Title: Reprocessing of Spent Nuclear Fuel
1Reprocessing ofSpent Nuclear Fuel
2Atoms for Peace Address by President. Dwight D.
Eisenhower, To the 470th Plenary Meeting of the
United Nations General AssemblyDecember 8,
1953, 245 p.m.
3Commercial Reprocessing Timeline
- December 8, 1953, President Dwight D. Eisenhower,
Atoms For Peace Speech - 1963 Humboldt Bay Nuclear Plant went commercial
- 1966, Nuclear Fuel Services (NFS) opens in West
Valley, New York - NFS is the first of three reprocessing facilities
that were planned - Humboldt Bay shipped 270 assemblies (21 MTU)
from 1969 to 1971 - NFS received a total of 628 MTU from commercial
and government facilities and recovered 1,925 kg
of Pu (86 kg of Pu from Humboldt) - 1972, NFS shuts down for expansion and never
reopens
4Commercial Reprocessing Timeline, cont.
- 1974, Reprocessing Slowed by President Ford
- India tests their Nuclear weapon using plutonium
possibly from the US - 1976, Reprocessing Stopped by President Carter,
and NFS Closes permanently - 1982, The Nuclear Waste Policy Act is Enacted
- 1983, DOE selected nine candidate repository
sites and one was Yucca Mountain. - 2003 President Bush Authorizes Yucca Mount and
State of Nevada sues - Reprocessing is in the spotlight
5Various steps that together make up the entire
Nuclear Fuel Cycle
URANIUM INFORMATION CENTRE Ltd. .C.N. 005 503 828
6Spent Nuclear Fuel contains
- By activity, the spent fuel is approximately
- 95 uranium (U-238)
- lt 1 is fissionable uranium (U-235)
- 1 is plutonium (Pu)
- 3 is comprised of waste fission products
- Mostly Cesium 137 and Strontium 90
- By weight, the spent fuel is approximately
- 86 U-238
- 1 U-235
- 10 Oxygen
- 1 Pu
- 1 fission products
- 1 hardware (Zirconium and stainless steel)
7Spent Nuclear Fuel as waste
- 40 years of commercial nuclear power has only
produced an inventory of spent fuel in the U.S.
that would fill one football field to depth of
below 30 feet. - In 2005, there is approx. 52,000 tons of
high-level waste stored around the country, - Approximately 2,000 tons of high level waste is
generated in the US each year. - The Yucca Mountain repository presently is
designed for a capacity of 77,000 tons.
81 Gbq1X109 bq 1 bq 1 disintegrations per sec
(dps) 37x109 bq 3.7x1010 dps 1 curie Curie
That quantity of radioactive nuclide which decays
at a rate of 3.7x1010 dps
9Reprocessing
- Reprocessing separates uranium and plutonium from
waste products - Spent fuel rods are chopped up and dissolved in
acid to separate the various materials. Mostly
Uranium 238 (95) - Recovered Uranium 235 (1) is converted to
uranium hexafluoride for subsequent re-enrichment
of new fuel. - The reactor-grade plutonium (1) can be blended
with enriched uranium to produce a mixed oxide
(MOX) fuel. - The remaining of high-level radioactive wastes
(3) can be stored in liquid form and
subsequently solidified (Vitrified) - Commercial Reprocessing plants planed to use
verification which is based on calcining of the
wastes (evaporation to a dry powder)
10Reprocessing cont.
- The dry powered waste is incorporation in
borosilicate (Pyrex) glass. - The molten glass mixed with the dry wastes is
poured into large stainless steel canisters, each
holding 400kg - A year's waste from a 1000 MWe reactor is
contained in 5 tons of such glass - About twelve canisters each 1.3 meters high and
0.4 meters diameter. - The US first started reprocessing in the 1940s to
extract the plutonium for use in nuclear weapons - Reprocessing Facilities in Europe, Japan and
Russia have been operating for almost 40 years.
11Loading silos with canisters containing vitrified
high-level waste in the UK,Each disc on the
floor covers a silo holding ten canisters
121 Gbq1X109 bq 1 bq 1 disintegrations per sec
(dps) 37x109 bq 3.7x1010 dps 1 curie Curie
That quantity of radioactive nuclide which decays
at a rate of 3.7x1010dps
13Reprocessing Does
- Reduces the volume of high level waste by
primarily removing the U-238 from the waste
stream. - Allows the recycling of U-235 back into the fuel
cycle. - Makes Plutonium available for Mixed Oxide Fuels
(MOX) - Could develop a market for weapons grade
plutonium
14Reprocessing Does Not
- Remove the need for a disposal site for long
lived radioactive waste - Directly address the resulting plutonium inventory
15Conclusion
- Reprocessing is good for
- An expanding Nuclear industry
- Efficient use of already extracted Uranium
materials - Reducing mining of new Uranium ore
- Reducing the volume of high level waste
- Reprocessing is not good for
- A shrinking nuclear industry
- Today, reducing the cost of nuclear energy
16Questions
17(No Transcript)
18(Courtesy of the Department of Energy)
19Mixed Oxide (MOX) Fuel
- MOX fuel requires a facility redesign/Relicensing
to use in US nuclear plant and no taker to date. - MOX fuel was being fabricated at facilities in
Belgium, France, Germany, UK, Russia and Japan. - The first large-scale plant, Melox, commenced
operation in France in 1995. - Across Europe about 30 reactors are licensed to
load 20-50 of their cores with MOX fuel and
Japan plans to have one third of its 54 reactors
using MOX by 2010.
20Accelerator Transmutation of Waste
- Spent Fuel uranium and short-lived fission
products are removed from the rest of the waste. - These short-lived fission products are prepared
for disposal, while the uranium can be recycled
for reuse or prepared for disposal. - The remaining transuranics (plutonium, neptunium,
americium and curium) are transferred to a waste
burner - They are fissioned into materials that pose
mostly short-lived hazards. - The fission process is controlled using neutrons
produced by an accelerator's proton beam as it
strikes a target of the long-lived fission
products . - The long-lived fission products would capture
neutrons and be converted into stable or
short-lived materials. - This could result in
- Energy production
- Elimination of plutonium which could be used in
nuclear weapons
21(No Transcript)
22Nine original Sites for the Repository
- Vacherie dome, Louisiana (salt dome)
- Cypress dome, Mississippi (salt dome)
- Richton dome, Mississippi (salt dome)
- Yucca Mountain, Nevada (tuff)
- Deaf Smith County, Texas (bedded salt)
- Swisher County, Texas (bedded salt)
- Davis Canyon, Utah (bedded salt)
- Lavender Canyon, Utah (bedded salt)
- Hanford Site, Washington (basalt flows).