1 / 16

Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor

Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor. First Preliminary Report: Fuel Composition Analysis. Base Core . Driver Fuel: Weapons Grade Plutonium Host Fuel: Natural Uranium. Comparison to Reference Core. TRU Transmutation Optimization. Two approaches: Host Fuel Modification Thorium Host Fuel

dugan
Download Presentation

Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor First Preliminary Report: Fuel Composition Analysis Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  2. Base Core • Driver Fuel: Weapons Grade Plutonium • Host Fuel: Natural Uranium Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  3. Comparison to Reference Core Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  4. TRU Transmutation Optimization • Two approaches: • Host Fuel Modification • Thorium Host Fuel • Enriched Uranium Host Fuel (Reactor Grade) • Introduction of Burnable Poisons Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  5. Host Fuel Modification • Natural thorium host fuel transmutes over double that of the natural uranium host fuel • Enriched Uranium unsuitable as a host fuel Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  6. Poison impact on transmutation potential relatively low, and insensitive to poison positioning Burnable Poisons Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  7. Reactor Grade Plutonium Driver Fuel • Loss of transmutation efficiency with introduction of BP Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  8. Recycled LWR Spent Fuel Driver • Lower reactivity swing than WGPu driver fuel core Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  9. Power Density Comparisons Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  10. Power Density Comparisons • Uranium host fuel yielded highest power density (925.378 W/cc) • Average difference between max power between uranium host and thorium host ≈ 231.31 W/cc • Compositions with WGPu driver gave highest power densities • BP introduction did not detriment power out significantly ≈ 35.697 W/cc difference on average • Maximum power density independent of BP positioning Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  11. Power Distribution Analysis: Axial Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  12. Power Distribution Analysis: Axial • Cosine shape, with maximum at center of fuel pin • Power fluctuations are small between: • Differenet BP positioning • Uranium and thorium fuel compositions Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  13. Power Distribution Analysis: Radial Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  14. Power Distribution Analysis: Radial • Power peaks at center of core • Decrease occurs due to configuration of low and high energy drivers • Power increases near outer core due to increased flux from reflectors Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  15. Future Prospects Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

  16. References • [1] N.J. Nicholas, K.L. Coop and R.J. Estep, Capability and Limitation Study of DDT Passive-Active Neutron Waste Assay Instrument (Los Alamos: Los Alamos National Laboratory, LA-12237-MS, 1992). • [2] Plutonium Fuel: An Assesment (Paris:OECD/NEA,1989) • [3] Hill RN, Wade DC, Liaw JR, and Fujita EK, Physics Studies of Weapons Plutonium Disposition in the Integral Fast Reactor Closed Fuel Cycle. Nuclear Science and Engineering: 121, 17-31 (1995) • [4] H. Conde, Introduction to ADS for Waste Incineration and Energy Production.(Uppsala University, SE751 10 Uppsala, Sweden) • Rebus3 for multi-group diffusion analysis • Argonne National Laboratory • MC2 for lattice physics calculations • Argonne National Laborator Fynan, Mar, Sirajuddin

More Related