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ORNL-TM-3137.txt
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ORNL-TM-3137.txt
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B IcEtek
LARRID
14 fEE GY 5Y
3
TR
3 445L DL3IS2EE 7
Fhis: r_;eport' was prepared as an account of work sponsored by the United-
States . Goverament. Neither the United States nor the United States Afomic
Energy Commission, nor any of their empiayee’s, nor any - of their £ONlractors,
subcontractors, or their en{pt_oyees-, rmakes any warranty, express or dmptlied, or
assumes. any legal liability or respansibility for the accuracy, completeness or
usefuiness of any inforrnation, “apparatus, prod‘sjcf_ or jzpmcess_ d§$clbsed, OF
r-etar_e'sénts-that its use would not infringe priviately owned rights. :
ORNL~TM~313T
Contract No. W-T4O5-eng-26
CHEMICAL TECHNOLOGY DIVISION
ENGINEERING DEVELOPMENT STUDIES FOR MOLTEN~SALT
BREEDER REACTOR PROCESSING NC. 2
I.. E. McNeese
FEBRUARY 1971
CAK RIDGE NATTIONAL LABORATORY
Oak Ridge, Tennassee
operated by
UNION CARBIDE CORPCRATICN
for the
U.S. ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION
A
B
i
|
4
JUERERRERY
3 445k 0135288 7
ii
Reports previously issued in this series include the following:
ORNL-413%9
ORNL -420k
ORNL-123Lk
ORNL-4235
ORNL-4364
ORNL-4365
ORNL -L366
ORNL-TM-30573
Period
Period
Period
Period
Period
Period
Period
Period
Ending
Ending
Ending
Ending
Ending
Ending
Ending
Ending
March 1967
June 1967
September 1967
December 1967
March 1968
June 1968
September 1968
December 1968
CONTENTS
Page
SUMMARIES . &+ ¢ v v v s o v s o e v o e e e e v
1. INTRODUCTION « v v ¢ 4 o v o o s o 2 s & o o o s o« o s o = 1
2. PROPOSED FLOWSHEET FOR PROCESSING A SINGLE-FLUID MSBR BY REDUCTIVE
EXT RA CT ION . . . . . a . . . . . . . . . - . . . . 1.
5. MSBR MATERIAL-BALANCE CALCULATIONS . . ¢« « ¢ ¢ ¢« & « « « & 5
5.1 Effect of Fuel~Salt Discard Cycle . « . « « + &« « + . & 5
3.2 FEffects of Removing Zirconium and Seminoble Metals 6
3.3 FEffect of Protactinium Removal Efficiency . . . . 8
3.4 Quantities of Heat and Mass in the MSBR Off-Gas System . 10
L. REMOVAL OF PROTACTINIUM FROM A SINGLE-FLUID MSBR . . . . . . 22
4.1 Mathematical Analysis of a Reductive Extraction System . 2h
4.2 Calculated System Performance 26
4.3 Stabilization of the Protactinium Isolation System . . 29
L. Transient Performance .+ « + « o o o o o o o o + o« . s L1
5. USE OF THE PROTACTINIUM ISOLATION SYSTEM FOR CONTROLLING THE
URANIUM CONCENTRATION IN THE BLANKET OF A SINGLE-FLUID MSBR . Ly
6. REMOVAL OF RARE EARTHS FROM A SINGLE~FLUID MSBR . . 52
6.1 Proposed Rare-Earth Removal Flowsheet 52
6.2 Effect of Rare~Farth--Thorium Separation Factor and Bismuth
Flow RAt@ « ¢ ¢ o o & o o o o & o o s oo o o + o« 5k
6.3 Effect of Location of Feed Point . . . .« . . « « « « . . 63
6.4 Effect of the Fraction of ThFu That Is Reduced in the
Electrolytic Cell . . . . . e e v e e e e e e 63
6.5 Effect of Wumber of Stages in the Extraction Column . . 66
6.6 Effect of Processing Cycle Time « + « o o ¢ + o o + 66
6.7 Rare-Earth Removal Times for Reference Conditions 7
jil
iv
CONTENTS (Continued)
Page
T. SEMICONTINUOUS ENGINEERING EXPERIMENTS ON REDUCTIVE EXTRACTION T8
T.1 Pressure Tests of the Feed-and-Catch Tanks . . . . . . . 78
7.2 TInitial Cleanup of Experimental System . . . . . . . . . 79
(.5 Loading and Treatment of Bismath . . . . . . . . . « . . 79
