GB2153286A - Storage arrangements for nuclear fuel - Google Patents

Storage arrangements for nuclear fuel Download PDF

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Publication number
GB2153286A
GB2153286A GB08502271A GB8502271A GB2153286A GB 2153286 A GB2153286 A GB 2153286A GB 08502271 A GB08502271 A GB 08502271A GB 8502271 A GB8502271 A GB 8502271A GB 2153286 A GB2153286 A GB 2153286A
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GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
tubes
storage
fuel
storage arrangement
air
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Granted
Application number
GB08502271A
Other versions
GB8502271D0 (en
GB2153286B (en
Inventor
Christopher John Ealing
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
English Electric Co Ltd
Original Assignee
English Electric Co Ltd
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from GB848402669A external-priority patent/GB8402669D0/en
Application filed by English Electric Co Ltd filed Critical English Electric Co Ltd
Priority to GB08502271A priority Critical patent/GB2153286B/en
Publication of GB8502271D0 publication Critical patent/GB8502271D0/en
Publication of GB2153286A publication Critical patent/GB2153286A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of GB2153286B publication Critical patent/GB2153286B/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • GPHYSICS
    • G21NUCLEAR PHYSICS; NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
    • G21CNUCLEAR REACTORS
    • G21C19/00Arrangements for treating, for handling, or for facilitating the handling of, fuel or other materials which are used within the reactor, e.g. within its pressure vessel
    • G21C19/02Details of handling arrangements
    • G21C19/06Magazines for holding fuel elements or control elements
    • G21C19/07Storage racks; Storage pools
    • GPHYSICS
    • G21NUCLEAR PHYSICS; NUCLEAR ENGINEERING
    • G21CNUCLEAR REACTORS
    • G21C19/00Arrangements for treating, for handling, or for facilitating the handling of, fuel or other materials which are used within the reactor, e.g. within its pressure vessel
    • G21C19/02Details of handling arrangements
    • G21C19/08Means for heating fuel elements before introduction into the core; Means for heating or cooling fuel elements after removal from the core
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02EREDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
    • Y02E30/00Energy generation of nuclear origin
    • Y02E30/30Nuclear fission reactors

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  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Plasma & Fusion (AREA)
  • General Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • High Energy & Nuclear Physics (AREA)
  • Monitoring And Testing Of Nuclear Reactors (AREA)

Abstract

A storage arrangement for nuclear fuel has a plurality of storage tubes 5 connected by individual pipes to manifolds which are connected, in turn, to an exhaust system 23, 24 for maintaining the tubes at sub- atmospheric pressure, and means 15, 18 for producing a flow of a cooling fluid, such as air, over the exterior surfaces of the tubes. <IMAGE>

