Abstract

The ANSI/ANS-8.1 standard, “Safety Standard for Operations with Fissionable Materials Outside Reactors,” has been available since 1964 as ASA N6.1-1964. In 1969, this standard was revised as ANSI N16.1-1969, “Nuclear Criticality Safety in Operations with Fissionable Materials Outside Reactors.” This version of the standard includes a variety of subcritical limits (SCLs) for uniform aqueous solutions and metals containing fissile nuclides for 233U, 235U, and 239Pu. Furthermore, SCLs are also included for uranium-water lattices. In the 1983 version of ANSI/ANS-8.1 (a revision of ANSI N16.1-1975), the suite of SCLs in the standard expanded to include 235U enrichment limits for homogeneous uranium-water mixtures and dry/damp oxides, uniform aqueous solutions of low-enriched uranium, and uniform aqueous mixtures of Pu(NO3)4 containing 240Pu, in addition to the SCLs included in ANSI N16.1-1969. The SCLs have changed little in subsequent revisions (ANSI/ANS-8.1-1998 and ANSI/ANS-8.1-2014). The ANSI/ANS-8.1-2014 standard is currently being revised to include new SCLs (uranium metal and compounds with enrichments up to 20 wt. % 235U) and possible updates to the current SCLs already in the standard, although these SCLs will not be available to the nuclear criticality safety community for a number of years. The bases for these SCLs were documented in journal articles such as Nuclear Science and Engineering, and the American Nuclear Society’s meeting transactions; however, the bases were ambiguous enough that sites and regulators in the United States are reluctant to endorse them for safety purposes. The purpose of this paper is to present the results of a comparison study for the SCLs in the ANSI/ANS-8.1-2014 standard using modern codes and cross sections (SCALE/ENDF/B-VIII) to provide some assurance about their quality (bias and bias uncertainty) for use in nuclear criticality safety applications.

Highlights

  • The ANSI/ANS-8.1 (ANS-8.1) [1] standard, “Nuclear Criticality Safety in Operations with Fissionable Materials Outside Reactors,” has been available since 1964 as ASA N6.1-1964 [2] and provides a variety of subcritical limits (SCLs) for the handling, storing, processing, and transportation of fissionable material used for nuclear criticality safety (NCS) in process facilities

  • This paper presents the results of a comparison study for SCLs listed in the ANS-8.1 standard using modern codes (SCALE) and cross sections (ENDF/B-VIII) to provide some assurance about their quality for use in NCS applications

  • The results presented here are those with a keff value comparable to the legacy SCLs in the standard (0.98), which corresponds to a bias and bias uncertainty of about 2% in keff

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Summary

Introduction

The ANSI/ANS-8.1 (ANS-8.1) [1] standard, “Nuclear Criticality Safety in Operations with Fissionable Materials Outside Reactors,” has been available since 1964 as ASA N6.1-1964 [2] and provides a variety of subcritical limits (SCLs) for the handling, storing, processing, and transportation of fissionable material used for nuclear criticality safety (NCS) in process facilities. A 1969 revision of the ANS-8.1 standard, ANSI N16.1-1969, included a variety of SCLs for uniform aqueous solutions and metals containing fissile nuclides for 233U, 235U, and 239Pu along with uranium-water lattices [3]. The SCLs in subsequent versions of the standard (ANSI/ANS-8.1-1998 [6] and ANSI/ANS-8.1-2014) have changed little; ANSI/ANS-8.1-2014 is currently being revised to include SCLs for uranium metal and compounds with enrichments up to 20 wt% 235U. This revision will not be available to the NCS community for a number of years. This paper presents the results of a comparison study for SCLs listed in the ANS-8.1 standard using modern codes (SCALE) and cross sections (ENDF/B-VIII) to provide some assurance about their quality (bias and bias uncertainty) for use in NCS applications

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