T.4 Operation of Gas Purification and Supply Systems . . . . 80
7.5 7Planned Experiments .+ « + o « + o « o o ¢ o « o 4 4 . . 80
8. ELECTROLYTIC CELL DEVELOPMENT . + « v « 4 v « ¢« « o o o « o . g2
8.1 Comparison of Cell Resistance with AC and DC Power . . . 82
8.2 Experiments in a Quartz Static Cell with a Graphite Anode 63
8.3 Studies of Frozen~Wall Corrosion Protection in an All-Metal
Cell o o v & v v i v s e e e e e e e e e e e e e e e 85
9. MSRE DISTILLATION EXPERIMENT . . . . « « « « « & o « o « + . 89
9.1 Instrument Panel . . .+ + « ¢« ¢ 4 4 ¢ i 4 e e e e e e e . 90
9.2 Main Process Vessels . « « « ¢ v v v v v 0 0 v e e e . 30
G.3 Valve BOX « v v v v v v v e e e e e e e e e e e e e e 9k
9.4 Condensate Sampler . « « « + « 4 4 4 4 e e e 4 e e e 96
10. REFERENCES . « ¢ « ¢« v v o v v « o v 4 4 v v o o o o o o o = 100
SUMMARIES
PROPOSED FLOWSHEET FOR PRCOCESSING A SINGLE-FLUID
MSBR BY REDUCTIVE EXTRACTION
A proposed flowsheet for processing a single-fluid MSBR is based
on reductive extraction, and routes the reactor salt through the prot-
actinium-isolation and the rare-earth~removal systems on 3- and 30-day
cycles, respectively. The flowsheet is scaled for a 1000-Mw (electrical)
MSBR.-
In addition to the two primary operations {protactinium isolation
and rare-earth vemoval), the flowsheet incorporates means for removing
materials such as zirconium and nickel. Other operations include
recovery of uranium from waste streams, UF6 collection, and fuel recon-
stitution and cleanup.
MSBR MATERIAL-~BALANCE CALCULATIONS
The MATADOR steady-state material-balance computer code has been
used to determine the effects of a number of processing-plant variables
on the nuclear performance of a 1000-Mw {electrical) MSBR. Variables
studied were fuel-salt discard rate, removal times for zirconium and
seminoble metals, and efficiency for the removal of protactinium.
REMOVAL OF PROTACTINIUM FROM A SINGLE-FLUID MSEBR
Isolation of protactinium by reductive extraction is proposad,
based on the fact that protactinium is intermediate in nobility between
uranium and thorium. By countercurrently contacting a salt stream con-
taining flucrides of uranium and protactinium with a bismuth stream
containing thorium and lithium, the uranium is transferred from the salt
to a downflowing metal stream and is carried out of the extraction column.
vi
The protactinium, which is trapped in the center of the column, will,
for the most part, be held up for decay in a tank through which wolten
salt is circulated. This protactinium isolation method was analyzed
mathematically; calculated results show it to be attractive.
USE OF THE PROTACTINIUM ISOLATION SYSTEM FOR CONTROLLING THE
URANTIUM CONCENTRATION IN THE BLANKET OF A SINGLE-FLUID MSER
The presently envisioned system for protactinium isolation produces
a salt stream that is free of uranium and protactinium at one point in
the system. This characteristic could be exploited to decrease the
uranium concentration {and hence the uranium inventory) in the blanket
region of a single-fluid MSBR. We concluded that the use of the prot-
actinium~isolation system for decreasing the uranium concentration in
the blanket region to 10% of that in the core region is restricted to
reactor designs having an exchange rate between the core and blanket
regions of less than 0.01% of the flow rate through the core.
