The S–I cycle was invented at
General Atomics in the 1970s. The Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) has conducted successful experiments with the S–I cycle in the helium cooled
High Temperature Test Reactor, a reactor which reached first
criticality in 1998, JAEA have the aspiration of using further nuclear very high-temperature
generation IV reactors (
VHTR) to produce industrial scale quantities of hydrogen. (The Japanese refer to the cycle as the IS cycle.) Plans have been made to test larger-scale automated systems for hydrogen production. Under an International Nuclear Energy Research Initiative (INERI) agreement, the French
CEA, General Atomics and
Sandia National Laboratories are jointly developing the sulfur-iodine process. Additional research is taking place at the
Idaho National Laboratory, and in Canada, Korea and Italy.
Material challenge The S–I cycle involves operations with corrosive chemicals at temperatures up to about . The selection of materials with sufficient corrosion resistance under the process conditions is of key importance to the economic viability of this process. The materials suggested include the following classes: refractory metals, reactive metals,
superalloys, ceramics, polymers, and coatings. Some materials suggested include
tantalum alloys,
niobium alloys, noble metals, high-silicon steels, several nickel-based
superalloys,
mullite,
silicon carbide (SiC), glass,
silicon nitride (Si3N4), and others. Recent research on scaled prototyping suggests that new tantalum surface technologies may be a technically and economically feasible way to make larger scale installations. ==Hydrogen economy==