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Abstract
Alain Marmier, Michael Fütterer, Kamil Tucek, Han de Haas, Jim C. Kuijper, and Jan Leen Kloosterman,
Revisiting the Concept of HTR Wall-Paper Fuel,
Proc. of the 4th International Topical Meeting on High Temperature Reactor Technology (HTR-2008), Washington-DC, USA (2008).
Good safety characteristics are an outstanding feature of High Temperature Reactors (HTR):
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The high graphite inventory in the core provides significant thermal inertia. Graphite also has a high thermal
conductivity, which facilitates the transfer of heat to the reflector, and it can withstand high temperatures.
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The strong negative Doppler coefficient gives a negative feedback, such that the reactor shuts down by itself in
overpower accident conditions.
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The high quality of fuel elements - tri-isotropic (TRISO) coated particles - minimizes operational and accidental
fission gas release. The materials selected have resistance to high temperatures.
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The low power density enables stabilization of core temperature significantly below the maximum allowable, even in
case of severe accidents (suc as loss-of-coolant accident).
Together, these aspects significantly reduce the risk of massive fission product release, which is one of the attractive
features of HTRs.
The fuel that is currently used in pebble bed reactors such as AVR, HTR-10 and soon PBMR is based on a homogeneous
distribution of coated particles within a fuel pebble. This homogenizes power density in the pebble, but creates a radial
temperature gradient across the fuel sphere. Fuel particles placed at its centre has the highest temperature. Reducing
the average temperature of particles would help preserve their integrity and maintain the resistance of the first barrier
agains fission product release.
As early in the 1970s, attempts were made to reduce the peak fuel temperature by means of so-called "wallpaper fuel",
in which the fuel is arranged in a spherical shell witin a pebble. At that time, the production process was not sufficiently mature
and had caused unacceptable damage to the (less performing) BISO particles, which is why this fundamentally promising concept
was abandoned. In this paper, proposals will be put forward to improve the production process.
The paper further exploits the wallpaper concept, not only from the point of view of temperature reduction, but also for
enhanced neutronic performance through improved neutron economy, resulting in reduced fissile material and/or enrichment
needs or providing the potential to achieve higher burn-up. Paremters modified were the density of the central fuel-free
graphite zone and the packing fraction of the fuel zone.
It is demonstrated that this fuel type impacts positively on the fuel cycle, reduces production of minor actinides (MA) and
improves the safety-relevant parameters of the reactor. A comparison of these characteristics with PBMR-type fuel is presented.
The calculations were performed using Monte Carlo neutron transport and depletion codes MCNP/MCB and the deterministic code WIMS.
By comparison with PBMR fuel, the wallpaper design of the fuel pebble results in an effective neutron multiplication coefficient
increase (by amount 2%), which is combined with a decrease of between 3 and 15% in MA production. An improved neutron economy
of the heterogeneous design enables enrichment of the "wallpaper type" of fuel to be reduced by more than 6%.
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