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The fabrication and performance of Canadian silicide dispersion fuel for test reactors

Abstract

Fuel fabrication effort is now concentrated on the commissioning of large-scale process equipment, defining product specifications, developing a quality assurance plan, and setting up a mini-computer material accountancy system. In the irradiation testing program, full-size NRU assemblies containing 20% enriched silicide dispersion fuel have been Irradiated successfully to burnups in the range 65-80 atomic percent. Irradiations have also been conducted on mini-elements having 1.2 mm diameter holes In their mid-sections, some drilled before irradiation and others after irradiation to 22-83 atomic percent burnup. Uranium was lost to the coolant in direct proportion to the surface area of exposed core material. Pre-irradiation in the intact condition appeared to reduce in-reactor corrosion. Fuel cores developed for the NRU reactor are dimensionally very stable, swelling by only 6-8% at the very high burnup of 93 atomic percent. Two important factors contributing to this good performance are cylindrical clad restraint and coarse silicide particles. Thermal ramping tests were conducted on irradiated silicide aspersion fuels. Small segments of fuel cores released {sup 85}Kr starting at about 520 deg. C and peaking at about 680 deg C. After a holding period of 1 hour at 720 deg. C a secondary {sup 85}Kr peak occurred during cooling  More>>
Publication Date:
Jul 01, 1985
Product Type:
Technical Report
Report Number:
INIS-XA-C-052
Resource Relation:
Conference: International meeting on Reduced Enrichment for Research and Test Reactors (RERTR), Petten (Netherlands), 14-16 Oct 1985; Other Information: 3 refs, 4 figs, 2 tabs; PBD: 1985
Subject:
21 SPECIFIC NUCLEAR REACTORS AND ASSOCIATED PLANTS; BLISTERS; BURNUP; CLADDING; FUEL ELEMENTS; KRYPTON 85; MODERATELY ENRICHED URANIUM; NRU REACTOR; REACTOR CORES; SWELLING; TEMPERATURE DEPENDENCE; THERMAL CRACKING; URANIUM SILICIDES
OSTI ID:
20577120
Research Organizations:
Atomic Energy of Canada Limited - Research Company, Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories, Chalk River, ON (Canada)
Country of Origin:
IAEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
TRN: XA04C1917028657
Availability:
Available from INIS in electronic form
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
[14] pages
Announcement Date:
Apr 17, 2005

Citation Formats

Sears, D F, Wood, J C, Berthiaume, L C, Herbert, L N, and Schaefer, J D. The fabrication and performance of Canadian silicide dispersion fuel for test reactors. IAEA: N. p., 1985. Web.
Sears, D F, Wood, J C, Berthiaume, L C, Herbert, L N, & Schaefer, J D. The fabrication and performance of Canadian silicide dispersion fuel for test reactors. IAEA.
Sears, D F, Wood, J C, Berthiaume, L C, Herbert, L N, and Schaefer, J D. 1985. "The fabrication and performance of Canadian silicide dispersion fuel for test reactors." IAEA.
@misc{etde_20577120,
title = {The fabrication and performance of Canadian silicide dispersion fuel for test reactors}
author = {Sears, D F, Wood, J C, Berthiaume, L C, Herbert, L N, and Schaefer, J D}
abstractNote = {Fuel fabrication effort is now concentrated on the commissioning of large-scale process equipment, defining product specifications, developing a quality assurance plan, and setting up a mini-computer material accountancy system. In the irradiation testing program, full-size NRU assemblies containing 20% enriched silicide dispersion fuel have been Irradiated successfully to burnups in the range 65-80 atomic percent. Irradiations have also been conducted on mini-elements having 1.2 mm diameter holes In their mid-sections, some drilled before irradiation and others after irradiation to 22-83 atomic percent burnup. Uranium was lost to the coolant in direct proportion to the surface area of exposed core material. Pre-irradiation in the intact condition appeared to reduce in-reactor corrosion. Fuel cores developed for the NRU reactor are dimensionally very stable, swelling by only 6-8% at the very high burnup of 93 atomic percent. Two important factors contributing to this good performance are cylindrical clad restraint and coarse silicide particles. Thermal ramping tests were conducted on irradiated silicide aspersion fuels. Small segments of fuel cores released {sup 85}Kr starting at about 520 deg. C and peaking at about 680 deg C. After a holding period of 1 hour at 720 deg. C a secondary {sup 85}Kr peak occurred during cooling (at about 330 deg. C) probably due to thermal contraction cracking. Whole mini-elements irradiated to 93 atomic percent burnup were also ramped thermally, with encouraging results. After about 0.25 h at 530 deg. C the aluminum cladding developed very localized small blisters, some with penetrating pin-hole cracks preventing gross pillowing or ballooning. (author)}
place = {IAEA}
year = {1985}
month = {Jul}
}