Fuel Flashcards

1
Q

What are the main stages of the fuel cycle?

A

Natural uranium -> Conversion -> enrichment -> fuel fabrication -> Power -> transport -> spent fuel storage -> reprocessing (recycled or waste)

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2
Q

What are the methods of enrichment?

A

Gaseous diffusion and gas centrifugation

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3
Q

What is the principle of gaseous diffusion?

A

UF6 piped through a series of porous membranes, the smaller, lighter U 235 diffusing 0.4% quicker than heavier U 238 – energy intensive

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4
Q

What is the principle of gas centrifugation?

A

standard method 10x more efficient – rotation send heavier to outside of cylinder, lighter remain near the centre

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5
Q

What are the different forms of Pu in the fuel cycle?

A

Pu239 - produced from U238 and burnt
Pu239 can capture additional electrons -> 240(not fissile)-242 which are fissile
239 has proliferation concerns but once enough 240 and other isotopes have been produced the Pu cannot be used for weapons

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6
Q

What are alternative fuel cycles?

A

once-through
modified open
fully recycled

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7
Q

How can we reduce the hazard of spent fuel?

A

By removing Pu, U and minor actinides, the activity of nuclear fuel is dominated by fission products for which the dose is majority beta radiation

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8
Q

What is the breeding ratio?

A

The average number of fissile atoms created per fission event

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9
Q

What is the breeding gain?

A

The net gain in the number of fissile fuel atoms per fissile fuel atom consume

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10
Q

What is the burn-up?

A

Proportion of heavy-metal atoms in the fuel that has undergone fission

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11
Q

What are burnable poisons?

A

atoms within the core that have a high neutron absorption cross section (higher than uranium), which are transmutated into atoms of relatively low absorption cross section as the result of neutron absorption

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12
Q

What are common burnable poisons?

A

Boron, gandolinium

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13
Q

What are the main components of fuel rods?

A

Cladding tube, fuel pellet, plenum spring, helium gas, seal weld

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14
Q

Why do we use powder blends?

A

To maximise the use of U and recycle waste

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15
Q

What is involved in press feed preparation?

A

Powder blending, pore former addition, analysis and testing, granulation then conditioning

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16
Q

Why do we sinter the pellets?

A

To increase the pellet density, creating the true ceramic of correct microstructure and physical properties

17
Q

What conditions are used for sintering?

A

1750 C for >5 hrs under H2 to prevent oxidation, on molybdenum boats

18
Q

What shape of pellet is used and why?

A

Cylinders with Dish ends to accommodate the thermal expansion of pellet, and bevelled edges to prevent chipping during handling

19
Q

Which fuels are commonly used in the PWR?

A

Magnox fuel rod - MOX fuel