PEAK CLADDING TEMPERATURE IN A SPENT FUEL STORAGE OR TRANSPORTATION CASK

Year
2007
Author(s)
Jie Li - Argonne National Laboratory
Haruko Murakami - Argonne National Laboratory
Liu Yung - Argonne National Laboratory Argonne, IL, USA
P.E.A. Gomez - University of Nevada
Mithun Gudipati - University of Nevada- Reno
Miles Greiner - University of Nevada - Reno
File Attachment
81.pdf1.29 MB
Abstract
From reactor discharge to eventual disposition, spent nuclear fuel assemblies from a commercial light water reactor are typically exposed to a variety of environments under which the peak cladding temperature (PCT) is an important parameter that can affect the characteristics and behavior of the cladding and, thus, the functions of the spent fuel during storage, transportation, and disposal. Three models have been identified to calculate the peak cladding temperature of spent fuel assemblies in a storage or transportation cask: a coupled effective thermal conductivity and edge conductance model developed by Manteufel and Todreas, an effective thermal conductivity model developed by Bahney and Lotz, and a computational fluid dynamics model. These models were used to estimate the PCT for spent fuel assemblies for light water reactors under helium, nitrogen, and vacuum environments with varying decay heat loads and temperature boundary conditions. The results show that the vacuum environment is more challenging than the other gas environments in that the PCT limit is exceeded at a lower boundary temperature for a given decay heat load of the spent fuel assembly. This paper will highlight the PCT calculations, including a comparison of the PCTs obtained by different models.