Fast Reactors and Accelerator Driven Systems Knowledge Base

Conference Article: Recent advances in thorium fuel cycles for CANDU reactors

Boczar, P.G.; Dyck, G.R. (Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd, Chalk River Laboratories, Chalk River, ON (Canada)); Chan, P.S.W.; Buss, D.B. (Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd, Sheridan Park, Mississauga, ON (Canada))

Abstract

The once-through thorium fuel cycle in CANDU reactors provides an evolutionary approach to exploiting the energy potential of thorium. In the 'mixed bundle' strategy, the central 8 elements in a CANFLEX fuel bundle contain thoria, while the outermost 35 elements contain slightly enriched uranium (SEU). Detailed full-core fuel-management simulations have shown that this approach can be successfully implemented in existing CANDU reactors. Uranium requirements are lower than for the natural uranium fuel cycle. Further energy can be derived from the thorium by recycling the irradiated thoria fuel elements, containing 233U, as-is without any processing, into the center of a new mixed bundle. There are several examples of such 'demountable' bundles. Recycle of the central 8 thoria elements results in an additional burnup of 20 MWcentre dotd/kgHE from the thoria elements, for each recycle. The reactivity of these thoria elements remains remarkably constant over irradiation for each recycle. The natural uranium requirements for the mixed bundle (which includes the natural uranium feed required for the outer SEU fuel elements), without recycle, is about 10% lower than for the natural uranium fuel cycle. After the first recycle, the uranium requirements are -35% lower than for the natural uranium cycle, and remain fairly constant with further recycling (the total uranium requirement averaged over a number of cycles is 30% lower than a natural uranium fuelled CANDU reactor). This thorium cycle strategy is a cost-effective means of reducing uranium requirements, while producing a stockpile of valuable 233U, safeguarded in the spent fuel, that can be recovered in the future when predicated by economic or resource considerations.

view the full text of this article (17 pages, format: PDF, size= 1005kB)


key words: burnup; candu type reactors; fuel element clusters; fuel management; nuclear fuel conversion; reactor kinetics; slightly enriched uranium; thorium cycle; uranium 233
Reference:
Proceedings of three IAEA meetings held in Vienna in 1997, 1998 and 1999
International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (Austria)
IAEA-TECDOC--1319, pp:104-120