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Feasibility and Safety Assessment for Advanced Reactor Concepts Using Vented Fuel
Author(s) -
Andrew C. Klein,
Topher Matthews,
Renae Lenhof,
Wesley Deason,
Jackson Harter
Publication year - 2015
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1183683
Subject(s) - burnup , nuclear engineering , nuclear fission product , fission products , fuel element failure , fissile material , environmental science , fission , spent nuclear fuel , process engineering , engineering , nuclear physics , physics , neutron
Recent interest in fast reactor technology has led to renewed analysis of past reactor concepts such as Gas Fast Reactors and Sodium Fast Reactors. In an effort to make these reactors more economic, the fuel is required to stay in the reactor for extended periods of time; the longer the fuel stays within the core, the more fertile material is converted into usable fissile material. However, as burnup of the fuel-rod increases, so does the internal pressure buildup due to gaseous fission products. In order to reach the 30 year lifetime requirements of some reactor designs, the fuel pins must have a vented-type design to allow the buildup of fission products to escape. The present work aims to progress the understanding of the feasibility and safety issues related to gas reactors that incorporate vented fuel. The work was separated into three different work-scopes: 1. Quantitatively determine fission gas release from uranium carbide in a representative helium cooled fast reactor; 2. Model the fission gas behavior, transport, and collection in a Fission Product Vent System; and, 3. Perform a safety analysis of the Fission Product Vent System. Each task relied on results from the previous task, culminating in a limited scopemore » Probabilistic Risk Assessment (PRA) of the Fission Product Vent System. Within each task, many key parameters lack the fidelity needed for comprehensive or accurate analysis. In the process of completing each task, the data or methods that were lacking were identified and compiled in a Gap Analysis included at the end of the report.« less

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