First concrete for US advanced reactor

Thursday, 8 May 2025

First concrete for US advanced reactor
Concrete pouring begins in the first of Hermes’ 51 foundational piers (Image: Kairos)

Kairos broke ground for the scaled demonstration of its KP-HFR fluoride salt-cooled high-temperature reactor technology last July, with excavation works completed in October. Safety-related construction activities, which are subject to oversight from the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC), formally began on 1 May, with the start of work on the the piers that will form part of the building’s foundation. Hermes will have 51 such piers, which are six feet (just under 2 metres) in diameter and will extend about 40 feet below ground, anchoring the building to bedrock.

Kairos Power CEO and co-founder Mike Laufer described the first safety-related concrete pour for a US advanced reactor under an NRC construction permit as a major milestone. “This achievement reflects the value of our iterative development process to meet the necessary nuclear quality standards and provide crucial real cost information that gives confidence to our customers. It is a testament to the hard work of our dedicated team and represents an enormous amount of learning and progress,” he said.


An auger drills the pier (Image: Kairos)

The concrete pour was the culmination of several months of preparation, Kairos said, coming after programmes to test the drilled pier installation process and refine the company’s nuclear quality assurance programme. A full-scale test pier was completed in November, and 70 piers have now been drilled for Kairos Power’s ETU 3.0 non-nuclear engineering test unit, which is being built adjacent to the Hermes site as part of Kairos’s iterative approach for the development of its KP-FHR technology. It says this has enabled the team, led by Barnard Construction Company, Inc, to become proficient at installing piers using quality control checklists similar to those that will be used for Hermes.


Quality checking rebar for the pier (Image: Kairos)

The Hermes reactor will use tri-structural isotropic (TRISO) uranium fuel and a mixture of lithium fluoride and beryllium fluoride salts known as Flibe as its coolant. This combination yields robust inherent safety while simplifying the reactor’s design, Kairos said.

Hermes, which is supported by risk reduction funding from the US Department of Energy’s Advanced Reactor Demonstration Program, is the first non-light-water reactor to be permitted in the USA in more than 50 years. It will not produce electricity, but Hermes 2 – a two 35 MWt-unit plant for which the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission issued a construction permit in November – will include a power generation system. The commercial deployment of the reactor is supported by a power purchase agreement signed with Google in October 2024, for power from a fleet of up to 500 MW of capacity by 2035.

Article researched and written by WNN’s 

   

  • Related Posts

    Vessel for Newcleo technology demonstrator installed

    To support Newcleo’s advanced reactor R&D programme, SRS Servizi di Ricerche e Sviluppo Srl has recently completed the installation of OTHELLO, a 2 MW loop-type lead test facility for qualifying…

    ‘Largest ever shipment’ for a single nuclear plant

    In addition to the 330-tonne reactor vessel for El Dabaa’s second unit, the other equipment – including the pressuriser for unit 1 – pushed the total cargo weight up to…

    Have You Seen?

    Hormuz Shutdown Sends Capital Flooding Back Into Renewables

    • May 26, 2026
    Hormuz Shutdown Sends Capital Flooding Back Into Renewables

    Sumitomo Heavy Industries launches California semiconductor R&D facility

    • May 26, 2026
    Sumitomo Heavy Industries launches California semiconductor R&D facility

    Sumitomo Heavy Industries launches California semiconductor R&D facility

    • May 26, 2026
    Sumitomo Heavy Industries launches California semiconductor R&D facility

    Video | What AI growth means for the specialty gas market

    • May 26, 2026
    Video | What AI growth means for the specialty gas market

    California records first CO2 injection

    • May 26, 2026
    California records first CO2 injection

    Gas operators urge EU support for hydrogen infrastructure buildout

    • May 26, 2026
    Gas operators urge EU support for hydrogen infrastructure buildout

    Linde and Valmet advance electrical carbon capture tech for pulp and paper

    • May 26, 2026
    Linde and Valmet advance electrical carbon capture tech for pulp and paper

    PEACE IN PERIL: Global Oil Price Gains 2% as US Military Strikes on Iran Add to Peace Deal Uncertainty

    • May 26, 2026
    PEACE IN PERIL: Global Oil Price Gains 2% as US Military Strikes on Iran Add to Peace Deal Uncertainty

    Northern Oil & Gas Reaches First Deal for Canadian Energy Assets

    • May 26, 2026
    Northern Oil & Gas Reaches First Deal for Canadian Energy Assets

    WhiteHawk Minerals Eyes $701 Million Valuation in US IPO

    • May 26, 2026
    WhiteHawk Minerals Eyes $701 Million Valuation in US IPO