ROBERTO VICENTE

Resumo

Degree in Physics from Universidade de São Paulo (1977); master degree in Nuclear Technology from Universidade de São Paulo (1980) and doctorate in Nuclear Technology from Universidade de São Paulo (2002). Has experience in radioactive waste management, acting on the following subjects: radioactive waste characterization, treatment and disposal; disposal of disused sealed radioactive sources. (Text obtained from the Currículo Lattes on November 25th 2021)


É bacharel em Física pela Universidade de São Paulo (1977), tem mestrado em Tecnologia Nuclear pela Universidade de São Paulo (1980) e doutorado em Tecnologia Nuclear pela Universidade de São Paulo (2002). Atualmente é tecnologista da Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear. Tem experiência na área de Engenharia Nuclear, com especialização em Gestão de Rejeitos Radioativos, atuando principalmente nos seguintes temas: gerenciamento, tratamento e deposição de rejeitos radioativos. (Texto extraído do Currículo Lattes em 25 nov. 2021)

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Agora exibindo 1 - 2 de 2
  • Artigo IPEN-doc 26329
    Advanced heavy water reactor
    2019 - SMITH, RICARDO B.; SACHDEVA, MAHIMA; BISURI, INDRANIL; VICENTE, ROBERTO
    One of the great advances in the current evolution of nuclear power reactors is occurring in India, with the Advanced Heavy Water Reactor (AHWR). It is a reactor that uses thorium as part of its fuel, which in its two fueling cycle options, in conjunction with plutonium or low enriched uranium, produces energy at the commercial level, generating less actinides of long half-life and inert thorium oxide, which leads to an optimization in the proportion of energy produced versus the production of burnt fuels of the order of up to 50%. The objective of this work is to present the most recent research and projects in progress in India, and how the expected results should be in compliance with the current sustainability models and programs, especially the "Green Chemistry", a program developed since the 1990s in the United States and England, which defines sustainable choices in its twelve principles and that can also be mostly related to the nuclear field. Nevertheless, in Brazil, for more than 40 years there has been the discontinuation of research for a thorium-fueled reactor, and so far there has been no prospect of future projects. The AHWR is an important example as an alternative way of producing energy in Brazil, as the country has the second largest reserve of thorium on the planet.
  • Artigo IPEN-doc 26274
    Plutonium-238
    2019 - SMITH, RICARDO B.; ROMERO, FERNANDA; VICENTE, ROBERTO
    Plutonium-238 is currently still the best fuel to power satellites to be sent to deep space in regions where the solar panels can no longer efficiently receive the sunlight. For 50 years, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) has used this radioisotope as a fuel in radioisotope thermoelectric generators (RTGs) installed on satellites such as Pioneer 10 and 11, Voyager 1 and 2, Cassini-Huygens and New Horizons, as well as the various rovers sent to the Moon and to Mars, among others. Plutonium-238 is not a naturally occurring isotope on the planet, it was produced in greater quantity during the Cold War period, as a by-product of the production of Plutonium-239 used for nuclear bombs. However, after the shutting down of the Savannah River reactors in 1988 and the ending of the Soviet Union in 1991, the United States stock of Plutonium-238 has been increasingly reduced, which threatens NASA's future space projects. Commentaries on the options available to the United States, from restarting the production of this fuel, to possible alternatives for a new type of fuel or equipment that may supply the spacecrafts, are also presented.