Abstract

Abstract On-line activity measurement of fission products in a primary circuit water is often used for a fuel failure detection in research and power nuclear reactors. When gamma spectrometry is used for the activity measurement, high signal from 16N radionuclide and other activation products make the detection of fission products difficult. The detection of delayed neutrons emitted from several fission products is also used; however, if the detector is placed near the outlet coolant pipe, the signal from the delayed neutrons cannot be distinguished from the neutrons emitted due to 17N decay and deuterium photofission, with exception of a reactor scram condition. In this paper, a method of discontinuing the flow of primary circuit water is described. This method is based on the water flowing through a bypass on the outlet pipe to the sampling container and the flow is periodically temporarily interrupted, e.g., using 200 s + 200 s cycles. Neutrons located in the vicinity of the sampling container are continuously detected with a measuring sampling time of less than 2 s. The signal part, corresponding to the delayed neutrons, is evaluated by the signal decay analyzing during the flow interruption. The main sources of delayed neutrons suitable for this method are 137I, 87Br, and 88Br radionuclides with half-lives of 24.5 s, 55.7 s, and 16.5 s, respectively. The method was theoretically analyzed and experimentally verified in the LVR-15 research reactor.

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