Description

SPECIFICATION Storage arrangements for nuclear fuel This invention relates to storage arrangements for irradiated fuel following its removal from nuclear reactors. The invention can also relate to the storage of pre-irradiated fuel and also vitrified waste after spent fuel reprocessing.
It is a common practice to store spent fuel under water, in what are generally known as pond stores, for periods that are long enough to allow the decay heat and radiation levels to reduce sufficiently to allow the fuel to be transported with safety. However the use of a pond store is not entirely satisfactory where the fuel needs to be stored for any considerable length of time.
Thus the ability to store the fuel safely for protracted periods in a water environment is very dependent upon the materials of the cladding in which the fuel is accommodated, the irradiation history of the fuel and/or the cladding, the integrity of the cladding, and the quality of the water in which the fuel is stored. Thus cooling and shielding functions can be carried out completely satisfactorily whilst the fuel cladding remains intact, and whilst the water is present. However if the fuel cladding is perforated by corrosion or handling, then fission products can escape and both fission products and corrosion products that are radioactively contaminated are then able to float and permeate to the surface of the water, which could result in high dose rates to operators.In addition it is possible for these fission products and corrosion/contamination products to adhere to the walls of the pond. Variations in the pond water level, due to evaporation or leakage, could allow these products to dry out, when they could then become airborne, causing possible ingestion hazards to operators and the risk of atmospheric pollution.
Moreover in order to maintain adequate cooling and shielding the pond integrity must be assured to very high limits. Small leaks could give rise to minor contamination problems, and larger leaks, resulting in loss of cooling water may result in a serious district hazard.
As safety requirements for nuclear installations become more rigorous, and the allowable dose rates to operators continue to decrease, the need to design storage systems and other nuclear installations to even higher orders of integrity becomes essential, particu larly as for various reasons it is now becoming necessary to store spent nuclear fuel for longer periods than was originally anticipated.
In our co-pending United Kingdom patent application No. 8027066 (Serial No.
2061798) there is described and claimed an alternative form of storage arrangement which substantially avoids the above-mentioned disadvantages. Such a storage arrangement comprises an enclosure for the fuel that utilises air as its storage medium; an exhaust system for exhausting this air from the enclosure through filters so as to maintain the interior of the enclosure at sub-atmospheric pressure; and a transfer mechanism for transferring fuel into and from the enclosure.
Maintaining a depression within the enclosure could eliminate the need for a high integrity envelope for the enclosure, as any leakage that might occur will be into the enclosure, and accordingly the invention provides an inherently safer store than the usual water filled pond. In addition, as the fuel is stored in air rather than water, the risk of corrosion is reduced, and consequently the need for an operator to maintain the water chemistry at precise levels in order to prevent the generation of corrosion products and the possibility of atmospheric pollution is thereby avoided.
Another form of dry storage arrangement for irradiated nuclear fuel is described in United Kingdom Patent Specification No.
1583303, such an arrangement comprising a grid having a plurality of openings for supporting respective fuel cans so that they extend downwards therefrom, the space above the grid forming an air filled enclosure associated with an exhaust system for exhausting air from the space through filters to maintain the interior of this space at sub-atmospheric pressure, and the arrangement including means for producing a flow of cooling air over the exterior of the cans. In use of such an arrangement the fuel is first enclosed in cans and the cans placed in openings in the grid, the unused openings being sealed with lids.
However the lids need to be removed for accommodating further cans. which is inconvenient, and failure of a can could give rise to contamination of the cooling air, with the risk of polluting the atmosphere.
An object of the invention is to provide an alternative form of dry storage arrangement which avoids these disadvantages and has other benefits as will be apparent from the following description.
According to the invention a storage arrangement for nuclear fuel comprises a plurality of storage tubes each of which is closed at one end and is closeable at the other end by a removable plug, a pipe connecting the interior of each tube to a manifold serving a plurality of tubes, exhaust means connected to the manifold for maintaining the interiors of the respective tubes, when the plugs are fitted thereto, at sub-atmospheric pressure, and means for producing a flow of cooling fluid over the exterior surfaces of the tubes.
The use of an exhaust system connected to individual tubes by a manifold and pipe arrangement has the advantage of limiting the spread of radioactive particles throughout the storage system compared with an arrangement in which the tubes communicate with a common chamber. In addition it enables fault conditions that might arise to be more rapidly detected; the use of a plurality of manifolds each serving a respective series of storage tubes also enables faults to be quickly traced by isolating different sections of the manifold system.
Monitors for detecting any rise in radiation levels can be situated in any convenient parts of the exhaust system. it will be understood that the filters associated therewith must, of course, be of the kind suitable for preventing the escape of radioactive particles from the store.
The storage of fuel in storage tubes forming a part of the storage structure means that the fuel does not first have to be placed into sealed cans, which is an advantage as canning involves an additional process and moreover removes the ability to check the fuel easily. Furthermore, canning gives rise to additional contaminated waste which must ultimately be disposed of. The storage tubes can be reused after removal of the fuel.
Each storage tube forms a single walled containment boundary preferably being air filled. The depression maintained within the tubes by the exhaust system effectively forms a secondary containment system. The tubes are conveniently supported vertically with their closeable ends fitting closely within respective openings in the base of a charging hall used for the transfer of fuel into and from the tubes, so that the tubes extend downwards into the cooling chamber through which air is caused to pass. Preferably the chamber has a vertical air inlet volume on one side of the plurality of storage tubes and a vertical outlet volume on the opposite side so that air is caused to flow across the chamber, and over the tube surfaces, by a natural thermosyphon process that is enhanced by a chimney connected to the outlet volume.
It will be seen that for a given store geometry the amount of air flow is governed by the heat generated within the store, so that the cooling is self regulating. Preferably the airflow conditions are arranged to be sufficient for the fuel within the tubes to be maintained at a temperature of not more than 1 80 C under all normal storage conditions when air is used within the tubes.
