Assessment of the Evolution with Time of the Instant Release Fraction of Spent Nuclear Fuel in Geological Disposal Conditions

2002 ◽  
Vol 713 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Poinssot ◽  
Patrick Lovera ◽  
Marie-Hélène Faure

ABSTRACTUnder the geological disposal conditions, spent nuclear fuel (SNF) is expected to evolve during the first thousands years while being maintained isolated from the biosphere before water comes in. Under those circumstances, several driving forces would lead to the progressive intrinsic SNF transformations within the rod which would basically modify the physical and chemical state of the fuel and the subsequent release of radionuclides in solution. In this paper, we briefly summarize the mechanisms we estimate to be significant and propose a new framework for the quantitative assessment of the radionuclide (RN) inventory we estimate to be associated to the classically referred to “Instant Release Fraction” (IRF). We hence demonstrate that in this framework, significantly high IRF values have to be expected for the long term due mainly to the presence of athermal diffusion processes.

2003 ◽  
Vol 807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe POINSSOT ◽  
Cécile FERRY ◽  
Jean-Marie GRAS

ABSTRACTThe anticipated long term evolution of spent nuclear fuel as well as the remaining scientific key issues are presented for the various boundary conditions that can be encountered in long term dry storage and geological disposal. Spent fuel is expected to evolve significantly in closed system conditions which are representative of long term dry storage and the first stages of geological disposal. The mechanical evolution of the grain boundaries, the fate of helium and the evolution of the RN location within the pellet are the three major questions to be addressed which could significantly modify the physical and chemical state of the fuel. In addition, mechanisms and kinetics of fuel alteration by water in deep geological repository are still to be more deeply understood, in particular the inventory of the instant release and the radiolytic dissolution processes, to get a robust and reliable source term.


2004 ◽  
Vol 824 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Poinssot ◽  
Patrick Lovera ◽  
Cécile Ferry

AbstractIn the framework of the research conducted on the long term evolution of spent nuclear fuel in geological disposal conditions, a source term model has been developed to evaluate the instantaneous release of RN (Instant Release Fraction IRF) and the delayed release of the RN which are embedded within the matrix. This model takes into account all the scientific results currently available in the literature except the hydrogen effect. IRF was assessed by considering the evolution with time of the RN inventories located within the fuel microstructure to which no confinement properties can be allocated on the long term (rim, gap, grain boundaries). It allows to propose some reference bounding values for the IRF as a function of time of canister breaching and burnup. The matrix radiolytic dissolution was modeled by a simple kinetic model neglecting the radiolytic species recombination and the influence of aqueous ligands and radiolytic oxidants were supposed to completely react with the fuel surface. Spent fuel performance was therefore demonstrated to deeply depend on the reactive surface area.


Author(s):  
Sergey Yu. Sayenko ◽  
G. A. Kholomeyev ◽  
B. A. Shilyaev ◽  
A. V. Pilipenko ◽  
E. P. Shevyakova ◽  
...  

Abstract This paper describes the research work carried out at the NSC KIPT to develop and apply a final waste form in the shape of a monolithic solid block for the containment of spent nuclear fuel. To prepare radioactive waste for long-term storage and final deep geological disposal, investigations into the development of methods of immobilizing HLW simulators in protective solid matrices are being conducted at the NSC KIPT. For RBMK spent nuclear fuel it is proposed and justified to encapsulate the spent fuel bundles into monolithic protective blocks, produced with the help of hot isostatic pressing (HIP) of powder materials. In accordance with this approach, as a material for the protective block made up of the glass-ceramic composition prepared by sintering at isostatic pressure, the powder mixture of such natural rocks as granite and clay has been chosen. Concept approach and characterization of waste form, technological operations of manufacturing and performance assessment are presented. The container with spent fuel for long-term storage and final disposal presents a three barrier protective system: ceramic fuel UO2 in cladding tube, material of the glass-ceramic block, material of the sealed metal capsule. Investigations showed that the produced glass-ceramic material is characterized by high stability of chemical and phase compositions, high resistance in water medium, low porosity (compared with the porosity of natural basalt). With the help of mathematical calculations it was shown that the absorbed dose of immobilizing material by RBMK spent fuel irradiation for 1000 years of storage in the geological disposal after 10 years of preliminary cooling will be ∼ 3.108 Gy, that is 2–3 orders of magnitude less than the values corresponding to preserving radiation resistance and functional parameters of glasses and ceramics. The average value of velocity of linear corrosion in water medium of the protective layer made up of the glass-ceramic composition determined experimentally makes up ∼ 15 mm per year. This allows to use glass-ceramic compositions effectively as an engineering barrier in the system of spent fuel geological disposal and to increase the lifetime of the waste container, in particular, up to 3000 years with the layer thickness ∼ 40 mm. The possible release of radionuclides from the waste container during its interim storage in the open air (near-surface storage) is estimated. The calculations are made by taking into account the possible increase of coefficients of radionuclide diffusion from 10−16 to 10−14 m2/c as a result of spent fuel radiation affecting the protective layer. The obtained results showed that the protective barrier (about 40 mm) at the base of the glass-ceramic composition, ensures reliable isolation from the environment against the release of radionuclides from the controlled near-surface long-term storage far up to 1000 years. The relatively limited release of radionuclides will make up about 1% for the period of more than 400 years, and 10% - in 1000 years. During this period of time, the radionuclides 90Sr and 137Cs will completely turn into stable 90Zr and 137Ba and the decay of many transuranium elements will occur. The results from laboratory scale experiments, tests and calculations carried out so far, show that the proposed glass-ceramic materials may be used as basic materials for manufacturing the monolithic protective block in which the spent fuel elements will be embedded with the aim of further long-term storage or final disposal.


