1. Introduction
Since commercial operation of a CANDU nuclear power plant started in April 1983, four CANDU nuclear power plants have been operated. As these domestic CANDU plants have been operated for a long time, various types of spent fuel defects have occurred in them [1]. The physical properties of the pellet, which is uranium dioxide (UO2) in the fuel rod, must be free of small holes, cracks, and chipping defects in the process of manufacturing nuclear fuel [2-3].
In addition, since the fuel rod must withstand high heat and radiation in the reactor and maintain its integrity in water of 5 m depth in the spent fuel pool facility for decades, the fuel rods made of Zircaloy material are also inspected by helium leak testing in the manufacturing process. However, during the fuel burning in the reactor, many small defects occur in the welding area of the endcap in the fuel rod. The spent fuel released from the reactor can be stored in a canister designed with a capacity of 60 fuel assemblies if it is determined to be a sound spent fuel without defects by the defect detection system in the power plant. It is then transferred to a dry storage facility [4]. However, in the case of defective spent fuel, it is sealed in a special container (Can) after determining the fuel is defective through sipping inspection system and a visual inspection system [5-6]. Defective fuels are stored separately in the defective spent fuel facility. When it is difficult to check defects through a sipping test and visual inspection, a precise inspection for investigating the root cause of the defect type and the defect location is performed in a hot cell [7].
In order to secure the safety of the CANDU nuclear power plant, the integrity of the spent fuel must be guaranteed. However, complete monitoring of the fuel being burned in the reactor has many restrictions due to high radiation conditions. To date, in order to monitor fuel loaded in the reactor, a method of analyzing the coolant radioactivity of the reactor has been widely used. In Korea, the analysis technology of the coolant radioactivity was previously at a relatively low level where only indication of a fuel defect was identified and it was unable to investigate the root cause of the defect. In particular, in the case of CANDU spent fuel, it is difficult to perform fuel dismantling due to the welded structure of the fuel assembly, as shown in Fig. 1 [8].
If the fuel rod located inside the fuel assembly is defective, it is impossible to identify the fuel defect. In response, in this study, a methodology for analyzing the number of defective fuel rods and the size of defects and the root cause of defects is described.
2. Development of analysis technology for fuel defect
2.1 Fission product of nuclear fuel
When nuclear fission occurs in the uranium pellet of the fuel rod, fission products are generated. Fission products that are directly generated through fission are called primary fission products, and since these primary fission products are unstable, they can be converted into another nuclide through various decay mechanisms.
The instability of the primary fission product is stabilized by conversion to other nuclides with the release of beta particles (β-particles) due to excessive neutron numbers and is generally accompanied by gamma ray (γ-ray) emission simultaneously.
Secondary fission products are not generated directly through nuclear fission and come from the neutron capture of the stable fission product. The nuclides generated in this way increase in proportion to the square of the burn-up of the fuel. The method of calculating the amount of nuclides generated in spent fuel is evaluated by the Bateman equation, given as Eq. (1), through various nuclide transformation processes based on the decay concept illustrated in Fig. 2.
where Ni is the number density of nuclide i, Nj is the number density of the nuclide j that can contribute to the formation of the nuclide i by fission, and is the decay constant from nuclide i to nuclide j by beta decay or isomeric transition. Ø is the average neutron flux and is the average cross section for conversion from nuclide i to the nuclide j [9].
2.2 Diffusion of the fission product
The fission products generated in the uranium pellets move from the pellets to the gap, which is a space between the pellets and the Zircaloy cladding. In the central region of the pellet, which has temperature above about 1,400℃, the fission products are moved by diffusion. On the other hand, in the outer region of the pellet, where the temperature is below 1,000℃, fission products are moved by recoil and knock-on.
2.2.1 Modeling of the fission product release
In order to evaluate the amount of fission products in the gap of the fuel rod, mass balance equations are used and the mass balance equations can be established in terms of a diffusion model or a kinetic model. If spent fuel is defective, the mass balance equations shown in equation (2) and (3) are used to calculate the transport of fission products from the gap to the coolant according to the kinetic model of Fig. 3.
where Ng (i,t) is the number of atoms of the isotopes i in the gap at instant t and Nf (i,t) is the number of atoms of the isotopes i in the pellet at instant t.
is the experimental escape rate coefficient from the pellet to the gap, is number of atoms of the isotopes i in the pellet, λi is decay constant for the isotopes i and is the experimental escape rate coefficient from the gap to the coolant, is average fission rate in the pellet, Yi is cumulative fission yield of the isotopes i [10].
2.3 Nuclides for evaluation of the defective fuel
In the event of leakage in the cladding of the fuel rod due to the fuel defect, nuclides such as krypton, xenon, and cesium that leak outside the fuel rod are detected in the coolant system [11].
These gas nuclides such as xenon and krypton exist without reacting with other nuclides in the gap because they are chemically stable. Under normal conditions, nuclides of inert gas are easily released through the defective area. In the case of iodine nuclides, they exist in a gaseous state in the central region of the pellet but when iodine nuclides are released to the gap, which is relatively cooler than the pellet, a small portion of iodine is absorbed in the surface of the pellet in the form of CsI and most of the iodine is absorbed in the surface of the cladding of the Zircaloy material [12]. If the temperature of the pellet surface decreases below the saturated temperature of the water due to reduction of the reactor power, the soluble iodine and cesium nuclides are dissolved by the coolant which flows into the gap of the fuel rod. The soluble iodine and cesium nuclides are leaked to the coolant from the gap of the fuel rod. Because of this phenomenon, the peak of the radioactivity for the iodine and cesium occurs in the coolant by direct release and recoil release.
The presence of a small defect in the cladding of the fuel rod increases the ratio of 131I to 133I. This is because 131I has a longer half-life than 133I.