It is a feature of the design that the exhaust system may be isolated and gas other than air used within the tubes. The alternative gas will allow fuel to be stored at a higher temperature without damage to the fuel. This may be necessary for limited periods when fuel heat output is too great to give acceptable temperatures for storage in air.
The tubes preferably have shoulders adjacent their upper ends which combined with ledges within the respective openings, provide a barrier to radiation from the fuel passing to the charge hall. The tubes being supported from the floor of the cooling chamber are free to thermally expand upwards.
This method of support enables tubes to be readily withdrawn upwards from the cooling chamber into the charge hall for replacement should this prove to be necessary.
Seals are preferably provided between the plugs and the walls of the tubes so that the plugged tubes effectively form air-tight enclosures. However, the seals do not need to be completely air-tight. as any leakage that might occur will be inwards with the exhaust system working.
When the plugs are in their operating position they are preferably surmounted by removable tiles which together provide a floor to the charging hall. It will be understood that both the charging hall and cooling chamber should be surrounded by adequate radiation shielding, preferably of reinforced concrete.
A storage structure can be built up in modular fashion utilising a plurality of independently operable storage arrangements in accordance with the invention.
One embodiment of the invention will now be described by way of example with reference to Figures 1 to 3 of the accompanying schematic drawings, in which Figure 1 illustrates diagrammatically a sectional view of part of the storage arrangement, Figure 2 represents, on an enlarged scale, an individual storage tube of the arrangement shown in Figure 1, and Figure 3 shows a structure embodying a plurality of storage arrangement of the form illustrated in Figure 1.
The storage arrangement comprises a chamber 1 having walls, floor and ceiling of reinforced concrete. The ceiling 2 of the chamber if pierced by a matrix of openings 3, the upper ends of which have a slightly greater diameter than the lower ends as shown more clearly in Figure 2, ledge 4 joining the parts of greater and lesser diameter. Each of the openings 3 has, located within it, the upper end of a storage tube 5 of steel, the top section 6 of the part of the tube within the opening 3 being of greater diameter than the remainder and being connected to it by an annular shoulder 7. The stepped annular gap so formed provides attenuation to radiation from the tube contents. The tubes 5 are supported from the floor 8 of the chamber 1 and are free to expand thermally upwards through openings 3.
The tubes 5, which are closed at the bottom, serve to store irradiated nuclear fuel as at 9, and their upper ends are closed by plugs 10 which are supported within the tubes by the inner surfaces of the inclined shoulders 7.
A seal 11 is provided between the top of each plug and the tube, and each tube/plug assembly is surmounted by a removable tile 21, the tiles together forming the floor of a charge hall 1 2 (Figure 3), the walls and roof of which are also of reinforced concrete, and in which there is located a charge machine and gantry 13, of any convenient construction, for introducing fuel into and removing it from the storage tubes 5.
The floor of the chamber 1 has an opening 1 4 which communicates, via an inlet duct 15, with a louvred air inlet 1 6 (Fig 3), and the ceiling 2 of the chamber has a further opening 1 7 leading into a discharge stack 1 8 extending upwards to a louvred air outlet 1 9 disposed a distance above the air inlet 1 6.
The opening 1 7 is located at the opposite side of the chamber to the inlet opening 14, and in use decay heat from spent fuel 9 within the storage tubes 5 is transferred to the walls of the tubes by conduction, convection and radiation.
The heat is removed from the tubes 5 to the atmosphere by a natural thermosyphon process, the heated air rising within the outlet stack 1 8 by convection, and being replaced by cooler air drawn into the chamber 1 through the inlet opening 1 4. The disposition of the inlet and outlet openings 14, 1 7 at opposite sides of the chamber 1 ensures that there is a flow of air between the tubes in a direction transverse to the tube axes, as well as vertically, as indicated by the arrows in Figure 1, which gives rise to optimum cooling. It will be seen that the amount of air flow is governed by the heat generated within the store, and the arrangement is designed to be sure that the cooling is adequate to maintain the fuel within the tubes at a safe temperature, consistent with the gas used within the tubes.
In accordance with the invention the interior of each tube 5 communicates, by means of a pipe 20, connected to the side of the tube below the seal 11, to a manifold 22 common to a plurality of tubes, and by which air can be withdrawn from the respective tubes by a fan 23 after passing through a suitable filter 24, the withdrawn air being fed into the stack 1 8 for discharge to the atmosphere. Monitors are provided as at 25 in the manifold in order to detect any significant rise in the level of radiation and contamination.
The depression that is maintained within the storage tubes 5 supplements the high integrity sealed enclosure for the fuel created by the tube 5 and the sealed plug 10, as any leakage that occurs will be into the tubes 5.
Similarly any leakage that occurs at the seals 11 will also be inwards.
The use of an exhaust system connected to pipes to the individual storage tubes has the practical advantage of enabling any fault conditions to be more rapidly detected.
The individual pipes 20 and/or manifold 22 can be provided with isolating valves as at 26, if desired, in order to permit a rapid segregation of various tubes or series of tubes should a fault condition occur, thereby enabling the fault position to be speedily traced.
If desired portable monitors may be used to check the conditions within the tubes 5 periodically by connection to tapping points on the individual pipes or to separate pipes communicating with the interiors of the respective tubes either through the tube walls or through the respective plugs 10.
The storage arrangement described has the advantage that it can be used to store uncanned fuel, enabling inspection and monitoring to be readily carried out. Moreover removal of fuel from the store, should this become necessary, can be speedily effected, without the need to interfere with neighbouring storage tubes, simply by removing the respective tile and plug. Re-use of the storage tubes after fuel removal is an operational option.
Moreover the manner of supporting the storage tubes 5 enables a tube to be readily withdrawn upwards into the charge hall for examination or replacement should this be required.
Although the tiles 21 have been shown resting on the tops of the tubes 5 the skirt portions 27 of the tiles can be extended, if desired, so that these rest upon the surface of the concrete giving a more even floor surface to the charge hall 12.
The storage tubes 5 will normally be of circular cross section, but this is not essential and other shapes may alternatively be employed. In some cases the tubes may carry external cooling fins of any convenient configuration to enhance the cooling effect of the air flow.
Figure 3 shows a plurality of independent storage arrangement modules as described above, sections of which are shown at C, combined to form a nuclear storage structure having, in this case, a common receipt/despatch building A for spent fuel or vitrified waste, and associated with a storage submodule for initially storing waste fuel before transfer to the charge hall and storage tubes.
The charge hall 12 is common to all the storage modules as is the gantry 1 3.

