Abstract

We appraised in this study the effects of core excess reactivity and average coolant temperature on the operable time of the Nigeria Research Reactor-1 (NIRR-1), which is a miniature neutron source reactor (MNSR). The duration of the reactor operating time and fluence depletion under different operation mode as well as change in core excess reactivity with temperature coefficient was investigated over a period of five years. Our result shows that there is a strong dependence of reactor operating time on core excess reactivity and temperature coefficient. It was observed in 2004 that with a cold core excess reactivity of 3.77 mk, at full-power flux of 1.0 × 10 12 n cm −2 s −1 the reactor operated for 5 continues hours. At half-power flux of 0.5 × 10 12 n cm −2 s −1 and under the same excess reactivity condition, the reactor reaches 8 h of operation. However, re-measurements done in 2009 shows that excess reactivity of the reactor has reduced to 2.80 mk, the operable time at full flux dropped to 3.5 h while that of half-power became 7 h. We also investigated the reactor's energy consumption within the period under study and found to be much more in 2008 compared to the previous years. We infer that the amount of fluence consumed and the excessive reactor usage in 2008 has contributed significantly to the reduction of the reactor's excess reactivity in that year. The results obtained here revels that for an MNSR with a clean core excess reactivity between 3.5 mk and 4.0 mk, 5 and 8 h are the maximum operable times under full and half-power flux conditions, respectively. Negative deviation from these optimum times is therefore an indication of a drop in excess reactivity and the need for beryllium shims addition.

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