2.4 Simulation of the fission products behavior
2.4.1 ORIGEN overview
After the fuel assembly is loaded into the reactor core, it is burned in the core for a certain period of time until the fuel is released from the core. At this time, nuclides are generated in the process of the nuclear reaction. ORIGEN code is a program for calculating the decay and generation of these nuclides [13].
Input data are the burn-up, power distribution, decay time, core loading period, etc. The results of the ORIGEN code calculation are the inventory of each nuclide in the fuel rod. If the fuel is defective, the nuclides in the fuel rod are leaked outside the fuel rod and the radioactivity of the leaked nuclide is then measured in the coolant by the detection system. Therefore, if the measured value of leaked nuclides and the inventory of nuclides in the fuel rod calculated by ORIGEN code are known, the defect size can then be predicted even if it is difficult to see the defect, which is located in the internal rod of the fuel assembly.
2.4.2 Characteristics for each defective fuel
During the operation of the nuclear power plant, four fuels that were actually failed were sampled and the defect characteristics of each fuel were analyzed. Table 1 shows the defect characteristics such as the defect indication, defect shape, defect size, and burn-up occurred after loading the fuels in reactor.
2.4.3 Analysis of leakage rate for each defective fuel
The method of measuring the nuclides leaked through the defect hole of the fuel rod was to measure the activity of the nuclei such as iodine, xenon, kryton leaked from the defective fuel using NaI(TI) scintillation detector with circulating coolant including gas after inserting the defective fuel into a sealed canister of a sipping inspection system.
Analysis comparing the inventory of the nuclei in the defective fuel rod calculated by ORIGEN and the nuclei leaked into the coolant through the defect hole of the fuel rod shows that the leakage rate of 135Xe is in the range of 2.21×10−04 to 8.56×10−02 while 133Xe shows slightly higher leakage rates of 3.61×10−04 to 1.68×10−01. This is because 133Xe has a longer half-life than 135Xe. The leakage rate was calculated as shown in equation (4).
The leakage rate of 88Kr, a gaseous nuclide, is in a range from 9.20×10−05 to 3.40×10−02, which is smaller than the leakage rate of 133Xe and 135Xe. It is also analyzed that as the half-life of 88Kr is much shorter than those of 133Xe and 135Xe, many nuclides of 88Kr disappear in the process of diffusion from fuel rods to coolant. 131I, which is a soluble nuclide, has a leakage rate of 1.86×10−03 to 1.49×10−02, which indicates a relatively smaller deviation than that of a gaseous nuclide. The 131I nuclide and 133Xe /131I are closely related to the defect size of the fuel rod [14].
Therefore, if the value calculated by ORIGEN and the coolant activity in the event of a fuel defect are known, the defect size can be predicted.
3. Results and discussion
3.1 Prediction for the number of defective fuel rod
It is important to recognize the number of defective fuel rods in the process of the fuel burning in the reactor. As the power of the fuel rod increases, 131I in the fuel rod also increases. Fig. 4 shows the maximum radioactivity of 131I (red line) that can be leaked per one fuel rod according to the oxidation of pellets and the fuel rod power. If the measured activity of 131I (Meas. 131I) in the coolant is within the inventory activity of 131I (Pred. 131I) generated in a fuel rod, it is estimated as one fuel rod which is defective and if more activity is measured in the coolant, the number of defective fuel rods is calculated in proportion to measured activity as shown in Fig. 5.
Based on Fig. 4, we developed a program that can automatically estimate the number of defective fuel rods by inputting the element linear power and the coolant activity of 131I (Meas. 131I), as shown in Fig 5.
To check the accuracy for prediction of the number of defective fuel rod, it was applied to the case of the defective fuel. As a result of reviewing to the case that one fuel rod was actually defective, it was proved that the predicted value was satisfied as shown in Table 2.
3.2 Prediction for the defect size
The defect size of the fuel rod cannot be verified without seeing the defect. However, the defect size can be predicted without dismantling the fuel using the method for estimating the defect size obtained from Fig. 6 and Fig. 7.
The correlation was analyzed by comparing the leakage rate for each defect size after measuring the actual defect size shown in Table 1. Based on this, even if the defect size cannot be checked visually the leakage rate can be calculated according to Equation 4. the defect size can be estimated in reverse using the leakage rate. Since the data was calculated based on four defective fuels, the accuracy may be somewhat lower but the accuracy is expected to increase when more data is accumulated in the future.
Therefore, it is possible to measure the size of the defect by the leakage rate of 131I or the ratio of 133Xe to 131I. In particular, the ratio 133Xe to 131I is applied to very tiny defects.
3.3 Prediction of defect causes
By analyzing the database of the defective spent fuel, it is found that there are various defect characteristics depending on the burn-up, and typical defect types are classified according to the root cause. Through this data, a method to identify the root cause of the defect can be established according to the defect shape.
The root causes for defective fuel were analyzed by dividing the region of burn-up into high burn-up and low burn-up using the intermediate value. If the fuel burn-up is 120 MWHr/kgU or less, the root causes for each defect shape are as given in Table 3. And if the fuel burn-up exceeds 120 MWHr/kgU, the root causes of each defect type are as shown in Table 4. A program to predict the root cause is shown in Fig. 8.
4. Conclusions
Based on leakage characteristics of fission products and the inventory of nuclides in fuel rods by ORIGEN and analysis of coolant activity, a program was developed for the first time in Korea to predict the number of defective fuel rods and the root cause of spent fuel defects after analyzing the fuel. In addition, a method to estimate the defect size was established using a database for fuel defects.
It is anticipated that this program will be applied in the future to technologies that can predict the degree of defects.