Abstract
Molten salt reactor (MSR) concepts are being actively developed by several private companies, with some touting the fuel cycle benefits of this technology. Simulating the deployment of MSRs and their effect on fuel cycle transitions is the role of a system dynamics fuel cycles tool. However, many current fuel cycles tools have difficulty modeling MSR isotopic variations because they were designed for modeling existing reactors based on discrete fuel elements with batch fueling schemes (i.e., charge and discharge). This work presents ORION fuel cycle modeling results using a specific high power density fast spectrum MSR design. For code verification, a single-stage MSR fuel cycle was set up in ORION and results were compared with the results from the SCALE-based reactor physics model (ChemTriton). A transition scenario was set up in ORION from the current light water reactor fleet to a future fleet of MSRs to study the characteristics of an MSR that affect its performance during transition. Several transition scenarios were set with holds and delays in place that are representative of a sodium fast reactor as modeled in Evaluation Group 23 for the Fuel Cycle Options Campaign Evaluation and Screening Study. Several MSR characteristics lend to its high performance and ease in transition from the current fuel cycle: fissile material is only loaded at initial startup; all fissile material is available as it is bred due to online fuel processing; and fissile material recirculating through the core is briefly held in tanks for processing and has very minimal out-of-core time (on the order of a minutes to a few days). These characteristics are in contrast to a solid-fueled reactor, which requires discharge, cooling, and fabrication of fuel all of which could take a few months to a few years and repeated loading of fresh fuel assemblies. A solid-fueled reactor only discharges a fraction of a core every year.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 409-424 |
Number of pages | 16 |
Journal | Annals of Nuclear Energy |
Volume | 133 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Nov 2019 |
Funding
The authors would like to acknowledge the US Department of Energy Systems Analysis and Integration Campaign for funding this work. The authors would especially like to acknowledge the engaging discussions and feedback they have received on this topic from Jeffrey Powers, Edward Hoffman, Bo Feng, and Thomas Jay Harrison.
Funders | Funder number |
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US Department of Energy |
Keywords
- ChemTriton
- Deployment analysis
- Fuel cycle analysis
- Molten salt reactor
- ORION
- SCALE