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Feasibility of Once through Subcritical Cores Driven by an Accelerator Spallation Neutron Source

The proliferation resistance of the nuclear fuel cycle would be increased if one could eliminate the need for both uranium enrichment and spent fuel reprocessing. Heavy-water and graphite moderated critical reactors can extract energy from natural uranium but offer a very low uranium utilization (lo...

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Published in:Fusion science and technology 2012-01, Vol.61 (1T), p.431-435
Main Authors: Cisneros, Anselmo, Zweibaum, Nicholas, Di Sanzo, Christian, Cohen, Jeremie, Greenspan, Ehud, Peterson, Per, Ludwigt, Bernhard
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c286t-2ef736d9e05953b78e9704ff874a22257ee73e11e724f358a1aff0edce0294f03
cites cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c286t-2ef736d9e05953b78e9704ff874a22257ee73e11e724f358a1aff0edce0294f03
container_end_page 435
container_issue 1T
container_start_page 431
container_title Fusion science and technology
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creator Cisneros, Anselmo
Zweibaum, Nicholas
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description The proliferation resistance of the nuclear fuel cycle would be increased if one could eliminate the need for both uranium enrichment and spent fuel reprocessing. Heavy-water and graphite moderated critical reactors can extract energy from natural uranium but offer a very low uranium utilization (low discharge burnup). The objective of the present study is to explore the feasibility of achieving high fuel utilization without resorting to enrichment and reprocessing using spallation neutron source driven subcritical reactors. Three different high burnup once through subcritical nuclear systems are investigated: a fluoride salt cooled high temperature reactor (FHR) with pebble fuel, a helium cooled core with sphere pack fuel based on General Atomics' EM 2 reactor concept, and a sodium cooled fast reactor that is loaded with fuel discharged from a high burnup Breed-and-Burn (B&B) fast reactor that is fed with depleted uranium, after removing the gaseous fission products and inserting the voided fuel rods into a new clad (without removing the old one). The pebble fuel design and fuel cycle for the FHR concept was optimized for maximum electric power multiplication using natural thorium fuelled subcritical core. The maximum attainable power multiplication was not high enough to merit future studies. The optimal discharge burnup of the fuel in the EM 2 type subcritical core was found to be approximately 30% FIMA and the corresponding power multiplication was found higher than in the FHR but still not high enough for practical applications. Significantly better performance was obtained from the sodium-cooled source-driven core that is fed with metallic U-TRU-Zr fuel discharged at 20% FIMA from a critical B&B fast reactor that underwent recladding. The maximum attainable power multiplication was found to be close to 10 while fissioning an additional 20% of the loaded heavy metal.
doi_str_mv 10.13182/FST12-A13458
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title Feasibility of Once through Subcritical Cores Driven by an Accelerator Spallation Neutron Source
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