REMOVAL OF RARE EARTHS FROM A SINGLE-FLUID MSBR
A reductive extraction method is proposed for removing rare earths
from a single-fluid MSBR. Operation of the system is dominated by the
low separation factors (1.2 to 3.5) between thorium and the rare earths.
Calculated results for the steady-state perforwmance of the system
indicate that an extraction column having approximately 24 stages and
a bismuth flow rate of 15 gpm will be required for removing the rare
earths on a 30-day processing cycle, which is roughly equivalent to
a 50-day removal time for all rare earths.
SEMICONTINUOUS ENGINEERING EXPERIMENTS ON REDUCTIVE EXTRACTION
Equipment for semicontinuous engineering experiments on reductive
extraction was installed, and the initial shakedown operation was com-
viil
pleted. The salt and bismuth feed tanks were pressuve tested. The
internal surfaces of the system were treated for removal of oxides by
contact with hydrogen at 600°C, and a 18L4-kg charge of bismuth was
added to the system and treated for oxide removal. Several experiments
planned with this system are described.
ELECTROLYTIC CELL DEVELOFPMENT
The proposed reductive extraction preocesses for protactinium
isnlation and rare-earth removal refuire electrolytic cells for re-
ducing lithium and thorium fluorides into a bismuth cathode to prepare
the metal streams fed to the extraction columns and for oxidizing
extracted components from the metal streams leaving the columns. Experi-
mental work is reported on (1) a comparison of cell resistances ob-
served with alternating and direct current, (2) the performance of a
graphite anode, and (3) the evaluation of an all-metal cell employing
frozen-wall corrogion protection.
MSRE DISTILLATION EXPERIMENT
Equipment ig being insztalled at the MSRE for demonstrating the
nigh-temperature, low-pressure distillation of molten salt as a means
for separating the lanthanide fission products from the components of
the M3RE fuel-carrier salt, which is a mixture of lithium, beryllium,
and zirconium fluorides. Modifications that were made after the system
was tested with nonradiocactive salt are discussed; they include a change
in the configuratioen of the feed lire to the still pot, installation of
electrical insulation between resistance heaters and process lines to
prevent the lines [rcm being damaged in the event of a heater failure,
installation of absolute filters in the vacuum lines from the feed tank
and the receiver to prevent the spread of radioactivity, completioca of
the secondary containment feor the valve box, and construction of a
condensate sampler suitable for remote operation with radicactive samples.
1. INTRODUCTION
A molten-salt breeder reactor (MSBR) will be fueled with a molten
fluoride mixture that will circulate through the blanket and core re-
gions of the reactor and through the primary heat exchanger. We are
developing processing methods for use in a close-coupled facility for
removing fission products, corrosion products, and fissile materials
from the molten fluoride mixture.
Several operations associated with MSBR processing are under study.
The remaining parts of this section describe (1) a proposed reductive-
extraction flowsheet for a single-fluid MSBR, (2) material-balance cal-
culations that show the effects of the removal time for zirconium, alkali
metals and alkaline earths, europium, and protactinium on reactor per-
formance and that indicate the magnitudes of the heat generation and
mass flows associated with the reactor off-gas, (5) calculated results
showing the steady-state performance of a protactinium isclation system,
(4) an evaluation of the use of Che protactinium isolation system to limit
the uranium concentration in the blanket of a single-fluid MSBR, (5) cal-
culations to predict the steady-state performance of a rare-earth removal
system based on reductive extraction, {6) preliminary testing of the semi-
continuous reductive-extraction facility, (7) experiments related to the
development of electrolytic cells for use with molten salt and bismuth,
and (8) installation of equipment at the MSRE for demonstrating low-
pressure distillation of moltea salt, using irradiated MSRE fuel carrier
salt. This work was carried out by the Chemical Technolegy Division during
the period January-March 1969.
