• Title/Summary/Keyword: Analysis of fission product

Search Result 54, Processing Time 0.021 seconds

Separate and integral effect tests of aerosol retention in steam generator during tube rupture accident

  • Lee, Byeonghee;Kim, Sung-Il;Ha, Kwang Soon
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.54 no.7
    • /
    • pp.2702-2713
    • /
    • 2022
  • A steam generator tube rupture accompanying a core damage may cause the fission product to be released to environment bypassing the containment. In such an accident, the steam generator is the major path of the radioactive aerosol release. AEOLUS facility, the scaled-down model of Korean type steam generator, was built to examine the aerosol removal in the steam generator during the steam generator tube rupture accident. Integral and separate effect tests were performed with the facility for the dry and flooded conditions, and the decontamination factors were presented for different tube configurations and submergences. The dry test results were compared with the existing test results and with the analyses to investigate the aerosol retention physics by the tube bundle, with respect to the particle size and the bundle geometry. In the flooded tests, the effect of submergence were shown and the retention in the jet injection region were presented with respect to the Stokes number. The test results are planned to be used to constitute the aerosol retention model, specifically applicable for the analysis of the steam generator tube rupture accident in Korean nuclear power plants to evaluate realistic fission product behavior.

Effect of Spray System on Fission Product Distribution in Containment During a Severe Accident in a Two-Loop Pressurized Water Reactor

  • Dehjourian, Mehdi;Rahgoshay, Mohammad;Sayareh, Reza;Jahanfarnia, Gholamreza;Shirani, Amir Saied
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.48 no.4
    • /
    • pp.975-981
    • /
    • 2016
  • The containment response during the first 24 hours of a low-pressure severe accident scenario in a nuclear power plant with a two-loop Westinghouse-type pressurized water reactor was simulated with the CONTAIN 2.0 computer code. The accident considered in this study is a large-break loss-of-coolant accident, which is not successfully mitigated by the action of safety systems. The analysis includes pressure and temperature responses, as well as investigation into the influence of spray on the retention of fission products and the prevention of hydrogen combustion in the containment.

Evaluation of Fuel Cladding Failures from the Fission Product Activities in the Reactor Coolant (원자로 냉가수내의 핵분열생성물 방사에 의한 핵연료피복관 파손 평가)

  • Ho Ju Moon;Sung Ki Chae
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.16 no.3
    • /
    • pp.169-179
    • /
    • 1984
  • An efficient procedure of evaluating the fuel cladding failures occurring in the normal operations of typical PWR's has been investigated through the analysis of fission product(FP) activities in the reactor coolant using an analytical model, FIPREL code. Performed by this code is an extensive study on the sensivities of FP activities to such physical parameters as enrichment, turnup, and operation temperature of failed fuel rod as well as the effective failure size quantified in terms of the magnitude of gap release coefficient. The results of study are generally in agreement with those by PROFIP method. In the presence of tramp uranium the portion of activities released from failed rod is separated by an iterative calculation based on the activity ratios of fission nuclides chemically more stable than iodines. Obtained are the linear power density and the number of failed rods, the effective failure size, and the mass of tramp uranium. The operation experiences of 4 cycles of Kori Unit 1 are analyzed and the results show that the model is highly reliable for the survey and evaluation of fuel rod conditions during reactor operations.

  • PDF

Generation of Group Constant of Fission Product for Criticality Analysis of Spent Fuel (사용후 핵연료의 핵임계도 분석에 필요한 핵분열생성물의 핵군단면적 생산)

  • Shin, H.S.;Choi, B.I;Park, J.M.;Ro, S.G.
    • Journal of Radiation Protection and Research
    • /
    • v.14 no.2
    • /
    • pp.30-36
    • /
    • 1989
  • A FISSLIB, 51 group nuclear data set for 22 product nuclides, which are present in spent fuel and significantly affect the criticality of spent fuel, was generated from ENDF/B-IV using XLACS-II. The FISSLIB is ready to be used together with a data set generated from DLC-43/CSRL using AMPX system. The reliability of FISSLIB was verified by comparison with the data reported in BNL-325. Using FISSLIB, the criticality of KORI-1 spent fuel rod arranged infinitely was analyzed, and it was found that $K_{eff}$ of the spent fuel including fission products was lower by 9-14% than that calculated without fission products.

