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Relevance: GS Paper III — Science & Tech; Energy; Environment Source: Science & Tech notes, 2026

1 · What it is

Pyroprocessing is a dry, energy-heavy process that uses very high temperatures to change a solid material, physically or chemically.
It runs three major sectors: cement-making, metallurgy (extracting metals from ores), and the nuclear industry (recycling used fuel). The first two build infrastructure; the third matters for energy security.

2 · Where the heat is used

In cement, the same heat that makes the product also releases carbon dioxide. In the nuclear sector, heat plus electricity is used to separate elements in spent fuel for reuse.

Cement
Rotary Kiln
Limestone, clay and iron are heated. At ~1,450°C they fuse into nodules called clinker, later ground into cement.
Metallurgy
Three Heat Steps
Roasting (ore + air → oxide), smelting (melt to separate metal from slag), calcining (limestone → lime).
Nuclear
Electrorefining
Spent fuel sits in a molten salt bath (≥500°C). An electric current separates elements by their electrochemical properties.
The Climate Cost
Cement CO₂
Cement alone causes ~7–8% of global CO₂. The CO₂ comes from the limestone itself, so clean electricity cannot fix it.

  • India’s edge: Its closed fuel cycle recycles spent fuel to recover plutonium and unburnt uranium — vital for the PFBR at Kalpakkam.
  • Why pyro for nuclear: It resists radiation damage, needs no long cooling, and is proliferation-resistant — plutonium cannot be cleanly separated for weapons.
  • Two clean-up routes: CCUS to trap kiln emissions and green hydrogen for smelting heat, to meet Net Zero by 2070.

UPSC Value Box
Clinker Marble-sized nodules formed at ~1,450°C; ground to make cement.
Slag Waste byproduct left after smelting separates metal from impurities.
Calcining Heating limestone to make lime; the stage that releases CO₂ in cement.
PUREX India’s traditional water-based (aqueous) reprocessing method.
PFBR Prototype Fast Breeder Reactor at Kalpakkam.
IGCAR / BARC Institutions developing pyroprocessing for future metallic fuels (U-Pu-Zr alloys).
CCUS Carbon Capture, Utilisation and Storage; traps CO₂ from cement kilns.
Three-stage programme India’s nuclear plan ending in Thorium use for energy independence.

MCQ Practice Question
Q. With reference to pyroprocessing, consider the following statements:

  1. In cement-making, carbon dioxide is released directly from the limestone during calcination.
  2. In the nuclear sector, electrorefining separates elements of spent fuel in a molten salt bath.
  3. Pyroprocessing allows plutonium to be perfectly separated, making it easier to use in weapons.

Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 2 only    (b) 2 and 3 only    (c) 1 and 3 only    (d) 1, 2 and 3

Answer: (a) 1 and 2 only

  • Statement 1 — Correct: The CO₂ comes from the limestone itself, which is why cement is hard to decarbonise with clean electricity alone.
  • Statement 2 — Correct: An electric current through a hot salt bath separates elements by their electrochemical properties.
  • Statement 3 — Incorrect: The opposite is true — plutonium cannot be cleanly separated from other actinides, which makes the process proliferation-resistant.

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