Repatriation of Vinča RA Reactor Spent Fuel

Post on 09-Mar-2016

53 views 5 download

Tags:

description

Repatriation of Vinča RA Reactor Spent Fuel. The 15th International Symposium on the Packaging and Transportation of Radioactive Materials PATRAM-2007 21-26 October, 2007 Miami, FL USA Ed Bradley, Milan Pešić, John Kelly, Pablo Adelfang, Ira Goldman, and Dario Jinchuk. VIND. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

transcript

Repatriation of VinčaRA Reactor Spent Fuel

The 15th International Symposium on the Packaging and Transportation of Radioactive Materials

PATRAM-2007 21-26 October, 2007

Miami, FL USA

Ed Bradley, Milan Pešić, John Kelly,Pablo Adelfang, Ira Goldman, and Dario Jinchuk

2

VIND

Vinča Institute Nuclear Decommissioning (VIND) Program – initiated by Serbian government in 2004• repackage and ship spent fuel,• improve radioactive waste storage at the Vinča Institute,

and• begin decommissioning of the RA research reactor and

the radioactive waste storage hanger 1.

IAEA support for VIND is being implemented in 3 closely integrated Technical Cooperation (TC) projects.

3

Safe management of radioactive waste

The Vinča Institute remains the central waste storage and processing facility for Serbia and historically from the former Yugoslavia• More than 4,000 sealed and unsealed sources,• Depleted and natural uranium,• Other safeguarded material.

IAEA TC project SRB3003 is working to address these challenges as well as the safe & effective management of waste generated from fuel repatriation and decommissioning work.

4

Decommissioning the RA reactor

IAEA TC project SRB3002 provides support for decommissioning the Vinča RA research reactor by completing:

• Facility characterization and• Detailed decommissioning plans,

Removal of contaminated structures will commence following the removal of spent nuclear fuel from the RA reactor building.

Funding does not currently exist for decommissioning and dismantlement of these facilities.

At the present time, Vinča senior management and the IAEA are exploring options for “incremental decommissioning” of the RA reactor ($0.5M to $4M per donor)

5

Safe removal of spent fuel

IAEA TC project SRB4002 supports the stabilization, preparation and transport of spent fuel from the Vinča RA research reactor to the Russian Federation• 8,030 TVR-S fuel elements (approximately 17% contain

HEU)• prerequisite infrastructure upgrades• related documentation, regulatory approvals, international

agreements and licenses• project management and implementation including the

procurement of required equipment and services

6

Safe removal of spent fuel

7

Significant Challenges

Condition of the spent fuel elements• Condition of spent fuel elements• Degraded or inadequate support infrastructure• Limited Serbian Regulatory resources

8

Challenges – spent fuel condition

Water parameters pH Conductivity,

S/cmCl,

mg/LSO4

mg/L

Value 7.53 ± 0.12 492 ± 84 73 ± 6 47 ± 13

Prolonged, poor water chemistry has resulted in corrosion and the loss of fuel element integrity• Handling problems• Increased basin activity

9

TVR-S corrosion in Al fuel channel or storage tube

• Corrosion began at a point of initial defect

• Elements fused to Al tube

• Tends to prevent further release of fission products

Challenge – spent fuel condition

10

Challenge – spent fuel condition

11

Challenge – degraded infrastructure

Carbon steel pipes in the spent fuel basin.

12

Sludge around a carbon steel component being removed from the spent fuel basin.

Challenge – degraded infrastructure

13

Prerequisite activities• Carbon steel component removal• Fuel channel technical component removal• Basin / sludge cleanup• Basin floor plate / support structure

modification

Challenge – degraded infrastructure

14

Identified infrastructure upgrades include• Water chemistry and level control systems• Radioactive waste storage• Radiation monitoring and protection• Gas monitoring systems• Materials handling equipment (cranes, forklifts,

etc.)• Ventilation systems• Utilities and services (electrical, water, air, etc.)

Challenge – degraded infrastructure

15

Challenge - Serbian regulatory support

• Multiple, complex submissions from the three integrated sub-projects

• Limited resources within Serbia• Recent Government changes

The project has secured resource support from the region through in-kind project donations.

Considerably more resources are required.

16

Progress

• Sept. 2006 – Contract signed• Mar. 2007 – Carbon steel removal complete• May 2007 – Concept document complete• June 2007 – PSAR submitted to SRA by

Vinča• Sept. 2007 – WCCS requirements finalized

17

IAEA contributing activities

Procurement of ŠKODA VPVR/M packaging system

• Procured through a TC project supporting RRRFR program

• IAEA donated 10 VPRM casks and ancillary equipment to NRI Řež

18

IAEA contributing activities

RRRFR spent fuel shipment guideline

• October 2006 - RRRFR Lessons Learned Workshop• Provide technical and administrative

information on preparations for shipping irradiated Russian research reactor fuel; including the sharing experiences with Uzbek spent fuel shipments,

• Finalize the outline and provide substantive documentation for preparation of an IAEA guideline document, and

• Determine actions to be taken by the IAEA to facilitate future shipments

19

Summary

• VIND Program is working to address significant environmental and proliferation concerns.

• Degraded fuel and support infrastructure as well as recent, regional conflicts underscore the need for prompt action.

• IAEA direct and indirect support has contributed to steady progress and the achievement of key project milestones.

• Several challenges, including funding, continue to threaten project progress.

20

Thank YouFor your attention

e.bradley@iaea.org mpesic@vin.bg.ac.yu j.kelly@iaea.org p.adelfang@iaea.org

i.goldman@iaea.org d.jinchuk@iaea.org