Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8085260 | Progress in Nuclear Energy | 2015 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Interrogation of nuclear fuel and Plutonium (Pu) and Uranium (U) discrimination was performed using Missouri University of Science and Technology Reactor (MSTR) fuel by non-destructive (NDA) method. Post-irradiated delayed fast neutron spectra were obtained for two pairs of burnt and fresh fuels. Burnup and 239Pu conversions were calculated based on neutron emission intensity ratios. After 100Â kW high power runs, all fuel elements showed three distinct regions of neutron spectra; a distinct low energy peak followed by intermediate energy region without distinct peak but a wide hump, followed by a high energy peak with a long tail. At 10Â kW low powers, intermediate energy hump and low energy peak seems to merge together while the high energy peak still remains distinct. Based on data from 10Â kW power runs, the burnup values of F1 and F2 fuel elements were estimated to be 149 MWD/T and 196 MWD/T, respectively. 239Pu conversion since 1992 for low enriched (19.75%) fuel elements was calculated as 0.24Â g for F1 and 0.32Â g for F2. Results based on high power runs of 100Â kW provided comparable burnup of 217 MWD/T for F2. However the results for F1 were approximately 10 times higher perhaps due to unique burnup history and consequently high poison buildup. These experimental burnup results compare well with the reactor burnup calculation as reported to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).
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Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Authors
T. Akyurek, S. Usman,