• Title/Summary/Keyword: Nuclear safeguards

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경.중수로 연계 핵연료 주기 (DUPIC)관련 핵물질 보장조치 (Safeguards)

  • 나원우;이용덕;차홍렬;김호동;홍종숙;박현수
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.27 no.3
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    • pp.447-452
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    • 1995
  • 경·중수로 연계 핵연료 주기 (Direct Use of Spent PWR Fuel in CANDU : DUPIC ) 기술개발의 핵물질 보장조치(Safeguards)는 경수로 사용후 핵연료를 중수로에 재 활용하기 위한 DUPIC 공정에 대한 최적 보장조치 시스템을 구축하여, 국제 원자력 기구(IAEA) 및 국제 원자력 사회에서 핵 투명성확보 및 신뢰도를 향상시키는 것을 기술개발의 목적으로 하고 있다. DUPIC 공정은 고립된 차폐시설내의 고준위 방사선장 하에서 가동되므로 타 시설에 비해 핵 물질 전용 가능성은 희박하지만, 전 공정이 원격제어 되야 하고, 조업조건이 정복해야 하므로 기존의 보장조치 기술보다 더욱 발전된 계량관리시스템, 측정시스템 및 감시시스템 등을 개발하여야 한다. 이를 위해 본 연구에서는 각 항목에 대한 요소 분석 및 각 항목별 향후 연구방향에 대해 분석하였다. DUPIC 공정 전반에 대한 핵물질 계량관리를 위해 물질수지구역 (Material Balance Area : MBA) 및 주요측정 지점 (Key Measurement Point : KMP )을 설정하여 각 측정지점별 측정방법 및 재고검증(Inventory Verification) 방법을 분석하였다. 최적 측정시스템을 개발하기 위해 적용 가능한 비파괴분석 방법들을 분석한 결과, 핵분열성 물질 함량을 정량적으로 측정할 수 있는 수동적 중성자 측정법이 가장 적합하다는 결론을 얻었다. 또한, 감시시스템을 개발하기 위해 전용전략의 주요 요소 및 전용경로 등을 분석하였으며, 핵물질 및 시설에 대한 물리적 방호체제를 DUPIC시설에 적용하기 위하여 물리적 방호에 필요한 방호체제 요소를 분석하여 DUPIC 시설을 위한 가상적인 방호체제를 구축하였다.

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ASSESSING AND ADDRESSING INCREASED STAKEHOLDER AND OPERATOR INFORMATION NEEDS IN NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE FACILITIES: TWO CONCEPTS

  • Saltiel, David H.
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.39 no.6
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    • pp.691-696
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    • 2007
  • Nuclear energy programs around the world increasingly find themselves at the nexus of potentially conflicting demands from both domestic and international stakeholders. On one side, the rapid growth in demand for electricity coupled with the goal of reducing carbon emissions calls for a significant expansion of nuclear energy. On the other, stakeholders are seeking ever greater safety, environmental, security, and nonproliferation assurances before consenting to the construction of new nuclear energy facilities. Satisfying the demand for clean energy supplies will require nuclear energy operators to find new and innovative ways to build confidence among stakeholders. This paper discusses two related concepts which can contribute to meeting the needs of key stakeholders in cost effective and efficient ways. Structured processes and tools for assessing stakeholder needs can build trust and confidence while facilitating the "designing-in" of information collection systems for new facilities to achieve maximum efficiency and effectiveness. Integrated approaches to monitoring facilities and managing the resulting data can provide stakeholders with continued confidence while offering operators additional facility and process information to improve performance.

A Brief Scrutiny of Malawi's Policy on Nuclear Power

  • Katengeza, Estiner Walusungu
    • Journal of Radiation Protection and Research
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    • v.45 no.4
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    • pp.147-153
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    • 2020
  • Background: Malawi's 2018 National Energy Policy includes nuclear power as an energy option with an operational 100 MW targeted for 2035. Materials and Methods: This paper challenges the scope of the policy on nuclear power by reviewing its implementation strategy and comparing it to: the strategy established for coal in the same policy; some experiences from other countries; and documents by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) relating to establishing a national position on nuclear power and infrastructural requirements for a nuclear power program. Results and Discussion: It is found that the pro-nuclear position is uninformed, and targets are unrealistic owing to a lack of understanding of nature of nuclear power including the requirements for safety, security and safeguards, and nuclear infrastructure. It is apparent that neither consultation nor a proper analysis were comprehensively conducted for nuclear. Though the national energy policy suggests a national position for nuclear energy, the content does not demonstrate that the position was arrived at knowledgeably. Conclusion: Thus, nuclear power may presently be viewed as a potential energy option that is yet to be seriously considered. It is important to build an appropriate level of literacy on nuclear science and technology for policy makers, key stakeholders, and the public to be better positioned for strategizing on nuclear power.

