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Increased Accident Tolerance of Fuels for Light Water Reactors - Workshop Proceedings, OECD/NEA Headquarters, Issy-les-Moulineaux, France, 10-12 December 2012

Abstract

The Fukushima accident in March 2011 raised concerns about the safety of current and future nuclear power plants both inside and outside the international nuclear energy community. With a view to learning lessons from this accident a large consensus emerged on the need to strengthen each level of Defence-In-Depth, reinforcing both prevention and mitigation. The fuel performance characteristics identified as being central to increased accident tolerance for long-term loss of coolant include reduced clad-steam reactions, reduced hydrogen production and improved fission product retention. New fuel designs which offered the potential to incorporate these characteristics, while retaining the operational performance of existing designs, would therefore be considered as suitable candidates for further investigation. Under the auspices of the NEA Nuclear Science Committee, a workshop has been organised to bring together international experts from the modelling, safety, operations and regulatory technical disciplines to discuss the various issues related to increased accident tolerance of fuels for Light Water Reactors and to help establish a co-ordinated international approach in this field. The organisation of this workshop was also supported by the NEA Committee on the Safety of Nuclear Installations. These proceedings include all the abstract papers presented at this workshop. The programme was comprised  More>>
Publication Date:
Jun 24, 2013
Product Type:
Conference
Report Number:
NEA-NSC-DOC-2013-9
Resource Relation:
Conference: OECD/NEA Workshop on Accident Tolerant Fuels of LWRs, Issy-les-Moulineaux (France), 10-12 Dec 2012
Subject:
21 SPECIFIC NUCLEAR REACTORS AND ASSOCIATED PLANTS; CONTROL ELEMENTS; COORDINATED RESEARCH PROGRAMS; FUEL CANS; FUEL ELEMENTS; FUKUSHIMA ACCIDENT DATA; LICENSING PROCEDURES; LOSS OF COOLANT; MELTDOWN; REACTOR OPERATION; REACTOR SAFETY EXPERIMENTS; SAFETY MARGINS; SILICON CARBIDES; WATER COOLED REACTORS
OSTI ID:
22444357
Research Organizations:
Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development, Nuclear Energy Agency - OECD/NEA, 46, quai Alphonse Le Gallo, 92100 Boulogne Billancourt (France)
Country of Origin:
NEA
Language:
English
Other Identifying Numbers:
TRN: XN1600038013898
Availability:
Available from INIS in electronic form
Submitting Site:
INIS
Size:
534 page(s)
Announcement Date:
Mar 10, 2016

Citation Formats

None. Increased Accident Tolerance of Fuels for Light Water Reactors - Workshop Proceedings, OECD/NEA Headquarters, Issy-les-Moulineaux, France, 10-12 December 2012. NEA: N. p., 2013. Web.
None. Increased Accident Tolerance of Fuels for Light Water Reactors - Workshop Proceedings, OECD/NEA Headquarters, Issy-les-Moulineaux, France, 10-12 December 2012. NEA.
None. 2013. "Increased Accident Tolerance of Fuels for Light Water Reactors - Workshop Proceedings, OECD/NEA Headquarters, Issy-les-Moulineaux, France, 10-12 December 2012." NEA.
@misc{etde_22444357,
title = {Increased Accident Tolerance of Fuels for Light Water Reactors - Workshop Proceedings, OECD/NEA Headquarters, Issy-les-Moulineaux, France, 10-12 December 2012}
author = {None}
abstractNote = {The Fukushima accident in March 2011 raised concerns about the safety of current and future nuclear power plants both inside and outside the international nuclear energy community. With a view to learning lessons from this accident a large consensus emerged on the need to strengthen each level of Defence-In-Depth, reinforcing both prevention and mitigation. The fuel performance characteristics identified as being central to increased accident tolerance for long-term loss of coolant include reduced clad-steam reactions, reduced hydrogen production and improved fission product retention. New fuel designs which offered the potential to incorporate these characteristics, while retaining the operational performance of existing designs, would therefore be considered as suitable candidates for further investigation. Under the auspices of the NEA Nuclear Science Committee, a workshop has been organised to bring together international experts from the modelling, safety, operations and regulatory technical disciplines to discuss the various issues related to increased accident tolerance of fuels for Light Water Reactors and to help establish a co-ordinated international approach in this field. The organisation of this workshop was also supported by the NEA Committee on the Safety of Nuclear Installations. These proceedings include all the abstract papers presented at this workshop. The programme was comprised of 4 sessions: - Session 1: Lessons learned from the Fukushima accident; - Session 2: Accident-tolerant fuel design; - Session 3: Reactor operation, safety, fuel cycle constraints, economics and licensing; - Session 4: Synthesis and future programmes. A total of 55 participants from 16 countries attended the workshop, with 26 technical presentations and 2 breakout parallel sessions (one on safety issues, the other on reactor performance, R and D and technological issues). The attendees represented a broad spectrum of stakeholders involved in different nuclear energy organisations, mainly R and D and industry and representatives from regulatory bodies. The list of participants is given in Annex 2.}
place = {NEA}
year = {2013}
month = {Jun}
}