Abstract
To provide a data base for the regulatory guide of light water reactors, behavior of reactor fuels during off-normal and postulated accident conditions such as reactivity-initiated accident (RIA) is being studied in the Nuclear Safety Research Reactor (NSRR) program of the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA). The paper presents recent results obtained from the NSRR power burst experiments with high burnup fuels, and discusses effects of pellet expansion as PCMI (Pellet-Cladding Mechanical Interaction) loading and cladding embrittlement primarily due to hydrogen absorption. Results from the recent four experiments on high burnup (about 60 to 78 MWd/kgU) PWR UO2 rods with advanced cladding alloys showed that the fuel rods with improved corrosion resistance have larger safety margin against the PCMI failure than conventional Zircaloy-4 rods. The tests also suggested that the smaller inventory of inter-granular gas in the pellets with the large grain could reduce the fission gas release during the RIA transient; and high burnup structure in pellet periphery (so-called rim structure) does not have strong effect on reduction of the failure threshold because the PCMI load is produced primarily by solid thermal expansion.
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