Material attractiveness of unirradiated depleted, natural and low-enriched uranium for use in radiological dispersal device

  • Ahn, Jihyun;Seo, Hee
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.53 no.5
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    • pp.1652-1657
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    • 2021
  • Nuclear materials can be utilized not only for peaceful uses, but also for military purposes; hence, the international community has devoted itself to the control, management and safeguarding of nuclear materials. Nuclear materials are of varying degrees of usability for development of nuclear weapons. Thus, several methods for assessing the attractiveness of nuclear materials for nuclear weapons purposes have been proposed. When these methods are applied to unirradiated depleted, natural, and low-enriched uranium (DU, NU, and LEU), they are certainly classified as non-attractive nuclear materials. However, when nuclear material attractiveness is to be evaluated for potential radiological dispersal device (RDD) uses, it is required to develop a different method for the different aspects and factors. In the present study, we derived a novel method for evaluating nuclear material attractiveness for use in RDD development. To this end, the specific activity and dose coefficient were identified as the two sub-factors, and, in consideration of those, the mass causing detrimental health effects was determined to be the main factor impacting on nuclear materials attractiveness. Based on this factor, the attractiveness of unirradiated DU, NU, and LEU for RDD use was qualitatively compared with that of 137Cs.

Isotopic Analysis of NUSIMEP-6 Uranium Particles using SEM-TIMS

  • Park, Jong-Ho;Park, Sujin;Song, Kyuseok
    • Mass Spectrometry Letters
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    • v.4 no.3
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    • pp.51-54
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    • 2013
  • Isotopic analysis using thermal ionization mass spectrometry coupled with scanning electron microscopy (SEM-TIMS) was performed to determine the isotopic ratios of uranium contained in micro-particles in the 6th Nuclear Signatures Interlaboratory Measurement Evaluation Programme (NUSIMEP-6) sample. Elemental analysis by energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) was conducted on uranium-bearing mirco-particles, which were transferred to rhenium filaments for TIMS loading using a micromanipulation system in a SEM. A multi-ion-counter system was utilized to detect the ion signals of the four isotopes of uranium simultaneously. The isotope ratios of uranium corrected by bracketing using a reference material showed excellent agreement with the certified values. The measurement accuracy for $n(^{234}U)/n(^{238}U)$ and (b) $n(^{235}U)/n(^{238}U)$ was 10% and 1%, respectively, which met the requirements for qalification for the NetWork of Analytical Laboratories (NWAL).

THE IMPROVEMENT OF NUCLEAR SAFETY REGULATION: AMERICAN, EUROPEAN, JAPANESE, AND SOUTH KOREAN EXPERIENCES

  • CHO BYUNG-SUN
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.37 no.3
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    • pp.273-278
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    • 2005
  • Key concepts in South Korean nuclear safety regulation are safety and risk. Nuclear regulation in South Korea has required reactor designs and safeguards that reduce the risk of a major accident to less than one in a million reactor-years-a risk supposedly low enough to be acceptable. To date, in South Korean nuclear safety regulation has involved the establishment of many technical standards to enable administration enforcement. In scientific lawsuits in which the legal issue is the validity of specialized technical standards that are used for judge whether a particular nuclear power plant is to be licensed, the concept of uncertainty law is often raised with regard to what extent the examination and judgment by the judicial power affects a discretion made by the administrative office. In other words, the safety standards for nuclear power plants has been adapted as a form of the scientific technical standards widely under the idea of uncertainty law. Thus, the improvement of nuclear safety regulation in South Korea seems to depend on the rational lawmaking and a reasonable, judicial examination of the scientific standards on nuclear safety.

