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        검색결과 2

        1.
        2023.11 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        Most of the radioactive wastes generated during the nuclear fuel processing activities conducted by KEPCO Nuclear Fuel Co., Ltd. are classified as the categories of intermediate and low-level radioactive waste. These radioactive waste materials are intended for permanent disposal at a designated disposal site, adhering strictly to the waste acceptance criteria. To facilitate the safe transportation of radioactive waste to the disposal site, it is necessary to ensure that the waste drums maintain a level of criticality that complies with the waste acceptance criteria. This necessitates the maintenance of subcritical conditions, under immersion or optimal neutron moderation conditions. This paper presents a criticality safety assessment of concrete radioactive waste under the most conservative conditions of immersion and moderation conditions for waste drums. Specifically, In order to send radioactive waste, which is the subject of criticality analysis, to a disposal facility, pre-processing operations must be performed to ensure compliance with waste accepatance criteria. To meet the physical characteristics required by the accepance criteria, particles below 0.2 mm should not be included. Thus, a 0.3 mm sieve is used to separate particles lager than 0.3 mm, and only those particles are placed in drums. The drums should be filled to achieve a filling ratio of at least 85%. A criticality analysis was conducted using the KENO-VI of SCALE. The Criticality Safety Analysis Results of varying the filling ratio of concrete drums from 85% to 100% presented in an effective multiplication factor of 0.22484. Additionally, the effective multiplication factor presented to be 0.25384 under the optimal moderation conditions. This demonstrates full compliance with the USL and criticality technology standards set as 0.95.
        2.
        2023.05 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        Currently, in the United States, Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) is stored at the Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installations (ISFSIs) at 73 Nuclear Power Plants (NPPs). The SNF inventory stored on-site either in pools or dry storage was 84,500 MTU in 2020. The inventory stored in on-site dry storage facilities was 39,207 MTU (46% of the total), and it is growing at a rate of approximately 3,500 MTUs per year. However, because a site for geologic repository for permanent disposal of SNF has not been constructed in the U.S., the SNF will need to be stored in dry storage facilities across the U.S. for a much longer period of time than originally planned. During this time, the dry storage facilities could experience earthquakes of a different magnitude than the one for which they were originally designed. However, there is little data on the response of SNF inside dry storage systems to seismic loads in the U.S., and the various gaps and nonlinearities between storage containers, canisters, baskets, aggregates, and fuel make it very difficult to evaluate by analytical methods. Therefore, a full-scale shake table test is being planned as an international joint research project led by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) in the U.S. In Korea, KNF decided to participate in this seismic test through the project of SNF integrity evaluation under road and sea normal transportation conditions organized by KNF and conducted by KORAD, KAERI, and Kyung-Hee University, and has provided the KNF 17ACE7 and PLUS7 test assemblies for the tests to SNL. The test will be conducted at the LHPOST6 shake table test facility operated by University of California in San Diego (UCSD) from 2023 to 2024, with the participation of KNF, CRI, and KAERI in Korea. The test units consist of a NUHOMS 32 PTH2 canister, a mockup of a generic vertical cask, a mockup of a generic horizontal storage module, 4 surrogate fuel assemblies, and 28 dummy assemblies. The seismic inputs for the tests will consist of ground motions (acceleration time histories) representative of hard rock, soft rock, and soil sites and seismic conditions in moderately tectonically active Central and Eastern US and highly tectonically active Western US. Ground accelerations for soft rock and soil conditions will be developed taking in account soil-structure interaction. Not only is this test almost impossible to conduct independently in Korea in terms of scale, facilities and costs, but it is also considered an essential test for those of us who are preparing for dry storage of spent nuclear fuel, given the increasing social concern about earthquakes due to the recent earthquake in Turkey.