Title: Nuclear Fuel Cycle
1Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Uranium mining and milling
Conversion
Enrichment
Fabrication
Reactor
Spent fuel storage
Waste disposal
2Mining and Milling
- ore 2 - 0.1 U
- Reduced by chemical leaching or solvent
extraction to U3O8 (yellowcake) - Mill tailings still contain some U and therefore
emits radon. - Tailings are placed underground or capped
3(No Transcript)
4Enrichment
- Natural U is 0.72 235 power plants use 3-5
enriched - Gaseous diffusion - most common
- Gas centrifuges - 9 countries
- Aerodynamic separation - too expensive
- Electromagnetic separation
- Laser isotope
5Conversion Capacity in T U/y
1. Russia 24000 2. France
14350 3. USA 14000 4.
Canada 10500 5. Unit. Kingd.
6000 6. China,cont'l 400 7. Brazil
90 8. Algeria 0
9. Argentina 0 10. Armenia
0 11. Australia 0 12.
Belgium 0 13. Bulgaria
0
Total 69,340
No information available on India or Pakistan
6Fuel Fabrication
- UF6 is converted into UO2 clad then grouped into
fuel bundles
7International Fabrication Capacity
- (LWR, Uranium Oxide)
- t U/year nominal capacity
- 1. USA 3500
- 2. Russia 2020
- 3. Kazakhstan 2000
- 4. Japan 1674
- 5. France 970
- 6. Belgium 750
- 7. Germany 650
- 8. Sweden 600
- 9. Korea, Rep. 400
- 10. Unit. Kingd. 330
- 11. Spain 300
- 12. China,cont'l 100
- 13. India 25
- 14. Algeria 0
Total 13,319
8Reactor
- Fuel Management
- Remain critical while fuel composition and
reactivity changes - Shape the power density to max power output
- Max. heat production from fuel
- Uniform irradiation of fuel
- Max productive use of neutrons
9Definitions
- Availability - of time over a reporting period
that the plant is operational - Capacity - of total electric power that could
be produced - Efficiency - energy output per thermal energy
output of the reactor - EffW/QR (MWe/MWt)
10Fuel shuffle
- Every year PWR-1/3 or BWR 1/4 of the core is
removed and the core is reloaded - New fuel is shuffled into the core
- Zone loading
- Scattering loading
- Modified scatter loading
11ZONE
advantage - uniform burn-up where the flux is
uniform disadvantage - where the flux is not
uniform they use higher enriched fuel to
compensate
12SCATTER
Advantages 1. can be irradiated to a higher
burn-up 2. less poisons for control
4 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 1 2 3
1 2 3 4 1 2 3
13Definitions
- Burn-up - total energy released for a given
amount of fuel (MWd) - Specific burn-up - energy released per unit of
mass (MWd/t) or (MWd/kg) - Fractional burn-up (b)
- fission/heavy atoms
14Definitions
- Breeder- more than 1 fissile atom produced for
every fissile atom consumed Cgt1 - Converter- C1
- Burner-no conversion or breeding
15Spent fuel storage
- Still contains fuel
- 180 kg of fissile Pu and 22,000 kg of U-235 at
each refueling (435 MW and 420MW) - Also contains 100s of fission products -7 have
half-lives greater than 25 yrs. - Stored on site in water then dry storage
- No US permanent storage yet
-
16Waste Disposal
- High level - fission products separated in the
first stage of reprocessing - Mine and Mill tailings
- Transuranic (TRU)
- actinides with concentrations
- gt 100 nCi/g
- Low level waste - no shielding required
- lt 100 nCi/g
- class A - 0.1 Ci/ft3
- class B - 2 Ci/ft3
- class C - 7 Ci/ft3
- Intermediate level -
- vaguely defined between low and high
- !!! The DOT has its own classification.
17 The Transport Spectrum
Highway route controlled
Exempt
Excepted
Type A
Type B
3000 A1 or 3000 A2 or 27,000 Ci whichever comes
first
A1 or A2
2 nCi/g Or 70 Bq/g
10-4 liquids
18Reprocessing
- Objectives
- Recover U, Pu and Th to be used as fuel
- Separate radioactive and neutron- absorbing
fission products - Convert the radioactive waste into suitable forms
for safe storage - The US does not have reprocessing nor a long term
storage facility.
19Types of Process
- Redox
- Trigly
- Butex
- Purex-most common
- Thorex
20General Process Steps
Core Assembly
- Strip the cladding
- Dissolve fuel in acid
- Solvent extraction
- Precipitation
- Metal refining
- Fuel fabrication
FP
Shear
Oxidation
Dissolve
Separate
Extract
New FUEL