Analysis and Thermal Property Investigations into Ternary Actinide Chloride Salt Systems Containing UCl3 and PuCl3
- Idaho National Laboratory
While regulators, the scientific community, and MSR developers still lack access to literature data on the thermal properties of clean fuel salts, even less information is available on the properties of fuel salts containing impurities. It is essential to understand, benchmark, and predict crucial data on the changes in thermal properties of fuel salt systems due to impurities arising from moisture, corrosion, and reactor operation (i.e., fission products). This research focuses on two actinide fuel salts (1) to investigate a worst-case scenario buildup of actinide fission product in a NaCl-UCl3 eutectic fuel salt and (2) to investigate NaCl-PuCl3 eutectic salt after 1000 hours of operation in a natural circulation flow loop flow to determine if corrosion or atmospheric (moisture/oxygen) products are present. For the first salt, a conservative assumption or worst-case scenario, for fission product buildup in a fuel salt was investigated by adding PuCl3 to eutectic 67 mol% NaCl – 33 mol% UCl3 salt resulting in a ternary salt having a composition of 61 mol% NaCl – 30 mol% UCl3 – 9mol% PuCl3. Addition of PuCl3 to eutectic NaCl-UCl3 resulted in a ternary salt that had a higher melting temperature than either the NaCl-PuCl3 or NaCl-UCl3 binary eutectic mixture. Addition of PuCl3 also resulted in an increase in density which was expected. The second salt was extracted from a micro loop. The composition of the fuel (primary) salt prior to flow loop operations was determined to be 64 mol% NaCl – 36 mol% PuCl3, however, the post-flow loop salt showed increased levels of MgCl2 and NaCl changing the salt composition to 10 mol% MgCl2 – 63mol% NaCl – 26mol% PuCl3) indicating the primary salt interacted with the rinse salt. Analysis of the post flow loop salt detected low concentrations of Al, Ni, Co, Nb, and Zr, most likely corrosion products from the flow loop material of construction. Contamination of the fuel salt (with the rinse salt NaCl-MgCl2) decreased the density by approximately 10% and reduced the onset of melting temperature by 50 °C, from 451 °C to approximately 400 °C. Results from the fission product simulated salt (61 mol% NaCl – 30 mol% UCl3 – 9mol% PuCl3) and the corrosion product salt (10 mol% MgCl2 – 63mol% NaCl – 26mol% PuCl3) will be included in two separate manuscripts for submission to peer-reviewed journals.
- Research Organization:
- Idaho National Laboratory (INL), Idaho Falls, ID (United States)
- Sponsoring Organization:
- 58
- DOE Contract Number:
- AC07-05ID14517
- OSTI ID:
- 2000860
- Report Number(s):
- INL/RPT-23-74483-Rev000
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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