  • PDF

Separation of Fission Product Elements from Synthetic Dissolver Solutions of Spent Pressurized Water Reactor Fuels by $TBP/XAD-16/HNO_3$Extraction Chromatography ($TBP/XAD-16/HNO_3$추출 크로마토그래피에 의한 모의 사용후핵연료 용해용액 중 미량 핵분열생성물 원소의 분리)

  • Lee, Chang Heon;Choi, Kwang Soon;Kim, Jung Suk;Choi, Ke Chon;Jee, Kwang Yong;Kim, Won Ho
    • Journal of the Korean Chemical Society
    • /
    • v.45 no.4
    • /
    • pp.304-311
    • /
    • 2001
  • A study has been carried out on the extraction chromatographic separation of fission products from spent pressurized water reactor (PWR) fuels for inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometric analysis. Impregnation capacity of tri-n-butyl phosphate (TBP), which is well known as an extractant in the field of uranium separation from various nuclear grade materials, on Amberlite XAD polymeric macroporous support materials was measured. Amberlite XAD-16 of which the surface area is the highest was selected as a support material because its TBP impregnation capacity was the largest in Amberlite XADs. Sorption behaviour of this TBP impregnated resin was investigated for the fission product elements using acidic solutions simulated for dissolver solutions of spent PWR fuels. The parameters affecting the performance of the separation system were optimized. The fission product elements studied excluding Pd and Ru were quantitatively recovered with the precision of less than 3.1%.

  • PDF

Phase analysis of simulated nuclear fuel debris synthesized using UO2, Zr, and stainless steel and leaching behavior of the fission products and matrix elements

  • Ryutaro Tonna;Takayuki Sasaki;Yuji Kodama;Taishi Kobayashi;Daisuke Akiyama;Akira Kirishima;Nobuaki Sato;Yuta Kumagai;Ryoji Kusaka;Masayuki Watanabe
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.55 no.4
    • /
    • pp.1300-1309
    • /
    • 2023
  • Simulated debris was synthesized using UO2, Zr, and stainless steel and a heat treatment method under inert or oxidizing conditions. The primary U solid phase of the debris synthesized at 1473 K under inert conditions was UO2, whereas a (U, Zr)O2 solid solution formed at 1873 K. Under oxidizing conditions, a mixture of U3O8 and (Fe, Cr)UO4 phases formed at 1473 K, whereas a (U, Zr)O2+x solid solution formed at 1873 K. The leaching behavior of the fission products from the simulated debris was evaluated using two methods: the irradiation method, for which fission products were produced via neutron irradiation, and the doping method, for which trace amounts of non-radioactive elements were doped into the debris. The dissolution behavior of U depended on the properties of the debris and aqueous solution for immersion. Cs, Sr, and Ba leached out regardless of the primary solid phases. The leaching of high-valence Eu and Ru ions was suppressed, possibly owing to their solid-solution reaction with or incorporation into the uranium compounds of the simulated debris.

CERAMOGRAPHY ANALYSIS OF MOX FUEL RODS AFTER AN IRRADIATION TEST

  • Kim, Han-Soo;Jong, Chang-Yong;Lee, Byung-Ho;Oh, Jae-Yong;Koo, Yang-Hyun
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.42 no.5
    • /
    • pp.576-581
    • /
    • 2010
  • KAERI (Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute) fabricated MOX (Mixed Oxide) fuel pellets as a cooperation project with PSI (Paul Scherrer Institut) for an irradiation test in the Halden reactor. The MOX pellets were fitted into fuel rods that included instrumentation for measurement in IFE (Institutt for Energiteknikk). The fuel rods were assembled into the test rig and irradiated in the Halden reactor up to 50 MWd/kgHM. The irradiated fuel rods were transported to the IFE, where ceramography was carried out. The fuel rods were cut transversely at the relatively higher burn-up locations and then the radial cross sections were observed. Micrographs were analyzed using an image analysis program and grain sizes along the radial direction were measured by the linear intercept method. Radial cracks in the irradiated MOX were observed that were generally circumferentially closed at the pellet periphery and open in the hot central region. A circumferential crack was formed along the boundary between the dark central and the outer regions. The inner surface of the cladding was covered with an oxide layer. Pu-rich spots were observed in the outer region of the fuel pellets. The spots were surrounded by many small pores and contained some big pores inside. Metallic fission product precipitates were observed mainly in the central region and in the inside of the Pu spots. The average areal fractions of the metallic precipitates at the radial cross section were 0.41% for rod 6 and 0.32% for rod 3. In the periphery, pore density smaller than 2 ${\mu}m$ was higher than that of the other regions. The grain growth occurred from 10 ${\mu}m$ to 12 ${\mu}m$ in the central region of rod 6 during irradiation.

