Last year, the PBMR company in South Africa began testing TRISO coated fuel particles containing Uranium Dioxide enriched to 9.6% U-235. These 1 millimeter diameter fuel particles are the fundamental building blocks of the high temperature fuel that the company intends to use in their gas cooled modular reactors. The next higher level of assembly is the fuel pebble, which is a 60 centimeter diameter sphere that contains approximately 14,000 of the TRISO particles.

According to a press release scheduled for release on September 6, 2009 (today) the PBMR company has shipped 14 completed pebbles to Russia for continued testing at the Institute of Nuclear Materials (INM) in Zarechny near Ekaterinburg. Jaco Kriek, the company CEO, is pleased with this incremental step in their development process:
“We are very proud of this achievement, especially since the pebble fuel is at the heart of the PBMR’s safety case. The manufacturing of the fuel spheres is the culmination of many years of intensive development work at PBMR’s Fuel Development Laboratories on the Necsa site at Pelindaba near Tshwane. The irradiation tests are the final step in the development of the fuel for the PBMR demonstration unit and we are keenly anticipating the results.”
The irradiation testing will begin in January 2010 and will take approximately two years to complete.

Aside: Fuel testing is one of the long lead time items in nuclear reactor development. Unlike competitive power sources, nuclear fuel "burns" very slowly, so doing a full test of how the material will behave throughout its life in the plant requires a very patient researcher. In a combustion engine, you can burn through dozens to hundreds of tanks of fuel in the same amount of time. That is a disadvantage for innovation in nuclear energy, but it sure is nice during operation. End Aside

Check back here later for the link to the full press release. It has not yet appeared on the PBMR web site.