Claims (10)

1. A storage arrangement for nuclear fuel comprising a plurality of storage tubes each of which is closed at one end by a removable plug, exhaust means for maintaining the interiors of the tubes at sub-atmospheric pressure, and means for producing a flow of cooling fluid over the exterior surfaces of the tubes, characterised in that a pipe connects each tube to a manifold serving a plurality of tubes, and the manifold is connected to the exhaust means.
2. A storage arrangement according to Claim 1 characterised in that each said pipe incorporates an isolating valve.
3. A storage arrangement according to Claim 1 or 2 including at least one monitor for monitoring the level of radiation in the manifold.
4. A storage arrangement according to any preceding Claim characterised in that it includes a plurality of manifolds each connected to a plurality of tubes through respective pipes.
5. A storage arrangement according to any preceding Claim characterised in that the tubes are supported vertically with their closeable ends fitting closely within respective openings in the base of a charging hall used for the transfer of fuel into and from the tubes, so that the tubes extend downwards into a cooling chamber through which air is caused to pass, which chamber has a vertical air inlet volume on one side of the plurality of storage tubes and a vertical outlet volume on the opposite side so that air is caused to flow across the chamber, and over the tube surfaces, by a natural thermosyphon process.
6. A storage arrangement according to Claim 5 characterised in that the air flow conditions are such that the fuel within the tubes is maintained at a temperature of not more than 1 80 C under all normal storage conditions when air is used within the tubes.
7. A storage arrangement according to Claim 5 or 6 characterised in that the tubes have shoulders adjacent their upper ends which combined with ledges within the respective openings, provide a barrier to radiation from the fuel passing to the charge hall, the tubes being supported from the floor of the cooling chamber so as to be free to thermally expand upwards.
8. A storage arrangement according to Claim 5, 6 or 7 characterised in that the plugs are surmounted by removable tiles which together provide a floor to the charging hall.
9. A storage arrangement for nuclear fuel substantially as shown in and as hereinbefore described with reference to Figures 1 to 3 of the accompanying drawings.
10. A storage structure for nuclear fuel comprising a plurality of independently operable storage arrangements according to any preceding Claim.
GB08502271A 1984-02-01 1985-01-30 Storage arrangements for nuclear fuel Expired GB2153286B (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB08502271A GB2153286B (en) 1984-02-01 1985-01-30 Storage arrangements for nuclear fuel

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB848402669A GB8402669D0 (en) 1984-02-01 1984-02-01 Storage arrangements for nuclear fuel
GB08502271A GB2153286B (en) 1984-02-01 1985-01-30 Storage arrangements for nuclear fuel

Publications (3)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB8502271D0 GB8502271D0 (en) 1985-04-17
GB2153286A true GB2153286A (en) 1985-08-21
GB2153286B GB2153286B (en) 1988-02-10

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6430248B1 (en) * 1998-12-24 2002-08-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Dry radioactive substance storage facility

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6430248B1 (en) * 1998-12-24 2002-08-06 Hitachi, Ltd. Dry radioactive substance storage facility
US6501814B1 (en) * 1998-12-24 2002-12-31 Hitachi, Ltd. Dry radioactive substance storage facility

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
GB8502271D0 (en) 1985-04-17
GB2153286B (en) 1988-02-10

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Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
732 Registration of transactions, instruments or events in the register (sect. 32/1977)
732E Amendments to the register in respect of changes of name or changes affecting rights (sect. 32/1977)
PE20 Patent expired after termination of 20 years

Effective date: 20050129