2. PROPOSED FLOWSHEET FOR PROCESSING A SINGLE-FLUID MSBR
BY REDUCTIVE EXTRACTION
L. E. McNeese M. E. Whatley
The process flowsheet envisioned for a single-fluid MSBR is based
on reductive extraction, and routes the reactor salt volume through the
protactinium-isolation and the rare-earth removal systems on 3- and
30-day cycles, respectively. The present version of the process flow-
sheet (Fig. 1) is scaled for a 1000-Mw (electrical) MSBR. The protac-
tinium isolation and the rare-~earth removal systems will be described
in more detail in a later section.
The protactinium~isolation system exploits the fact that protac-
tinium is intermediate ia nobility between uranium and thorium. A
molten-salt stream is withdrawn from the reactor on a 3-day cycle (2.5
gpm) and is fed countercurrent to a 5.3-gpm stream of liquid bismuth in
a l2-stage extraction column. If the correct flow of reductant (thorium
plus lithium) in the bismuth stream entering the coutactor is used, the
uranium in the salt will transfer to the downflowing bismuth stream in
the lower part of the column. The protactinium, however, will concen-
trate midway up the cascade, where most of the protactinium in the
reactor system can be held up by diverting the salt through a suitably
large volume (200 ftj). At steady state, the 253 255U at
Pa decays to
the same rate that it enters the tank from the reactor. The concen-
trations of both protactinium and uranium in the salt leaving the column
are negligible; however, the concentration of rare earths at this point
is approximately the same as that in the reactor. Approximately 10% of
the salt stream leaving the protactinium-isolation column (i.e., 0.25
gpm) will be processed for the removal of rare earths. The remaining
salt passes through an electrolytic oxidizer-reducer, where lithium and
thorium are reduced into a flowing bismuth cathode to provide the metal
stream that is fed to the column. At the anode of the cell, bismuth is
oxidized to BiFf’ which is soluble in the molten salt. The salt stream,
containing BiFfi, is countercurrently contacted with the bismuth stream
exiting from the extraction column in order to oxidize uranium, prot-
actinium, and other materials, which are then transferred to the salt
stream and returned to the reactor.
The concentration of uranium or protactinium must be known at some
point in the column in order to control the concentration of reductant
in the bismuth stream [ed to the column. The uranium concentration is
SALT MAKE UP
043 1+ day
Li=0r2
Be.-—'2=0.€6
Thiy =042
0.25gpm
RE =0.00004%
F
3 STAGE
CONTACTOR
ELECTROLYTIC CELL
11 # 8/ ELECTRCDE
1
3 STACE
CONTACTOR
Bi
REMOVAL
Th=00016
gl |
.94 gpr = 00018
AND
REDUCTIGN
] 3 STAGE
EXTLFACTOR
Ha ] 12 STAGE
EXTR
REACTOR Régcs;”gfi TRACTOR
3 e
{461 > (EL FCTROLYTIC CELL
BR=1.06 (ExcESS 411 2/ELECTRODE -
{_Ufe Th=00016 ©.25 gpm
Limid 51 {30 day CYCLE)
- £E=0.0001i6
F,TO
f RECYCLE & STAGE &
NoF LB 2 UFg
400°C _ EXTRACTOR Ha 31.9 9 moles/doy
HF | z2
* {2 STAGE
EXTRACTOR
Fa £a DECAY
FLUOR 1 cemdval TANK ”
200 13, 0.08 5z
U= 2 2107% A5 g
£ iy Pu:O,OOI;u
28 kw/ft
25k 15 gpm B7
& 8 STAGE
C.i2& gpm U=37x10 ~ = EXTRACTOR LiF-Zrf,
{60 day CYCLED Pfl=‘l‘33_>‘10 TO WASTE
24,4 kw/Ht 3 5.2 moles /doy
0.53 ZcRy
FUEL SALT REPROCESSING 0.7 LiF
PLANT FEED : E=
25% gom TANK 5.2 gom Bi RE_) 190.90por§9
{3 doy CYCLE]} U=0.0018 -8 :
UF, = 0.003 Po = 5.6 410"
Paf,=1.54 110 Th=2.0% QJ
37.9 kw/H> Li=4xi0
Fig. 1.
