Year
2023
File Attachment
finalpaper_548_0520112842.pdf347.09 KB
Abstract
The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is developing alternative physical protection
requirements for new nuclear power reactors as part of its effort to "risk-inform" its licensing and
oversight processes to address the enhanced safety and security characteristics that some assert the
next generation of reactors will exhibit. These alternatives include a "limited scope" rule to provide
a mechanism for exempting new reactor licensees from certain requirements that apply to the
operating fleet, such as maintaining a minimum number of armed responders capable of preventing
a design basis threat (DBT) adversary from causing radiological sabotage of the reactor(s). In
parallel, the Part 53 rule under development would allow any new reactor to be entirely exempt
from the requirement to protect against the DBT. To qualify for the exemptions in either case,
applicants would have to provide analyses to demonstrate that postulated security-initiated events
would not lead to exceeding certain dose limits to members of the public. NRC has not yet finalized
the process for determining specific events to be analyzed. However, for certain reactor
applications, it may be necessary to show that even adversaries with full access to the reactor could
not "break" it by any available means prior to being neutralized by a local law enforcement
response. Depending on reactor and facility design, sabotage attacks that cause rapid reactivity
insertions may be plausible and could pose challenges to meeting dose limits. However, assessing
the consequences of such events will be difficult because they cannot be experimentally validated
today in real-world integral tests. Fortunately, an experimental database of transient tests resulting
in core damage and radionuclide release exists from early programs such as BORAX and SPERT at
the National Reactor Testing Station and the nuclear rocket and ramjet tests at the Nevada Test Site.
However, in most of those tests the cores were unirradiated before the transients, which would not
generally be the case for a sabotage attack on a power reactor. This paper will provide some
observations about how the historical data may be able to inform sabotage analyses for regulatory
applications.