Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1740240 Nuclear Engineering and Technology 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

During the last three decades, South Korean nuclear power plants have discharged about 5,950 tons of spent fuel and the maximum bum-up reached 55 GWd/MTU in 2002. This study was performed to support the development of Korean dry spent fuel storage alternatives. First, we chose V5H-17 × 17 and KSFA-16 × 16 as representative domestic spent fuels, considering current accumulation and the future generation of the spent fuels. Examination reveals that their average burn-ups have already increased from 33 to 51 GWd/MTU and from 34.8 to 48.5 GWd/MTU, respectively.Evaluation of the fuel characteristics shows that at the average burn-up of 42 GWd/MTU, the oxide thickness, hydrogen content, and hoop stress ranged from 30 ∼ 60 μm, 250 ∼ 500 ppm, and 50 ∼ 75 MPa, respectively. But when burn-up exceeds 55 GWd/MTU, those characteristics can increase up to 100 μm, 800 ppm, and 120 MPa, respectively, depending on the power history. These results demonstrate that most Korean spent nuclear fuels are expected to remain within safe bounds during long-term dry storage, however, the excessive hoop stress and hydrogen concentration may trigger the degradation of the spent fuel integrity early during the long-term dry storage in the case of high burn-up spent fuels exceeding 45 GWd/MTU.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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