Proposed Reductive Extraction Processing Flowsheet
ORM_—DWG 69-2353RA
3.6 63 SALT/DAY FOR 41 days
T TeTTTYTTTTTTT T
TRERE EARTH ACCUMULATION 4AND Pa DECAY]
29,613 23617 39.6i115l 396615 39,647
e e b L
7.2 f1¥day
(SEMF - CONTINUOUS)
Ufg
; 100°C 400°C Fi
; MNeF NaF
o
‘2
G493 fr¥ SALT/day
TO WASTE
RE=0.0069 _
Li=0Q,72
Bef, =0.16
Thig =0.1i3
ALL CONCENTRATIONS ARE GIVEN N MOLE FRACTIONS
for a Single-Fluid MSER.
determined by fluorinating approximately 5% of the salt entering the
protactinium decay tank and analyzing the resulting gas stream for UF6.
Means are provided for collecting the UF6 from this operation as well
as from other fluorination operations and for returning this material
to the fuel salt. The UF6 is simultaneously absorbed into the molten
salt and reduced to UFLL by a hydrogen sparge. A bismuth-removal step
will also be provided before the salt returns to the reactor.
Approximately 1.5% of the bismuth stream leaving the extraction
column (i.e., 0.08 gpm) will be hydrofluorinated in the presence of a
salt strzam for the removal of the seminoble metals (Ga, Ce, Cd, In, Sn,
and Sb), various corrosion products {Fe, Ni, and Cr), and fission prod-
uct zircenium. The salt is recycled between the hydrofluorinator and a
fluorinator, where uranium is removed. The principal components that
build up in this salt are fLiF and ZrF, ; the expected steady-state
composition is 47-53 mole % LiF—ZrFM, which has a liquidus of 520°C.
Salt that is free of uranium and protactinium but contains rare
earths is fed to the center of a 2hk-stage extraction column at the rate
of about 0.25 gpm, which is sufficient to process the reactor veolume in
30 days. The salt flows countercurrent to a bismuth stream containing
thorium and lithium. Typically, 60% of the rare ecarths are extracted
from the salt stream in the upper column {an effective removal time of
50 days), and the rare-earth concentration in the lower column is
increased to approximately 0.6G mole %. The bismuth flow rate through
the column is 15 gpm. Part of the salt leaving the column is returned
to the reactor, whereas the remainder is fed to the electrclytic cell
complex; this produces a net effect of reducing thorium and lithium into
the bismuth phase and transferring the extracted rare earths from the
bismuth phase to the returning salt. (Both the anode and the cathode are
flowing streams of bismuth) A Bi-Li stream generated at the cathode of
the cell is fed to the three-stage contactor, which removes most of the
ThFu from the incoming salt. The salt then picks up BiF5 as it passes
1
the anode. The salt stream containing BiF_ is passed countercurrent to
5
the bismuth stream entering the complex from the rare-earth-removal
column in order to oxidize the rare earths, thorium, and lithium from
the bismuth.
Salt containing rare earths at a concentration of 0.69 mole % is
4
withdrawn from the system, at the rate of 0.49 ffyday, through a set of
sequentially arranged 40~ft§
tanks. The active-metal fission products
(Sr, Cs, Ba, Rb, and Eu) are also present in the stream at a concen-
tration equal to that in the reactor, and are removed on a 3000-day
cycle. Use of this system limits the rate at which rare earths could
inadvertently return to the reactor. The salt is fluorinated for
uranium recovery when necessary.
