumpstarte­d its production of plutonium-238 at ORNL,

which shipped a significan­t amount of the rare isotope to Los Alamos National Laboratory last August to be turned into fuel for NASA space exploratio­n, including a trip to one of Saturn’s moons.

Zeno Power is developing a new system using the strontium-90 isotope, which has been used in more than 1,200 systems to power sensors on the ocean floor, arctic buoys and other remote devices.

While strontium-90 is more abundant than plutonium-238, it requires concrete and lead to contain its radioactiv­ity, which make systems incredibly heavy and difficult to handle.

Zeno Power’s innovation is a lightweigh­t strontium-90 system that it plans to bring to market by 2026 as the first commercial radioisoto­pe power system. Long accessible only to the government, the systems are in greater demand from companies that work in telecommun­ications, deep-sea mining and offshore wind power.

In 2023, Zeno Power announced more than $40 million in contracts from the Department of Defense, including $30 million to develop a satellite for the U.S. Air Force and $7.5 million to power naval research on the ocean floor.

Its strontium-90 heat source — the building block of its systems — was first demonstrat­ed last October at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

Bernstein said Zeno Power, with offices in Washington, D.C., and Seattle, plans to source much of its fuel from legacy nuclear sites like Oak Ridge. The company’s power systems have a closed design that does not emit radioactiv­e waste into their environmen­ts and could allow spent fuel to be recycled.

Oak Ridge cleanup touted as rare government efficiency

Bernstein and his co-founders Jonathan Segal and Jake Matthews first saw the unused BUP-500 generator on a tour of ORNL when the company was in its infancy at Vanderbilt. The tour opened his eyes to opportunit­ies for partnershi­p in Oak Ridge, where the Department of Energy prides itself on disposing nuclear waste or reusing it in creative ways.

In the fast-paced developmen­t of new nuclear power in Oak Ridge after World War II, some technologi­es proved useless and were put into storage.

For instance, the Department of Energy once created a large amount of uranium-233, an isotope that held promise as an alternate nuclear fuel, before it proved too volatile to use and was stored away. Since 2019, the department has partnered with Isotek and Terrapower to extract thorium from the uranium-233 and use it for next-generation cancer treatments rather than throwing it away.

The transfer of the BUP-500 generator to Zeno Power is a similar success story. It is not the first Oak Ridge partnershi­p for the company, which has worked both formally and informally with ORNL for years. The lab previously validated the company’s design in an independen­t review.

Jay Mullis, manager of the Oak Ridge Office of Environmen­tal Management, called the generator transfer a “win-win scenario.” The generator is so radioactiv­e that it would have had to stay at ORNL for 25 to 30 years before it could be disposed of at the Nevada National Security Site, according to an unclassifi­ed Department of Energy document.

“The equipment represente­d one of the largest single radioactiv­e sources that was a legacy on the site, and so being able to take advantage of this transforms the site and gives us significan­t risk reduction,” Mullis said. “You would not believe how many people it took to get this approved and actually transporte­d out of state.”

Included in the many partners was a federal truck driver named Gabe Melo, who drove the generator about 600 miles from Oak Ridge to a subcontrac­tor facility in Pennsylvan­ia.

Though Melo was not at the ceremony, he was presented a commemorat­ive coin by Mike Smith, a representa­tive of the Department of Defense. Smith said Melo was the only driver in the nation certified and available to make the sensitive trip.

“We see, hear and understand how complicate­d and nuanced this activity was and we want to acknowledg­e that this was an incredibly efficient activity of the U.S. government and gives a great name to government workers,” Smith said.

The Oak Ridge Office of Environmen­tal Management is part of the Department of Energy’s cleanup program for World War II and Cold War nuclear sites, the largest of its kind in the world. Mullis, who manages the office, said Oak Ridge cleanup is far ahead of other legacy sites like the Hanford Site in Washington.

In addition to repurposin­g nuclear waste, the office plans to finish cleaning soil at the former K-25 site and tear down a Manhattan Project building at Y-12 National Security Complex for the first time this year.

 ?? IMAGE PROVIDED BY ZENO POWER ?? Zeno Power has a contract with the U.S. Air Force to develop a radioisoto­pe power system that could power a satellite. It plans to use nuclear waste from Oak Ridge to power this technology.
IMAGE PROVIDED BY ZENO POWER Zeno Power has a contract with the U.S. Air Force to develop a radioisoto­pe power system that could power a satellite. It plans to use nuclear waste from Oak Ridge to power this technology.

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