• DocumentCode
    679163
  • Title

    A new approach to fork measurements data analysis by RADAR-CRISP and ORIGEN integration

  • Author

    Vaccaro, S. ; Hu, Jiankun ; Svedkauskaite, J. ; Smejkal, A. ; Schwalbach, P. ; De Baere, P. ; Gauld, I.C.

  • Author_Institution
    Directorate Gen. for Energy, Nucl. Safeguards, Eur. Comm., Luxembourg, Luxembourg
  • fYear
    2013
  • fDate
    23-27 June 2013
  • Firstpage
    1
  • Lastpage
    7
  • Abstract
    Currently, in the EU, activities related to interim storage of spent fuel are constantly increasing. This is particularly true in Finland and Sweden, where final geological repository sites are planned to be operational in 2023 and 2026 respectively, but also in several other countries where fuel is moved from wet ponds to dry storage (Germany, Belgium, Spain, Czech, Bulgaria, etc). The required verification activities present a considerable challenge to the EURATOM Safeguards authority. Both EURATOM and IAEA safeguards need to know what is in the storage casks and keep continuity of knowledge of the spent fuel. A frequently-used tool for the verification of the nuclear material during loading is the "Fork” detectors for gross gamma and neutron counting. The IT applications RADAR (Remote Acquisition of Data and Review) and CRISP (Central RADAR Inspection Support Package), developed by EURATOM, are used to acquire safeguards measurement data and to analyze them in order to verify the declarations of the nuclear plant operators. Under the framework of the U.S. DOEEURATOM Agreement on nuclear safeguards and security, a module for automated analysis of spent fuel measurement data using the ORIGEN (Oak Ridge Isotope GENeration) code, part of the SCALE nuclear systems modeling and simulation package, has been integrated into CRISP. Measurement data are collected in an unattended mode by RADAR and then processed by CRISP, which outputs, for each fuel assembly, the measured gamma and neutron count rates. Simultaneously, ORIGEN performs burn-up calculations based on operator declarations previously entered into CRISP and calculates the expected neutron and gamma count rates for each assembly. These calculations also used response functions, developed using Monte Carlo modeling, to account for the detection probabilities of both neutron and photon particles that originated in each fuel pin. Finally, CRISP correlates and compares the expected (calculated) gamma and ne- tron signals with the measured values. The comparison is presented to the inspector to draw his conclusions. This paper will show initial case studies of in-field applications of the CRISP-ORIGEN approach for safeguards inspection activities during the loading of a spent fuel cask.
  • Keywords
    gamma-ray detection; neutron detection; nuclear engineering computing; nuclear materials safeguards; radioactive waste storage; Central RADAR Inspection Support Package; EURATOM Safeguards authority; Finland; IAEA safeguards; Monte Carlo modeling; ORIGEN code integration; RADAR-CRISP integration; Remote Acquisition of Data and Review; SCALE nuclear systems modeling; Sweden; US DOE-EURATOM Agreement; burn-up calculations; fork measurements data analysis; fuel dry storage; fuel pin; gamma count rates; geological repository sites; neutron count rates; nuclear material verification; nuclear security; safeguards inspection activities; spent fuel measurement automated data analysis; spent fuel storage cask loading; Assembly; Cooling; Detectors; Fuels; Loading; Neutrons; Radar; Depletion Modeling; Fork Detector Measurements; Nuclear Safeguards; Spent Fuel Verification;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Advancements in Nuclear Instrumentation Measurement Methods and their Applications (ANIMMA), 2013 3rd International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Marseille
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4799-1046-5
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ANIMMA.2013.6728103
  • Filename
    6728103