“…From 1965 to 1969, the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) Molten Salt Reactor Experiment (MSRE) demonstrated that graphite can be used as a moderator in nuclear reactors in which molten fluoride salts are used both as a coolant and liquid fuel carrier. In the MSRE reactor, graphite was in direct contact with the fueled salt, which was the mixture of 7 LiF-BeF2-ZrF4-UF4 (65.0-29.1-5.0-0.9 mole %), and with the nonfueled coolant, which was the 7 LiF-BeF2 eutectic (66-34 mole %), also known as FLiBe. At the operating temperature (650°C), the salt vapor pressure was less than 15 Pa, and the gas blanket (He) pressure above the salt was 700 Pa. 1 Graphite was the preferred choice for the moderator in contact with the molten salts due to its low wettability and better chemical corrosion resistance than most metals in molten fluoride salts.…”