Year
2023
File Attachment
Abstract
The SAVY-4000 nuclear material storage container has been in use at Los Alamos National
Laboratory (LANL) as a DOE Manual 441.1-1 compliant container since 2014. The most common
packaging configuration for storage containers involves a nested configuration of a metal inner
container, bag-out bag, and SAVY-4000 outer container. Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) bag-out bags
are used to control radiological contamination when the inner container is bagged out of the
glovebox. This generally prevents contamination of the inside of the SAVY-4000 container and
allows them to be re-used. In the past few years, however, corrosion of the SAVY-4000 has been
observed through annual container surveillance efforts. One source of this corrosion arises from
the degradation of the bag-out bag resulting from thermal and radiolytic degradation pathways.
The subsequent production and release of hydrogen chloride gas corrodes the stainless-steel
container wall. Corrosion rates of the 316L stainless steel and, consequently, the service life of the
SAVY-4000 depend heavily on this bag-out bag degradation rate, in addition to other
environmental and packaging factors, such as temperature and relative humidity. Our recent efforts
to establish a service life for the SAVY-4000 comprises three unique activities: 1) Surveillance of
nuclear material storage containers including the SAVY-4000 and its predecessor containers with
longer service lives, 2) systematic corrosion experiments on coupons to understand controlling
mechanisms of corrosion, and 3) accelerated aging experiments to establish corrosion thresholds
as related to container performance. Details of the projected path toward lifetime evaluation and
possible extension are highlighted, as well as an overview of the latest corrosion analysis efforts.