Year
2023
File Attachment
finalpaper_292_0505080144.pdf965.45 KB
Abstract
One of the challenges of nuclear safeguards for spent fuel storage in long-term geological
repositories is the continuity of knowledge of the fuel assemblies from the encapsulation facility
to the repository, which requires containment and surveillance measures. Following the proposal
of the Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Company (SKB), spent fuel is encapsulated
in copper canisters with a cast iron insert in an encapsulation facility, transported by ship
approximately 300 nautical miles and then emplaced underground. These canisters will be marked
with an engraved identification tag on the lid that includes the country of origin, serial number
and a control digit. Ideally, this identifier is unique and cannot be falsified.
In a previous work, we presented coherent scanning interferometry (CSI) as a non-invasive optical
measurement technique to identify the naturally occurring manufacturing artefacts of the
engraving process at the bottom of the identification characters as unique fingerprint for canister
authentication.
In this work, we introduce two alternative techniques for copper canister authentication, namely
laser triangulation (LT) and direct feature comparison in microscope images. We will discuss their
advantages and drawbacks with respect to CSI. Laser triangulation is a non-contact optical surface
metrology technique that allows 3D reconstruction of surfaces based on the geometrical
arrangement between a line laser, the target and a range camera. Both techniques, LT and
microscope image processing, could be easily implemented as compact detection instruments for
the field and allow fast data acquisition and results.
By comparing different copper samples with the same engraved identification tag for cross-sample
analysis, we evaluate the performance of both techniques for authentication purposes. Our work
underpins a potential pathway to nuclear safeguards of spent fuel containers and has implications
for cross-disciplinary areas, such as general surface authentication or forensic analysis.