Molten Salt Reactor, which employs molten salt mixture as fuel, has many advantages in reactor size and operation compared to conventional nuclear reactor. In developing Molten Salt Reactor, the behavior of fission product in operation should be preliminary evaluated for the correct design of reactor and its associated system including off-gas treatment. In this study, for 100 Mw 46 KCl- 54 UCl3 based Molten Salt Reactor with operating life time of 20 year, the fission product behavior was estimated by thermodynamic modeling employing FactSage 8.2. Total inventory of all fission product were firstly calculated using OpenMC code allowing depletion during neutronic calculation. Then, among all inventory, 46 element species from Uranium to Holmium were chosen and given to the input for equilibrium module of Factsage with its mass. In phase equilibrium calculation, for the correct description of solution phase, KCl-UCl3 solution database based on modified quasichemical model in the quadruplet approximation (ANL/CFCT-21/04) was employed and the coexisting solid phase was assumed to pure state. With the assumption of no oxygen and moisture ingress into reactor system, equilibrium calculation showed that 1% of solid phase and of gas phase were newly formed and, in gas phase, major species were identified : ZrCl4 (47%), Xe (33%), UCl4 (14%), Kr (5%), Ar (1%) and others. This result reveals that off-gas treatment of system should account for the appropriate treatment of ZrCl4 and UCl4 besides treatment of noble gas such as Xe and Kr.
Molten Salt Reactor (MSR) is one of Generation-IV nuclear reactors that uses molten salts as a fuel and coolant in liquid forms at high temperatures. The advantages of MSR, such as safety, economic feasibility, and scalability, are attributed from the fact that the molten salt fuel in a liquid state is chemically stable and has excellent thermo-physical properties. MSR combines the fuel and coolant by dissolving the actinides (U, Th, TRU, etc.) in the molten salt coolant, eliminating the possibility of a core meltdown accident due to loss of coolant (LOCA). Even if the molten salt fuel leaks, the radioactive fission products dissolved in the molten salt will solidify with the fuel salt at room temperature, preventing potential leakage to the outside. MSR was first demonstrated at ORNL starting with the Aircraft Reactor Experiment (ARE) in 1954 and was extended to the 7.4 MWth MSRE developed in 1964 and operated for 5 years. Recently, various start-ups, including TerraPower, Terrestrial Energy, Moltex Energy, and Seaborg, have been conducting research and development on various types of MSR, particularly focusing on its inherent safety and simplicity. While in the past, fluoride-based molten salt fuels were used for thermal neutron reactors, recently, a chlorine-based molten salt fuel with a relatively high solubility for actinides and advantageous for the transmutation of spent nuclear fuel and online reprocessing has been developing for fast neutron spectrum MSRs. This paper describes the development status of the process and equipment for producing highpurity UCl3, a fuel material for the chlorine-based molten salt fuel, and the development status of the gas fission product capturing technologies to remove the gaseous fission products generated during MSR operation. In addition, the results of the corrosion property evaluation of structural materials using a natural circulation molten salt loop will also be included.
In KAERI, the nuclide management technology is currently being developed for the reduction of disposal area required for spent fuel management. Among the all fission products of interest, Cs, I, Kr, Tc are considered to be significantly removed by following mid-temperature and high-temperature treatment, however, a difficulty of spent-fuel thermal treatment experiment limits the development of such thermal treatment. In this study, we applied our previously developed two-stage diffusion release model coupled to UO2 oxidation model to the development of optima thermal treatment scenario. Since the formation of cesium pertechnetate should be avoided and the fission release behavior is considerably affected by the extent of oxygen, we obtained oxygen-content dependent model parameters for two-stage fission release model and applied the model to the evaluation of fission release behavior to different oxygen content and thermal treatment procedure. It was found that the developed fission release model closely describes the experimental behavior of fission product of interest, implying a validity of model prediction and the thermal treatment condition reducing the chemical reaction between cesium and technetium could be developed.
Molten Salt Reactor (MSR) is one of the generation-IV advanced nuclear reactors in which hightemperature molten salt mixture is used as the primary coolant, or even the fuel itself unlike most nuclear reactors that adopt solid fuels. The MSR has received a great attention because of its excellent thermal efficiency, high power density, and structural simplicity. In particular, since the MSR uses molten salts with boiling points higher than the exit temperature of the reactor core, there is no severe accident such as a core melt-down which leads to a hydrogen explosion. In addition, it is possible to remove the residual heat through a completely passive way and when the fuel salt leaks to the outside, it solidifies at room-temperature without releasing radioactive fission products such as cesium, which make the MSR inherently safe. Both fluoride and chloride mixtures can be used as liquid fuel salts by adding actinide halides for MSRs. However, the MSRs using chloride-based salt fuels can be operated for a long time without adding nuclear fuel or online reprocessing because the actinide solubility in chloride salts is about six times higher than that in fluoride salts. Therefore, the chloride-based MSRs are more effective for the transmutation of long-lived radionuclides such as transuranic elements than the fluoride-based MSRs, which is beneficial to resolve the high radioactive spent nuclear fuel generated from light water reactors (LWRs). This paper examines liquid fuel fabrication using an improved U chlorination process for the chloride-based MSRs and presents the strategy for the management of gaseous fission products generated during the operation of MSR.