ORGANIZATIONAL CONTRIBUTIONS TO NUCLEAR POWER PLANT SAFETY

  • GHOSH S. TINA;APOSTOLAKIS GEORGE E.
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.37 no.3
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    • pp.207-220
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    • 2005
  • Nuclear power plants (NPP) are complex socio-technological systems that rely on the success of both hardware and human components. Empirical studies of plant operating experience show that human errors are important contributors to accidents and incidents, and that organizational factors play an important role in creating contexts for human errors. Current probabilistic safety assessments (PSA) do not explicitly model the systematic contribution of organizational factors to safety. As some countries, like the United States, are moving towards increased use of risk information in the regulation and operation of nuclear facilities, PSA quality has been identified as an area for improvement. The modeling of human errors, and underlying organizational weaknesses at the root of these errors, are important sources of uncertainty in existing PSAs and areas of on-going research. This paper presents a review of research into the following questions: Is there evidence that organizational factors are important to NPP safety? How do organizations contribute to safety in NPP operations? And how can these organizational contributions be captured more explicitly in PSA? We present a few past incidents that illustrate the potential safety implications of organizational deficiencies, some mechanisms by which organizational factors contribute to NPP risk, and some of the methods proposed in the literature for performing root-cause analyses and including organizational factors in PSA.

Time dependent heat transfer of proliferation resistant plutonium

  • Lloyd, Cody;Hadimani, Ravi;Goddard, Braden
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.51 no.2
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    • pp.510-517
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    • 2019
  • Increasing proliferation resistance of plutonium by way of increased $^{238}Pu$ content is of interest to the nuclear nonproliferation and international safeguards community. Considering the high alpha decay heat of $^{238}Pu$, increasing the isotopic fraction leads to a noticeably higher amount of heat generation within the plutonium. High heat generation is especially unattractive in the scenario of weaponization. Upon weaponization of the plutonium, the plutonium may generate enough heat to elevate the temperature in the high explosives to above its self-explosion temperature, rendering the weapon useless. In addition, elevated temperatures will cause thermal expansion in the components of a nuclear explosive device that may produce thermal stresses high enough to produce failure in the materials, reducing the effectiveness of the weapon. Understanding the technical limit of $^{238}Pu$ required to reduce the possibility of weaponization is key to reducing the current limit on safeguarded plutonium (greater than 80 at. % $^{238}Pu$). The plutonium vector evaluated in this study was found by simulating public information on Lightbridge's fuel design for pressurized water reactors. This study explores the temperature profile and maximum stress within a simple (first generation design) hypothetical nuclear explosive device of four unique scenarios over time. Analyzing the transient development of both the temperature profile and maximum stress not only establishes a technical limit on the $^{238}Pu$ content, but also establishes a time limit for which each scenario would be useable.

Evaluation of nuclear material accountability by the probability of detection for loss of Pu (LOPu) scenarios in pyroprocessing

  • Woo, Seung Min;Chirayath, Sunil S.
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.51 no.1
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    • pp.198-206
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    • 2019
  • A new methodology to analyze the nuclear material accountability for pyroprocessing system is developed. The $Pu-to-^{244}Cm$ ratio quantification is one of the methods for Pu accountancy in pyroprocessing. However, an uncertainty in the $Pu-to-^{244}Cm$ ratio due to the non-uniform composition in used fuel assemblies can affect the accountancy of Pu. A random variable, LOPu, is developed to analyze the probability of detection for Pu diversion of hypothetical scenarios at a pyroprocessing facility considering the uncertainty in $Pu-to-^{244}Cm$ ratio estimation. The analysis is carried out by the hypothesis testing and the event tree method. The probability of detection for diversion of 8 kg Pu is found to be less than 95% if a large size granule consisting of small size particles gets sampled for measurements. To increase the probability of detection more than 95%, first, a new Material Balance Area (MBA) structure consisting of more number of Key Measurement Points (KMPs) is designed. This multiple KMP-measurement for the MBA shows the probability of detection for 8 kg Pu diversion is greater than 96%. Increasing the granule sample number from one to ten also shows the probability of detection is greater than 95% in the most ranges for granule and powder sizes.

Application and testing of a triple bubbler sensor in molten salts

  • Williams, A.N.;Shigrekar, A.;Galbreth, G.G.;Sanders, J.
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.52 no.7
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    • pp.1452-1461
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    • 2020
  • A triple bubbler sensor was tested in LiCl-KCl molten salt from 450 to 525 ℃ in a transparent furnace to validate thermal-expansion corrections and provide additional molten salt data sets for calibration and validation of the sensor. In addition to these tests, a model was identified and further developed to accurately determine the density, surface tension, and depth from the measured bubble pressures. A unique feature of the model is that calibration constants can be estimated using independent depth measurements, which allow calibration and validation of the sensor in an electrorefiner where the salt density and surface tension are largely unknown. This model and approach were tested using the current and previous triple bubbler data sets, and results indicate that accuracies are as high as 0.03%, 4.6%, and 0.15% for density, surface tension, and depth, respectively.