4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Initial results from safety testing of US AGR-2 irradiation test fuel

Journal

NUCLEAR ENGINEERING AND DESIGN
Volume 329, Issue -, Pages 124-133

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.nucengdes.2017.08.006

Keywords

High-temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTGR) fuel; Tri-structural isotropic (TRISO) particles; Post-irradiation examination (PIE); Safety testing; Cesium release; SiC failure

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy, through the Idaho National Laboratory Advanced Reactor Technologies Technology Development Office as part of the Advanced Gas Reactor Fuel Development and Qualification Program

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Two cylindrical compacts containing tristructural isotropic (TRISO)-coated particles with kernels that contained a mixture of uranium carbide and uranium oxide (UCO) and two compacts with UO2-kernel TRISO particles have undergone 1600 degrees C safety testing. These compacts were irradiated in the US Advanced Gas Reactor Fuel Development and Qualification Program's second irradiation test (AGR-2). The time-dependent releases of several radioisotopes (Ag-110m, Cs-134, Cs-137, Eu-154, Eu-155, Sr-90, and Kr-85) were monitored while heating the fuel specimens to 1600 degrees C in flowing helium for 300 h. The UCO compacts behaved similarly to previously reported 1600 degrees C-safety-tested UCO compacts from the AGR-1 irradiation. No failed TRISO or failed SiC were detected (based on krypton and cesium release), and cesium release through intact SiC was very low. Release behavior of silver, europium, and strontium appeared to be dominated by inventory originally released through intact coating layers during irradiation but retained in the compact matrix until it was released during safety testing. Both UO2 compacts exhibited cesium release from multiple particles whose SiC failed during the safety test. Europium and strontium release from these two UO2 compacts appeared to be dominated by release from the particles with failed SiC. Silver release was characteristically like the release from the UCO compacts in that an initial release of the majority of silver trapped in the matrix occurred during ramping to 1600 degrees C. However, additional silver release was observed later in the safety testing due to the UO2 TRISO with failed SiC. Failure of the SiC layer in the UO2 fuel appears to have been dominated by CO corrosion, as opposed to the palladium degradation observed in AGR-1 UCO fuel.

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