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  4. Validation of 134Cs, 137Cs and 154Eu single ratios as burnup monitors for ultra-high burnup UO2 fuel
 
research article

Validation of 134Cs, 137Cs and 154Eu single ratios as burnup monitors for ultra-high burnup UO2 fuel

Caruso, S.
•
Murphy, M.
•
Jatuff, F.
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2007
Annals of Nuclear Energy

A measurement station has been built for the non-destructive investigation of burnt fuel rod segments through high-resolution gamma spectrometry. Four UO2 pressurised water reactor fuel rod segments with different burnup levels between 50 and 100GWd/t and 10 year cooling time have been experimentally characterised using gamma-ray spectrometry to determine 134Cs, 137Cs and 154Eu and their corresponding concentration ratios. Experimental errors of ~2% (1) for the 134Cs/137Cs ratio were obtained for most of the segments. In parallel, pin cell depletion calculations have been performed for each segment using the deterministic code CASMO-4. Measured and calculated ratios have then been compared with the purpose of deriving and validating pin-averaged single-ratio burnup indicators for very high burnups. It is shown that the 134Cs/137Cs ratio, frequently used as a burnup monitor, is considerably less precise for values exceeding 50GWd/t; discrepancies of ~16% are found between measured and calculated values, increasing with burnup up to ~23%. The ratios built with the 154Eu concentration show even much larger discrepancies, essentially because this isotope is rather poorly predicted as revealed by just using different basic cross section data. [All rights reserved Elsevier]

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.anucene.2006.11.009
Web of Science ID

WOS:000245029800004

Author(s)
Caruso, S.
Murphy, M.
Jatuff, F.
Chawla, R.  
Date Issued

2007

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Annals of Nuclear Energy
Volume

34

Issue

1-2

Start page

28

End page

35

Subjects

fission reactor monitoring

•

fission reactor theory

•

gamma-ray spectroscopy

•

isotopes

•

nuclear engineering computing

•

radioactive waste processing

Note

Lab. for Reactor Phys. Syst. Behaviour, Paul Scherrer Inst., Villigen, Switzerland

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
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Available on Infoscience
September 17, 2010
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/53891
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