METHODOLOGY FOR INTERPRETATION OF FISSILE MASS FLOW MEASUREMENTS

Year
1997
Author(s)
T.E. Valentine - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Jose March-Leuba - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
J.A. Mullens - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
J.K. Mattingly - Oak Ridge National Laboratory+
J.T. Mihalczo - Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Abstract
This paper describes a non-intrusive measurement technique to monitor the mass flow rate of fissile material in gaseous or liquid streams. This fissile mass flow monitoring system determines the fissile mass flow rate by relying on two independent measurements: (1) a time delay along a given length of pipe, which is inversely proportional to the fissile material flow velocity, and (2) an amplitude measurement, which is proportional to the fissile concentration (e.g., grams of 235U per length of pipe). The development of this flow monitor was first funded by DOE/NE in September 95, and an initial demonstration by ORNL was described in the 37th INMM meeting held in July 1996. This methodology was chosen by DOE/NE for implementation in November 1996; it has been implemented in hardware/software and is ready for installation. This paper describes the methodology used to interpret the data measured by the fissile mass flow monitoring system and the models used to simulate the transport of fission fragments from the source location to the detectors.