Year
2023
File Attachment
finalpaper_340_0509014500.pdf379.24 KB
Abstract
Geological disposal of spent nuclear fuel is planned to begin in Finland in a few years. The
disposal will start with spent BWR fuel from Olkiluoto 1 and 2 units operated by TVO.
Prior to transporting of the fuel to the encapsulation plant and geological repository, all fuel
assemblies will be verified in the wet storage facility where they are currently stored. The
verification will be done in collaboration with the International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA), the European Commission (EC) and Radiation and Nuclear Safety Authority of
Finland (STUK) using one set of NDA verification instruments with their measurement
results shared between all three inspectorates. The presently foreseen NDA methods will be
Passive Gamma Emission Tomography (PGET), approved by the IAEA for safeguards
inspections in 2017, and Passive Neutron Albedo Reactivity (PNAR). A PNAR instrument
has been developed in a STUK-led collaboration for specifically the purpose of the
verification of the BWR fuel at Olkiluoto. This paper summarizes the research and
development on the PNAR instrument that has been conducted at STUK in preparation for
the upcoming geological disposal. Since 2019, annual measurement campaigns have been
held at the Olkiluoto spent fuel storage facility to assess the capabilities of the PNAR
instrument. Over the course of these campaigns, more than 50 different fuel assemblies have
been measured, several of them in multiple campaigns. These measurements have
demonstrated the PNAR’s ability to verify the fissile material content of a spent fuel
assembly. In addition, the PNAR’s reactivity measurement correlates with the leftover
reactivity of the fuel, which can be estimated through simulations when the history of an
assembly is known. In the 2022 measurement campaign, an ORIGEN (Oak Ridge Isotope
Generation and Depletion) module for PNAR developed by the EC and the Oak Ridge
National Laboratory was used to simulate the measurement signals of PNAR for the verified
fuel assemblies. Such methods will allow for on-site verification of operator declarations
and be part of the PNAR verification process that will be automated in the future.