Abstract
A series of critical experiments were performed using heterogeneous cores at the Static Experiment Critical Facility (STACY) of the Japan Atomic Energy Agency (JAEA) in order to obtain systematic benchmark criticality data concerning the dissolving process in reprocessing plants. Focusing on the use of gadolinium as a soluble poison, critical mass was measured for a combination of uranium dioxide fuel rods (5 wt% 235U) and uranyl nitrate solution (6 wt% 235U) poisoned with gadolinium (Gd). Fuel rods were arrayed with a 1.5 cm lattice interval in the poisoned fuel solution in a 60-cm-diameter cylindrical tank. The uranium concentration of the solution was roughly kept at about 330 gU/L, and the Gd concentrations were varied up to 0.1 gGd/L. The other series of experiments were also conducted, as reference cases, varying uranium concentration in the fuel solution without Gd. The results provided benchmark criticality data for validation of neutron multiplication factor calculation on heterogeneous systems such as a dissolver. Validation calculation of JACS based on the newly obtained benchmarks supports the justification of its utilization for the criticality safety analysis.
Published Version
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