Initiation of Depleted Uranium Oxide and Spent Fuel Testing for the Spent Fuel Sabotage Aerosol Ratio Program

Year
2004
Author(s)
Martin A. Molecke - Sandia National Laboratories, USA
Michael W. Gregson - Sandia National Laboratories, USA
Ken B. Sorenson - Sandia National Laboratories
Michael C. Billone - Argonne National Laboratory
Hanchung Tsai - Argonne National Laboratory
Wolfgang Koch - Fraunhofer Institut für Toxikologie und Experimentelle Medizin, Germany
Oliver Nolte - Fraunhofer Institut für Toxikologie und Experimentelle Medizin, Germany
Gunter Pretzsch - Gesellschaft für Anlagen- und Reaktorsicherheit (GRS) mbH Köln, Germany
Florentin Lange - Gesellschaft für Anlagen- und Reaktorsicherheit (GRS), Germany
Bruno Autrusson - Institut de Protection et de Sûreté Nucléaire of France
Olivier Loiseau - Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire, France
Nancy Slater Thompson - U.S. Department of Energy
Russell S. Hibbs - U.S. Department of Energy
Francis Young - United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission
Tin Mo - United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission
File Attachment
2-6_040.pdf494.05 KB
Abstract
We provide a detailed overview of an ongoing, multinational test program that is developing aerosol data for some spent fuel sabotage scenarios on spent fuel transport and storage casks. Experiments are being performed to quantify the aerosolized materials plus volatilized fission products generated from actual spent fuel and surrogate material test rods, due to impact by a high energy density device, HEDD. The program participants in the U.S. plus Germany, France, and the U.K., part of the international Working Group for Sabotage Concerns of Transport and Storage Casks, WGSTSC have strongly supported and coordinated this research program. Sandia National Laboratories, SNL, has the lead role for conducting this research program; test program support is provided by both the U.S. Department of Energy and Nuclear Regulatory Commission. WGSTSC partners need this research to better understand potential radiological impacts from sabotage of nuclear material shipments and storage casks, and to support subsequent risk assessments, modeling, and preventative measures. We provide a summary of the overall, multi-phase test design and a description of all explosive containment and aerosol collection test components used. We focus on the recently initiated tests on “surrogate” spent fuel, unirradiated depleted uranium oxide, and forthcoming actual spent fuel tests. The depleted uranium oxide test rodlets were prepared by the Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire, in France. These surrogate test rodlets closely match the diameter of the test rodlets of actual spent fuel from the H.B. Robinson reactor (high burnup PWR fuel) and the Surry reactor (lower, medium burnup PWR fuel), generated from U.S. reactors. The characterization of the spent fuels and fabrication into short, pressurized rodlets has been performed by Argonne National Laboratory, for testing at SNL. The ratio of the aerosol and respirable particles released from HEDD-impacted spent fuel to the aerosol particles produced from surrogate depleted uranium oxide, i.e., the spent fuel ratio, SFR, will be determined under closely matched test conditions. We shall briefly summarize similar results from completed, surrogate tests that used nonradioactive, sintered cerium oxide ceramic pellets in test rods, documented separately.