MarketList of nuclear research reactors
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List of nuclear research reactors

This is an annotated list of all the nuclear fission-based nuclear research reactors in the world, sorted by country, with operational status. Some "research" reactors were built for the purpose of producing material for nuclear weapons.

Australia
Notes: The main uses of the current OPAL reactor are: • Irradiation of target materials to produce radioisotopes for medical and industrial applications • Research in the fields of materials science and structural biology using neutron beams and its sophisticated suite of experimental equipment • Analysis of minerals and samples using the neutron activation technique and the delay neutron activation technique • Irradiation of silicon ingots in order to dope them with phosphorus and produce the basic material used in the manufacturing of semiconductor devices ==Austria==
Belgium
• GUINEVERE – fast, accelerator driven, lead-cooled reactor at SCK•CEN, Mol ==Brazil==
China
==Democratic Republic of the Congo==
Estonia
Paldiski – 2 PWR naval training reactors (dismantled) ==Finland==
France
Working: • Azur at Cadarache • Cabri at Cadarache • Eole at Cadarache • Masurca at Cadarache • Minerve at Cadarache == Georgia ==
Germany
• AKR II – Ausbildungskernreaktor II, Technische Universität Dresden; rating: 2 W, commissioned 2005 • AVR – Arbeitsgemeinschaft Versuchsreaktor, Forschungszentrum Jülich; rating: 15 MW, commissioned 1969; closed 1988 • BER II – Berliner-Experimentier-Reaktor II, Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie; rating: 10 MW, commissioned 1990, closed 2019 • FRG-1 (see GKSS Research Center) – Geesthacht; rating: 5 MW, commissioned 1958, closed 2010 • FRM IITechnische Universität München; rating: 20 MW, commissioned 2004 • FRMZ – TRIGA of the University of Mainz, Institute of Nuclear Chemistry; continuous rating: 0.10 MW, pulse rating for 30ms: 250 MW; commissioned 1965 • FR2 - Forschungsreaktor 2; rating: 44 MW; commissioned 1957; closed: 1981 • SUR-FW "Neutron"; Hochschule Furtwangen University; type Siemens-Unterrichtsreaktor SUR-100; rating: 0.1 W; commissioned 1973 • SUR-S; University of Stuttgart; type Siemens-Unterrichtsreaktor SUR-100; rating: 0.1 W; commissioned 1964 • SUR-U; Ulm University of Applied Sciences; type Siemens-Unterrichtsreaktor SUR-100; rating: 0.1 W; commissioned 1965 PlannedWyhl, planned nuclear plant that was never built because of long-time resistance by the local population and environmentalists. == Ghana ==
India
• Bhabha Atomic Research Center (BARC) – Trombay • Apsara reactor – Asia's first nuclear reactor. 1 MW, pool type, light water moderated, enriched uranium fuel supplied by France • CIRUS reactor – 40 MW, supplied by Canada, heavy water moderated, uses natural uranium fuel • Dhruva reactor – 100 MW, heavy water moderated, uses natural uranium fuel • Purnima series • Indira Gandhi Center for Atomic Research (IGCAR) – KalpakkamPFBR – 500MWe Sodium cooled fast breeder nuclear reactor, under construction. Expected completion 2015. • FBTR – 40 MW Fast Breeder Test Reactor, uses mixed (plutonium and uranium) carbide fuel • KAMINI –30 kW, uses U-233 fuel ==Indonesia==
Iran
Tehran – AMF reactor at Tehran Nuclear Research Center (supplied by USA, 1967) • Isfahan, Nuclear Technology Center (mainly supplied by China) • MNSR – 27 kW miniature neutron source reactor • light water subcritical reactor (LWSCR) • heavy water zero power reactor (HWZPR) • graphite subcritical reactor (GSCR) • ArakIR-40 heavy water-moderated reactor (under construction, planned commissioning 2014) ==Iraq==
Iraq
Note: Tamuz-1 and Tamuz-2 are parts of the same French nuclear research complex design, the OSIRIS research complex. All three reactors were located at the same site. ==Israel==
Italy
• Brasimone (Bologna) – PEC (Prove Esperimenti Combustibile - Fuel Test Experiments): ENEA Ente Nazionale Energia Atomica - National Atomic Energy Agency - Brasimone Research Center (1972–1987) • Ispra (Varese) – ISPRA-1 (5 MW): European Commission Joint Research Centre (1959–1973) • Ispra (Varese) – ECO (Essai Critique ORGEL, 1 kW): European Commission Joint Research Centre (1966–1983) • Milan - L-54 (50 kW): CeSNEF Centro Studi Nucleari "Enrico Fermi" - Politecnico di Milano (1957–1979) • Montecuccolino (Bologna) - RB-1 (zero-power reactor): University of Bologna (1962–1985) • Montecuccolino (Bologna) - RB-2 (1 kW): University of Bologna (1964–1985) • Montecuccolino (Bologna) - RB-3 - Aquilone 11 (1 kW): University of Bologna (1971–1989) • PaviaTRIGA LENA (TRIGA Mk.II model, 250 kW): University of Pavia (1965 - operational) • Palermo - AGN-201 "Costanza" (zero-power reactor): University of Palermo (1960 – operational) • Saluggia (Vercelli) - AVOGADRO RS-1 ("Swimming Pool" model): FIAT/Montecatini (1959–1971) • San Piero a Grado (Pisa) – RTS-1 "Galileo Galilei" ("Swimming Pool" model, 5MW): CAMEN Centro Applicazioni Militari Energia Nucleare - Center for Military Applications of Nuclear Energy (1963–1980) • Santa Maria di Galeria (Roma) – ROSPO-2 (2 kW): ENEA Ente Nazionale Energia Atomica - Casaccia Research Center (1960–1975) • Santa Maria di Galeria (Roma) – TRIGA RC-1 (modified TRIGA Mk.II model, 1MW): ENEA Ente Nazionale Energia Atomica - Casaccia Research Center (1960–1987, reactivated 2010) • Santa Maria di Galeria (Roma) – RC-4 RITMO (0.01 kW): ENEA Ente Nazionale Energia Atomica - Casaccia Research Center (1965–1978) • Santa Maria di Galeria (Roma) – RANA (10 kW): ENEA Ente Nazionale Energia Atomica - Casaccia Research Center (1965–1981) • Santa Maria di Galeria (Roma) – TAPIRO (modified Argonne Fast Source Reactor model, 5 kW): ENEA Ente Nazionale Energia Atomica - Casaccia Research Center (1971–1987, reactivated 2010) ==Jamaica==
Japan
Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) Reactors • Tōkai JRR-2 (shut down) • Tōkai JRR-3 • Tōkai JRR-4 • Tōkai JPDR (Japan Power Demonstration Reactor, shut down) • Ōarai High-temperature engineering test reactor (HTTR) • Ōarai JMTR (Japan Materials Testing Reactor) • Naka JT-60 fusion reactor • Nuclear Safety Research ReactorFugen (ATR (Advanced Thermal Reactor), shut down) • Jōyō (FBR) • Monju (FBR) • Kinki University • UTR-KINKI • Kyoto University • KUR • Musashi Institute of Technology (Tokyo City University) • MITRR (TRIGA-II) (shut down 1990) • Rikkyo University • RUR (TRIGA-II) (shut down) • University of Tokyo • Yayoi (shut down) ==Jordan==
Pakistan
Under IAEA safeguards Not under IAEA safeguards ==Panama==
Panama
USS Sturgis - floating nuclear power plant for Panama Canal (operating 1966 to 1976) ==Peru==
Poland
Ewa reactor - 10 MW VVR-SM research reactor (dismantled in 1995) • Maria reactor - 30 MW research reactor • Anna reactor - 10 kW research reactor (dismantled) • Agata reactor - 10 W zero-power research reactor (dismantled) • Maryla reactor - 100 W zero-power research reactor (dismantled) • UR-100 reactor - 100 kW training reactor (dismantled) ==Portugal==
Puerto Rico
Mayagüez - TRIGA reactor (dismantled) • Boiling Nuclear Superheater (BONUS) Reactor Facility, BONUS - superheated BWR (decommissioned). Listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places. ==Romania==
Romania
Institute for Nuclear Research, Mioveni, 110 km northwest of Bucharest - TRIGA reactor (capable consisting of either a 500 kW pulse ACPR core, or a 14 MW steady state core) • National Institute for Research and Isotopic Separation, Govora, 170 km west of Bucharest - no research reactors, but instead devoted to heavy water production • National Institute for Physics and Nuclear Engineering, IFIN-HH, Mǎgurele, 5 km southwest of Bucharest - a 2 MW VVR-S research reactor (shut down in April 2002, with decommissioning/dismantling started in 2013) ==Russia==
Russia
A total of 98 nuclear research facilities, including: • T-15 fusion reactor at Kurchatov Institute • VVR-M 18 MW reactor at St. Petersburg Institute of Nuclear Physics • IBR-2 2 MW pulsed reactor at Joint Institute for Nuclear Research • SM, Arbus (ACT-1), MIR.M1, RBT-6, RBT-10 / 1, RBT-10 / 2, BOR-60 and VK-50 Research Institute of Atomic Reactors ==Saudi Arabia ==
Turkey
Fuel pilot plants • TRD Fuel Pilot Plant (Turkish Atomic Energy Authority) ==Ukraine==
United Kingdom
Culham - JET fusion reactor • Dounreay • The Shore Test Facility (STF) at VULCAN (Rolls-Royce Naval Marine) • DSMP1 at VULCAN (Rolls-Royce Naval Marine) (shut down 1984) • Prototype Fast Reactor (shut down 1994) ==United States==
United States
Army Nuclear Power Program United States Naval reactors Research reactors Civilian (private and university) research and test reactors licensed to operate Civilian (private and university) research and test reactors formerly licensed to operate Research and test reactors under decommission orders or license amendments are authorized to decontaminate and dismantle their facility to prepare for final survey and license termination. Research and test reactors with possession-only licenses are not authorized to operate the reactor, only to possess the nuclear material on-hand. They are permanently shut down. Civilian (private and university) research and test reactors in construction Executive Order 14301 created DOE's Reactor Pilot Program, expediting advanced reactor testing outside national labs, targeting criticality for three test reactors by July 4, 2026. 11 Reactors are being developed as part of this program. This list is of the reactors already in construction. ==Uruguay==
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