Opportunity
SAM #S-133663
Licensing Opportunity for Heat Pipe Reactor Fire Mitigation and Suppression System from Los Alamos National Laboratory
Buyer
DOE Senior Network Security Contractor
Posted
June 19, 2026
Respond By
December 20, 2026
Identifier
S-133663
NAICS
541715
This opportunity is a technology licensing offer from Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL), operated by Triad National Security, LLC under the Department of Energy (DOE). - Commercial licensing is available for the Heat Pipe Reactor Fire Mitigation and Suppression System, a patented technology (U.S. Patent No. 12,640,276). - The system is designed for alkali metal-cooled nuclear reactors and provides automated, sensor-driven fire mitigation and suppression. - Features include automated suppressant injection, inert gas buffer, phase change material jacket, and optional neutron-absorber dispersion. - Technology Readiness Level (TRL) is 3, indicating early-stage development. - Licensing is open to companies in nuclear energy, power generation, space power, industrial process heat, marine propulsion, and nuclear safety instrumentation. - This is not a solicitation for external development or procurement of products/services, but a technology transfer/licensing opportunity. - No specific OEMs or commercial vendors are named; the opportunity is for commercial development and application.
Key Details: - Buyer: Department of Energy (DOE) / Triad National Security, LLC (LANL) - Product: Heat Pipe Reactor Fire Mitigation and Suppression System - Patent: U.S. Patent No. 12,640,276 - Licensing: Exclusive or non-exclusive commercial licensing - Application areas: Nuclear reactors, power generation, space, marine, industrial heat, safety instrumentation
Description
The Heat Pipe Reactor Fire Mitigation and Suppression System from Los Alamos National Laboratory, transforms the heat pipes inside an alkali metal-cooled nuclear reactor from passive thermal conduits into active, sensor-driven fire defense components, giving designers of advanced small and microreactors a layered, automated safeguard against one of the most challenging hazards in their systems. By combining an inert gas buffer, a phase change material jacket, automated suppressant injection at multiple points and optional neutron-absorber dispersion into the reactor core, the system delivers redundant protection that responds within milliseconds of detecting fire-like conditions. This system enables advanced reactor developers to meet stringent safety expectations for remote, unattended and space-constrained deployments without redesigning the core architecture around bulky external suppression equipment.
How it Works
During normal operation, each heat pipe carries thermal energy away from the reactor core through the evaporation and condensation of an alkali metal working fluid, while valves connecting the heat pipe to external suppressant chambers remain closed. Temperature and pressure sensors continuously monitor the heat pipe reactor core and the valves near each heat pipe end, feeding data to a controller that compares readings against predefined thresholds. When a reading crosses the first threshold, the controller opens a valve and forces a fire suppressant material, typically a boron compound, into the interior of the heat pipe. If conditions worsen and a second threshold is crossed, additional valves activate to inject suppressant from the opposite end of the heat pipe, evacuate the working fluid through a dedicated valve and release suppressant into an inert gas chamber that annularly surrounds the heat pipe at the heat exchanger interface.
Technical Description
The system architecture centers on a heat pipe reactor core engaging a plurality of dual-ended or single-ended heat pipes, where both ends of each heat pipe extend externally of the core block so that suppressant can be introduced from either side of the core. A heat exchanger device sits at the heat rejection end of each heat pipe and defines an enclosed inert gas chamber that annularly surrounds the heat pipe, creating a physical gap between the alkali metal working fluid and any water-based cooling fluid. The chamber adds a second point of failure that must occur before incompatible fluids can interact, and the inert gas itself can serve as a blanketing agent for active flames. A layer of phase change material, typically a salt that doubles as a Class D fire extinguishing agent and alkali metal fire retardant, is disposed on the outer surface of the gas chamber, partitioned by fin-bearing components that both store thermal energy and improve heat transfer to the surrounding cooling fluid.
The active suppression and shutdown logic is governed by a controller comprising memory, processor, input/output circuitry and communications circuitry, optionally implemented as a distributed or cloud-based system. First and second valves regulate suppressant flow into each end of the heat pipe interior cavity from dedicated suppressant chambers, while third and fourth valves regulate suppressant flow into the inert gas chamber from separate chambers. The second valve at the heat pipe’s far end can also be configured to evacuate working fluid either simultaneously with or prior to suppressant injection, encouraging dispersion of the suppressant throughout the pipe. As an additional shutdown pathway, the reactor core block can include gaps between fuel rods and heat pipes in which a neutron absorber material such as cadmium or a boron compound is preloaded; on detection of an alkali metal fire, the controller can release that absorber into the gaps to reduce core reactivity and aid shutdown, providing a coupled fire-and-reactivity response unique to this design.
Advantages
Multiple independent barriers between reactive alkali metals and potential ignition sources, reducing the probability of a single-point failure Automated, sensor-driven response that opens valves and injects suppressant within milliseconds of fire-like conditions being detected Dual-purpose phase change jacket that stores thermal energy during normal operation and acts as a fire retardant during an event Coupled fire suppression and reactor shutdown through optional neutron absorber dispersion into the core Flexible architecture compatible with both heat pipe-cooled reactor cores and auxiliary equipment such as molten salt pumps Configurable suppressant choices and threshold logic, allowing developers to tailor the response to their specific reactor design
Market Applications
Nuclear Energy (microreactors, small modular reactors, heat pipe-cooled designs) Power Generation (remote bases, mining sites, Arctic installations) Space and Lunar Surface Power (radioisotope and fission surface power systems) Industrial Process Heat (high-temperature manufacturing, hydrogen production facilities) Marine and Naval Propulsion (advanced compact reactor concepts for maritime use) Nuclear Safety Instrumentation (sensor and controller subsystems for licensed reactor operators)
Development Status: TRL 3
U.S. Patent No. 12,640,276
LA-UR-26-25100
LANL Tech Partnerships: Unlock the Innovative Potential
Los Alamos National Laboratory offers a wide range of cutting-edge technologies and capabilities that may provide your company with a competitive edge in the market and unlock the innovative potential that can enhance, refine, and revolutionize your products.
LANL’s licensing program focuses on moving inventions developed by our researchers to commercial innovations. Patented and patent pending inventions and copyrighted software are available to existing and start-up companies through exclusive and non-exclusive licensing agreements. For specific discussions, please contact licensing@lanl.gov.
Note: This is not a call for external services for the development of this technology.
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