A Controllable Unit Concept as Applied to a Hypothetical Tritium Process

Publication Date
Volume
5
Issue
4
Start Page
39
Author(s)
P.W. Seabaugh - Mound Laboratory
D.E Sellers - Mound Laboratory
H. A. Woltermann - Mound Laboratory
D.R. Boh - Mound Laboratory
J.C. Miles - Mound Laboratory
F.C. Fushimi - Mound Laboratory
File Attachment
V-5_4.pdf4.96 MB
Abstract
A methodology (controllable unit accountability) is described that identifies controlling errors for corrective action, locates areas and time frames of suspected diversions, defines time and sensitivity limits of diversion flags, defines the time frame in which pass-through quantities of accountable material and by inference SNM remain controllable and provides a basis for identification of incremental cost associated with purely safeguards considerations. The concept provides a rationale from which measurement variability a'nd specific safeguard criteria can be converted into a numerical value that represents the degree of control or improvement attainable with a specific measurement system or combination of systems. Currently the methodology is being applied to a high-throughput, mixed-oxide fuel fabrication process. The process described herein is merely used to illustrate a procedure that can be applied to other more pertinent processes.
Additional File(s) in Volume
V-5_1.pdf7.15 MB
V-5_2.pdf7.03 MB
V-5_4.pdf4.96 MB