Integrated Monitoring and Reviewing Systems for the Rokkasho Spent Fuel Receipt and Storage Facility

Year
1998
Author(s)
J. K. Halbig - Los Alamos National Laboratory
T. Marks - Los Alamos National Laboratory
S. Klosterbuer - Los Alamos National Laboratory
Yuji Matsuda - Nuclear Material Control Center
M. Ishikawa - Nuclear Material Control Center
Y. Yokota - Nuclear Material Control Center
Mark E. Abhold - Los Alamos National Laboratory
Takeshi Tsujino - Nuclear Material Control Center
K. Ianakiev - Los Alamos National Laboratory
Steven E. Buck - Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract
The Rokkasho Spent Fuel Receipt and Storage (RSFS) Facility at the Rokkasho Reprocessing Plant (RRP) in Japan is expected to begin operations in 1998. Effective safeguarding by International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) and Japan Atomic Energy Bureau (JAEB) inspectors requires monitoring the time of transfer, direction of movement, and number of spent fuel assemblies transferred. At peak throughput, up to 1000 spent fuel assemblies will be accepted by the facility in a 90-day period. In order for the safeguards inspector to efficiently review the resulting large amounts of inspection information, an unattended monitoring system was developed that integrates containment and surveillance (C/S) video with radiation monitors. This allows for an integrated review of the facility’s radiation data, C/S video, and operator declaration data. This paper presents an outline of the integrated unattended monitoring hardware and associated data reviewing software. The hardware consists of a multicamera optical surveillance (MOS) system, radiation monitoring gamma-ray and neutron detector (GRAND) electronics, and an intelligent local operating network (ILON). The ILON was used for time synchronization and MOS video triggers. The new software consists of a suite of tools, each one specific to a single data type: radiation data, surveillance video, and operator declarations. Each tool can be used in a stand-alone mode as a separate application or configured to communicate and match time-synchronized data with any of the other tools. A data summary and comparison application (Integrated Review System [IRS]) coordinates the use of all of the data-specific review tools under a single-user interface. It therefore automates and simplifies the importation of data and the data-specific analyses.