5. MSBR MATERTIAL-BALANCE CALCULATIONS
M. J. Bell L. E. McNeese
The MATADOR computer code for calculating steady-state material
balances has been used to determine the effects of a number of proc-
essing-plant variables on the nuclear performance of a 1000-Mw
(electrical) MSBR, which has a thermal power of 2250 Mw. These var-
iables include fuel-salt discard rate, removal times for zirconium
and seminoble metals, and protactinium removal efficiency. The
reactor under consideration had a power of 2250-Mw (thermal) and
contained 1220 ;f:'t—.j of salt in the case of the studies of zirconium
and seminoble metal vemcval and 1463% ft° for studies of protactinium
removal and salt discard rate. The fuel-salt composition was 67.7-
20.0-12.0-0.3 mele % LiF -BeF,-ThF, -UF
2 o
5.1 Effect of Fuel-Salt Discard Cycle
The active metals {(Rb, Cs, Sr, and Ba) are not removed by reduc-
tive extraction, and their concentrations in the reactor system are
Lo
maintained at acceptable levels by the discard of salt. A study was
made of the effect of the rate of salt discard on the performance of
the reactor, as evidenced by neutron absorptions by the active metals.
The poisoning caused by these metals is shown in Table 1 for salt-
discard cycle times of 800, 1200, 2000, and 3000 days, and is compared
with the total poisoning for all fission products. It is evident that
the poisoning produced by the active metals is a small fraction of the
total at even the longest cycle times, and that low discard rates are
acceptable. However, the discard stream also contains concentrated
rare~earth fission products from the rare-earth reductive-extraction
system, and is the means for removing these materials from the system.
Cycle times longer than 3000 days are not possible because the solubil-
ity of the rare earths in the discard stream would be exceeded. A cycle
time of %000 days for a reactor containing 1220 ftj
of salt corresponds
to a salt discard rate of 0.4l fti/daya The approximate cost for the
fuel salt is $2000/ft5; thus the cost of discarding salt at the above
rate would be $250,000 annually (or 0.036 mill/kwhr), which indicates
that it might be economical to process this stream to partially recover
the carrier salt.
3.2 Effects of Removing Zirconium and Seminoble Metals
Zirconium is very similar in chemical behavior to uranium, and will
be extracted into the bismuth stream in the protactinium isolation sys-
tem. If means for removing zirconium from the bismuth are not employed,
the zivrconium will be returned to the reactor with the uranium and will
constitute a serious neutron peison. However, zirconium can be removed
from the system by hydrofluorination of part of the bismuth in the
presence of salt, followed by fluorination of the salt to recover the
uranium as UF6. This concentrates the zirconium in a salt stream as
ZrFu, which is then discarded.
Table 1.
of the Salt Discard Cycle
Neutron Absorptions by Active Metals as a Function
Discard Neutron Absorptions per 100 Fissile Absorptionsa
Cycle Total Total
Time Active Fission
(days) Rb Sr Cs Ba Metals Products
800 0.000059% 0.017L 0.00166 0.00672 0.0264 2.15
1200 0.00008588 0.0253% 0.00248 0.00925 0.0372 2.16
2000 0.00015 0.0398 0.00%9 0.0159 0.0598 2.18
3000 0.00022 0.0561 0.0055 0.0267 0.0885 2.21
e
aPoisoning x 10 .
A study was conducted to determine the effect of zirconium removal
time on neutron poisoning by fission-product zirconium. The results of
this investigation are summarized in Table 2, which shows the poisoning
due to zirconium isotopes for removal times of 50, 200, and 800 days.
The poisoning by zirconium is only 2% of the combined fission-product
poisoning for a 200-day removal time, and increases to 8% for an 800-
day removal time. On this basis, it was decided that the bismuth should
be processed on a 200-day cycle to keep zirconium poisoning at an accept-
able level. This requires the continuous hydrofluorination of 1.5% of
the circulating bismuth in the protactinium isolation system, or about
6.7 ft7 of bismuth per day.
Hydrofluorination of the bismuth stream to remove Zr will also
serve as a cleanup step to remove corrosion products (Fe and Ni) and
may remove fission products that are intermediate in nobility between
the noble metals and uranium (Zn, Ga, Ge, Cd, In, and Sn), which
are designated as seminoble metals. 1In the absence of the zirconium-
removal step, these materials would accumulate in the bismuth phase
until, eventually, saturation and precipitation occurred. Such an
event might impair the performance of the protactinium isolation system.
