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Proposed Fuel Pin Irradiation Facilities for the High Flux Isotope Reactor...

by Joel L Mcduffee, Jess C Gehin, Ronald J Ellis, Randy W Hobbs, Roy T Primm Iii
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
Page Number
0
Volume
N/A
Conference Name
2008 International Congress on Advances in Nuclear Power Plants (ICAPP'08)
Conference Location
Anaheim, California, United States of America
Conference Date
-

Abstract - The Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP) is proposing to develop a sodium-cooled fast-spectrum reactor (SFR) to transmute and consume actinides from spent nuclear fuel. The proposed fuels include metal and oxide mixed actinides (U-Np-Pu-Am-Cm) as well as target concepts with perhaps only Am-Cm. The High Flux Isotope Reactor was built for the purpose of transmuting plutonium to various higher actinides including Am, Cm, and Cf. Since a fast-spectrum irradiation facility does not exist in the United States, HFIR can fulfill a first step in the GNEP mission; that being to establish a near-term capability to irradiate materials in a fast neutron spectrum in addition to efforts to gain access to international facilities through partnering arrangements. Modifications to the HFIR central target region to accomplish this goal are described. A second on-going project for HFIR is to design capsules and installation tools and procedures to irradiate short rods of innovative nuclear fuel types and cladding materials under prototypic LWR operating conditions at an accelerated rate relative to expected reactor performance. This second proposal would be for a facility representative of thermal reactor conditions rather than the GNEP concept. In order to maintain power densities within the fuel at levels normally seen by LWR reactors, an entirely new experiment and test capsule design will be needed than has been available in the past.