Core catcher
A core catcher is a device provided to catch the molten core material of a nuclear reactor in case of a nuclear meltdown and prevent it from escaping the containment building.
A core catcher is made from a special thermally resistant concrete ceramic to prevent nuclear core material from melting through the core catcher; it also has a cooling mechanism to cool down the core material. The core catcher of the European Pressurized Reactor has 170 m2 expansion area and a mass of 500 t.
Examples of reactor types with core catchers, besides the EPR, are:
- SNR-300
- AES-91 / VVER-1000/428
- VVER-1200
- SWR1000
- ESBWR
- ABWR
- APWR
- Atmea I
- ACPR-1000
- EU-APR1400
- IPWR-900
The Russian physicist who helped design the Russian core-catcher model during the Chernobyl crisis, Leonid Bolshov, has stressed that the experience of Chernobyl has encouraged Russia to create reactors with core-catcher safety devices in new nuclear plants.
In 2018, Rosatom installed a 200-tonne core catcher at Bangladesh's Rooppur 1 Nuclear Power Plant, describing it as "a unique protection system".