2002 ◽  
Vol 757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Poinssot ◽  
Patrick Lovera ◽  
Cécile Ferry ◽  
Jean-Marie Gras

ABSTRACTThe research conducted in the framework of the French research project on spent nuclear fuel (SNF) long - term evolution (PRECCI Project) has enlightened the potential significance of spent nuclear fuel intrinsic evolution in closed system for the assessment of radionuclide (RN) source term in long-term storage or geological disposal. Beyond others, alpha self-irradiation enhanced diffusion and evolution of the grain boundaries cohesion are two major processes which have to be accounted for in view of the RN source term models development. Accounting for these processes, operational models are developed, the aim of which is to quantitatively define the RN release rates from SNF in long-term storage or geological disposal. They distinguish basically an instantaneous contribution (IRF in geological disposal) and a time-dependent contribution (matrix oxidation or alteration). RN inventories associated to these two different processes have to be modeled since they are time-dependent due to the RN diffusion within the pellet. The present paper details the models that are developed in France in terms of assumptions, conservatism and robustness. It comes out from this work that for the instant release fraction, we have to consider a much higher instant release fraction than classically assumed (5–6% in geological disposal) in particular for geological disposal.


Author(s):  
Christophe Poinssot ◽  
Christophe Jegou ◽  
Pierre Toulhoat ◽  
Jean-Marie Gras

Abstract Under the geological disposal conditions, spent fuel (SF) is expected to evolve during the 10,000 years while being maintained isolated from the biosphere before water comes in. Under those circumstances, several driving forces would lead to the progressive intrinsic transformations within the rod which would modify the subsequent release of radionuclides: the production of a significant volume of He, the accumulation of irradiation defects, the slow migration of radionuclides (RN) within the pellet. However, the current RN source terms for SF never accounted for these evolutions and was based on the existing knowledge on the fresh SF. Two major mechanisms were considered, the leaching of the readily available fraction (one which was supposed to be instantly accessible to water), and the release of RN through alteration of the UO2 grains. We are now proposing a new RN source term model based on a microscopic description of the system in order to also account for the early evolution of the closed system, the amplitude of which increases with the burnup and is greater for MOX fuels.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (14) ◽  
pp. 6499
Author(s):  
Matthias Frankl ◽  
Mathieu Hursin ◽  
Dimitri Rochman ◽  
Alexander Vasiliev ◽  
Hakim Ferroukhi

Presently, a criticality safety evaluation methodology for the final geological disposal of Swiss spent nuclear fuel is under development at the Paul Scherrer Institute in collaboration with the Swiss National Technical Competence Centre in the field of deep geological disposal of radioactive waste. This method in essence pursues a best estimate plus uncertainty approach and includes burnup credit. Burnup credit is applied by means of a computational scheme called BUCSS-R (Burnup Credit System for the Swiss Reactors–Repository case) which is complemented by the quantification of uncertainties from various sources. BUCSS-R consists in depletion, decay and criticality calculations with CASMO5, SERPENT2 and MCNP6, respectively, determining the keff eigenvalues of the disposal canister loaded with the Swiss spent nuclear fuel assemblies. However, the depletion calculation in the first and the criticality calculation in the third step, in particular, are subject to uncertainties in the nuclear data input. In previous studies, the effects of these nuclear data-related uncertainties on obtained keff values, stemming from each of the two steps, have been quantified independently. Both contributions to the overall uncertainty in the calculated keff values have, therefore, been considered as fully correlated leading to an overly conservative estimation of total uncertainties. This study presents a consistent approach eliminating the need to assume and take into account unrealistically strong correlations in the keff results. The nuclear data uncertainty quantification for both depletion and criticality calculation is now performed at once using one and the same set of perturbation factors for uncertainty propagation through the corresponding calculation steps of the evaluation method. The present results reveal the overestimation of nuclear data-related uncertainties by the previous approach, in particular for spent nuclear fuel with a high burn-up, and underline the importance of consistent nuclear data uncertainty quantification methods. However, only canister loadings with UO2 fuel assemblies are considered, not offering insights into potentially different trends in nuclear data-related uncertainties for mixed oxide fuel assemblies.


1997 ◽  
Vol 506 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.W. Dormuth ◽  
P.A. Gillespie ◽  
S.H. Whitaker

ABSTRACTA federal Environmental Assessment Panel has completed public hearings on the proposed concept for geological disposal of Canada's nuclear fuel waste. The Panel will make recommendations to assist the governments of Canada and Ontario in reaching decisions on the acceptability of the proposed concept and on the steps that must be taken to ensure the safe long-term management of nuclear fuel waste in Canada. It is instructive to review the background to the public hearings, to consider the issues that have been important in the public review, and to reflect on the opposing points of view presented at the hearings.


2017 ◽  
Vol 153 ◽  
pp. 07035 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mikhail Ternovykh ◽  
Georgy Tikhomirov ◽  
Ivan Saldikov ◽  
Alexander Gerasimov

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