Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
8781444 
Journal Article 
Irradiation performance of nonfertile (Pu-MA-Zr) fast reactor metal fuels 
Chichester, H; Hilton, B; Hayes, S; Capriotti, L; Medvedev, P; Porter, D 
2020 
Yes 
Journal of Nuclear Materials
ISSN: 0022-3115 
Elsevier 
542 
Elsevier 
152480 
English 
This work was part of a program begun in 2001 to develop advanced nuclear fuels, originally as carriers for plutonium and minor actinides (neptunium, curium, and americium) taken from spent commercial light-water reactors (LWR) so that the plutonium and minor actinides could be 'burned' or transmuted in an accelerator or a fast nuclear reactor. A central part of these experiment programs has been the development of advanced fast reactor fuels, because a fast reactor was considered the most efficient vehicle to transmute the actinide waste products, and metallic fuels is a central focus of these tests. An experiment design was developed in which a thermal test reactor, the Advanced Test Reactor (ATR), was used to test small fuel pin prototypes, by creating areas in the core shielded by cadmium filters to produce a largely epithermal and fast neutron spectrum environment in which the pins could be irradiated. The results of non-fertile metallic fuel (no uranium) tests are presented here. Am-Np-Zr fuels were irradiated to fission densities up to 33 x10(20) fission/cm(3) and Pu-239 depletions of up to 39%. The depletions were created by roughly 2/3 by fission and 1/3 by transmutation neutron capture. Up to five fuel 'rodlets' were irradiated in three sealed capsules stacked axially in the core, and the peak cladding temperatures ranged from 300 degrees C to 500 degrees C, depending on axial location as those near the core centerline are operating hotter and to higher fission densities. Several post-irradiation examinations (precision gamma scanning and fission gas release) were similar to other historical metal fuel experiments in fast reactors. However, optical metallography indicated that two of the rodlets had breached. The exact reasons are unclear. Due to the design of this irradiation experiment a rodlet breach could have increased the temperature in others in the same capsule by contaminating the thermal gap helium with heavier and less conductive fission product gases. Some of those rodlets showed high amounts of fuel/cladding chemical interaction (FCCI). (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. 
Fast reactor; Metallic fuel; Transmutation fuels; Nonfertile; Post-irradiation examination; POSTIRRADIATION EXAMINATION 
IRIS
• Uranium Toxicological Review
     Screening
          Excluded
     Date limited literature search 2011-2021
          New to this search
          WOS