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Title: Regulatory perspective of boiling water reactor peak reactivity credit in spent fuel storage and transportation - 14592

Conference ·
OSTI ID:23100951
;  [1]
  1. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, 11545 Rockville Pike Rockville, MD 20852 (United States)

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) performs reviews of applications for spent nuclear fuel transportation packages and storage casks to ensure pertinent safety regulations are met. Among other acceptance criteria, these regulations require that the package be subcritical under a variety of normal, off-normal and accident conditions. Currently, all spent nuclear fuel transportation packages and storage casks assume fresh fuel (i.e., the fuel is unirradiated) in their criticality safety analyses for boiling water reactor (BWR) fuels. Reviews using this conservative assumption are less complex. The fresh fuel assumption for BWR fuel does not allow the presence of gadolinium (often called the 'fresh fuel no-Gad' assumption), an integral burnable absorber present in nearly all BWR fuel assemblies. More recently, applicants began requesting credit for the reactivity reduction due to depletion. This credit is commonly referred to as 'burnup credit' (BUC). As of today, NRC recommends that only analyses for Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) spent fuel implement BUC. This is due to the fact there is limited directly applicable data available to benchmark codes for depletion and reactivity calculations for BWR BUC analyses, and determining the most reactive irradiation conditions is much less straightforward than for PWR BUC analyses. Similar to what was done for PWR BUC, the NRC staff and its contractors have begun identifying and prioritizing significant technical issues so that a technical basis for the allowance of BWR BUC can be developed. BWR fuel exhibits a peak in reactivity where initial gadolinium is depleted. Crediting burnup at this point is generally referred to as using a 'peak reactivity method'. This is a conservative approach and a method routinely used in BWR spent fuel pool criticality analyses. NRC is implementing a two-phased approach in investigating BWR BUC. Phase 1 investigates peak reactivity credit and Phase 2 evaluates BUC at a typical discharge exposure. This paper discusses peak reactivity credit and its history in regulatory analyses, challenges the NRC expects in reviewing an application requesting peak BWR reactivity credit for a spent fuel transportation package or storage cask, the work that is being performed by NRC contractors to address these challenges, and future work on peak reactivity credit and full BWR BUC. (authors)

Research Organization:
American Nuclear Society - ANS, 555 North Kensington Avenue, La Grange Park, IL 60526 (United States)
OSTI ID:
23100951
Resource Relation:
Conference: ICNC 2015: 2015 International Conference on Nuclear Criticality Safety, Charlotte, NC (United States), 13-17 Sep 2015; Other Information: Country of input: France; 11 refs.; available on CD Rom from American Nuclear Society - ANS, 555 North Kensington Avenue, La Grange Park, IL 60526 (US)
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English