Before encapsulation of spent nuclear fuel in a geological repository, the fuels need to be verified for safeguards purposes. This requirement applies to all spent fuel assemblies, including those with properties or designs that are especially challenging to verify. One such example are quivers, a new type of containers used to hold damaged spent fuel rods. After placing damaged rods inside the quivers, they are sealed with a thick lid and the water is removed. The lid is thick enough to significantly reduce the amount of the gamma radiation penetrating through it, which can make safeguards verification from the top using gamma techniques difficult. Considering that the number of quivers at storage facilities is foreseen to increase in near future, studying the feasibility of verification is timely.
In this paper we make a feasibility study related to safeguards verification of quivers, aimed at investigating the gamma and neutron radiation field around a quiver designed by Westinghouse AB and filled with PWR fuel rods irradiated at the Swedish Ringhals site. A simplified geometry of the quiver and the detailed operational history of each rod are provided by Westinghouse and the reactor operator, respectively.
The nuclide inventory of the rods placed in the quiver and the emission source terms are calculated with ORIGEN-ARP. The radiation transport is modeled with the Serpent2 Monte Carlo code. The first objective is to assess the capability of the spent fuel attribute tester (SFAT) to verify the content for nuclear safeguards purposes. The results show that the thick quiver lid attenuates the gamma radiation, thereby making gamma radiation based verification from above the quiver difficult.
The neutron flux monitoring system of the French GEN-IV sodium-cooled fast reactor will rely on hightemperature fission chambers installed in the reactor vessel and capable of operating over a wide-range neutron flux. The definition of such a system is presented and the technological solutions are justified with the use of simulation and experimental results. I. INTRODUCTION RANCE has a long experience of about 50 years in designing, building and operating sodium-cooled fast reactors (SFR) such as RAPSODIE, PHENIX and SUPER PHENIX. Fast reactors feature the double capability of both reducing nuclear waste and saving nuclear energy resources by burning actinides. Since this reactor type is one of those selected by the Generation IV International Forum, the French government asked, in the year 2006, CEA, namely the French Alternative Energies and Atomic Energy Commission, to lead the development of an innovative GEN-IV nuclear-fission power demonstrator. The major objective is to improve the safety and availability of an SFR. In this paper, we show that the architecture of the neutron flux monitoring (NFM) system will rely on in-vessel hightemperature fission chambers (HTFC) featuring wide-range
Non-destructive assay (NDA) methods are at the core of nuclear safeguards verification of spent nuclear fuel (SNF). In Sweden, the spent nuclear fuel from all the reactor sites is moved to the Swedish central interim storage facility for spent nuclear fuel (for which the Swedish acronym is Clab). A new facility, Clink, is planned at the site where the SNF will undergo a safeguards verification prior to encapsulation for long-term storage. The fuel to be encapsulated includes both regular fuel assemblies as well as “non-regular” fuel assemblies including fuel objects called quivers, which are specially designed containers to house damaged or failed and leaking spent fuel rods in a way to isolate the rods from the environment and prevent contamination. The quiver concept was recently introduced in the Swedish nuclear market by Westinghouse Electric Sweden AB and it has led to some unique challenges from a safeguards verification standpoint which stem from their construction. Their overall stainless steel build, while providing robustness to the structure, also greatly diminishes the possibility of detecting gamma or neutron radiation using traditional safeguards measurement devices. The current investigation looks into the practicalities of safeguards verification of boiling water reactor (BWR) quiver objects in the spent fuel pool from above, and also assesses the possibility of their verification from the side using the widely used Fork detector. The Fork instrument has been routinely employed by both operators and inspectors around the world to verify spent fuel for routine safeguards inspections. In the present work, we model the BWR quiver and the Fork instrument in the Monte Carlo particle transport code, Serpent2 to estimate the radiation flux around the quiver objects. We have shown that the gamma and neutron radiation from the BWR quiver were heavily attenuated by the stainless steel lid and could not be relied on to make a safeguards verification from above. Furthermore, it was established that while gamma radiation from the quiver remains measurable on the sides of the quiver by the Fork instrument, the neutron counts were low compared to a typical BWR fuel assembly of similar fuel content albeit within the limits of detectability of the Fork.
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