SELECTIVE REDUCTION OF ACTIVE METAL CHLORIDES FROM MOLTEN LiCl-KCl USING LITHIUM DRAWDOWN

  • Simpson, Michael F.;Yoo, Tae-Sic;Labrier, Daniel;Lineberry, Michael;Shaltry, Michael;Phongikaroon, Supathorn
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.44 no.7
    • /
    • pp.767-772
    • /
    • 2012
  • In support of optimizing electrorefining technology for treating spent nuclear fuel, lithium drawdown has been investigated for separating actinides from molten salt electrolyte. Drawdown reaction selectivity is a major issue that requires investigation, since the goal is to remove actinides while leaving the fission products and other components in the salt. A series of lithium drawdown tests with surrogate fission product chlorides was run to obtain selectivity data with non-radioactive salts, develop a predictive model, and draw conclusions about the viability of using this process with actinide-loaded salt. Results of tests with CsCl, $LaCl_3$, $CeCl_3$, and $NdCl_3$ are reported here. Equilibrium was typically achieved in less than 10 hours of contact between lithium metal and molten salt under well-stirred conditions. Maintaining low oxygen and water impurity concentrations (<10 ppm) in the atmosphere was observed to be critical to minimize side reactions and maintain stable salt compositions. An equilibrium model has been formulated and fit to the experimental data. Good fits to the data were achieved. Based on analysis and results obtained to date, it is concluded that clean separation between minor actinides and lanthanides will be difficult to achieve using lithium drawdown.

FAST irradiations and initial post irradiation examinations - Part I

  • G. Beausoleil;L. Capriotti;B. Curnutt;R. Fielding;S. Hayes;D. Wachs
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.54 no.11
    • /
    • pp.4084-4094
    • /
    • 2022
  • The Advanced Fuels Campaign Fission Accelerated Steady-state Test (FAST) at Idaho National Laboratory (INL) completed its first irradiation cycle within the Advanced Test Reactor (ATR). The test focused on the irradiation of alloy fuel forms for use in sodium fast reactors. The first cycle of FAST testing was completed and four rodlets were removed for the initial post irradiation examination (PIE). The rodlet design and irradiation conditions were evaluated using Monte Carlo N-Particle (MCNP) for as-run power history and COMSOL for temperature analysis. These rodlets include a set of low burnups (~2.5 % fissions per initial metal atoms [%FIMA]), control rodlets, and a helium-bonded annular rodlet (4.7 %FIMA). Nondestructive PIE has been completed and includes visual inspection, neutron radiography and gamma scanning of the FAST capsules and rodlets. Radiography confirmed the integrity of the experiments, revealed that the annulus in the annular fuel was filled at a modest burnup (4.7 %FIMA), and indicated potential slumping of the cooler rodlets at lower burnup. Precision gamma scanning indicated mostly usual fission product behavior, except for cesium in the He-bonded annular fuel. Future destructive PIE will be necessary to fully interpret the effects of accelerated irradiation on U-Zr metallic fuel behavior.

KAFEPA: A Computer Code for CANDU PHWR-Fuel Performance Analysis under Reactor Normal Operating Condition (KAFEPA: 월성로형 핵연료봉의 정상상태 성능분석용 전산코드)

  • Suk, Ho-Chun;Woan Hwang;Sim, Ki-Seob
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
    • /
    • v.19 no.3
    • /
    • pp.180-185
    • /
    • 1987
  • A computer code, KAFEPA, for analysing in-reactor behavior of a PHWR-fuel rod under reactor normal operating condition was developed. This code, KAFEPA, corresponds to the ELESIM code that was developed for the same purpose by AECL. Even though the KAFEPA originated from the ELESIM, it contains more accurate and theoretical models in comparison with the ELESIM, such as fission gas release model, in-reactor densification model and a new database for neutron flux depression across the radial direction in a fuel pellet. The KAFEPA code was verified by comparing the predictions with 22 measurements of fission product gas release. The predictions of the KAFEPA was well agreed with the experimental data.

  • PDF