Table 3 shows the chemical composition of the mixture of seminoble
metals and the production rate of these materials, assuming that they
are removed on a 200-day cycle. This group of fission products, which
consists primarily of isotopes of tin, does not contain important neutron
poisons and is not a significant source of heat. The heat-generation
rate of the combined seminoble metals is about 0.02 Mw. This heat
generation rate is small compared to that of the zirconium isotopes
removed in this operation, which is 0.39 Mw.
5.3 Effect of Protactinium Removal Efficiency
Another parameter that was studied is the efficiency of the prot-
actinium isolation system, which has been defined as the ratio of a 5~
day removal time for protactinium to the actual removal time. These
k\f)
. a . ,
Table 2. Neutron Absorptions by Zirconium Isotopes
as a Function of Zirconium Removal Time
Removal Time (days)
Isotope 50 200 800
99, 0.0000035 0.000017 0.000062
o 0.00145 0.00608 0.0231
92 7y 0.00056 0.00148 0.00579
95y 0.00761 0.0305 0.1199
I 0.00012 0.00048 0.00196
96zr 0.000058 0.000234 0.000955
Total Zr 0.00954 0.0388 0.152
Total Fission
Products 2.18 2.21 2.32
aAbsorptions per 100 fissile absorptions. Poisoning x 102.
Table 3. Composition of Seminoble Metals Stream from 2250-Mw (thermal)
MSBR for a 200-day Removal Time
Production Rate
Element (mole/day) Mole Fraction
n 2.60 x lO‘r 9.27 % 10'6
ol -6
Ga 1.70 x 10 6.06 x 10
- -
Ge 6.65 x 107" 2.36 x 107"
cd 1.22 x 1072 L.35 x 107
=4 -3
In 1.76 x 10 6.27 x 10
Sn 2.60 x 107 9.27 x 107t
Total 2.81 x 107 1.00
10
studies were performed using a combination of the MATADOR material-
balance code and the ROD reactor optimization and design code. The
combinedVCode, called MODROD, uses the MODRIC nine-~group diffusion
calculation and two-dimensional flux synthesis to compute the fissile
inventories and a neutron balance for a given "lumped" fission-product
concentration obtained from MATADOR. The fissile nuclide reaction rates
computed by ROD are then used by MATADOR to obtain a new estimate of the
lumped fission-product concentrations. This procedure 1s repeated until
the lumped fission-~product concentrations converge. A few of the indi-
vidual points computed by the MODROD code were compared with the exact
ROD treatment of the same case and were found to be in excellent agree-
ment.
The proposed protactinium-isolation system will not perform with
100% efficiency; therefore, the effective protactinium removal time will
be greater than the 3-~day processing cycle time. Figure 2 presents the
effect of this longer cycle time on the fuel yield and the fuel-cycle
cost of the reference MSBR design. It is obvious from this figure that
the reactor performance varies only slightly for a protactinium removal
time of 3 to 5 days, which is the expected operating range.
3.4 Quantities of Heat and Mass in the MSBR 0ff-Gas System
A series of investigations conceraing the MSBR ocff-gas system has
been carried out. Significant quantities of noble metals and noble
gases and their daughters will be carried into this system by a helium
stream that has been contacted with the fuel salt. These materials
will be intensely radioactive and will generate about 30 Mw of heat.
The system must also be able to accommodate all volatile fission products
that are evolved throughout the processing plant. Table ! summarizes the
important volatile radionuclides that are generated in the processing
plant and designates their point of origin. This table shows that the
noble-metal group of fission products is an important source of volatile
FUEL YIELD (% of fissile inventory per annum}
ORNL—DWG 70—10033
Pa PROCESSING TIME (days)
QEL-CYCLE COST
emmemnemenli.
2.25 / \\ 0.0!
\
2.00 O
O 0.4 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
Pa PROCESSING EFFICIENCY
o 30 15 10 75 & 5 375 3
3.50
£
3.25 E—_ 0.05 &
/ E
4—
3.00 YIELD £ 0.04 @
Q)
\ N
275 0.03 O
/ %
1
Lol
250 002 T
N Tz
L
&
=
<
T
o
Fig. 2. MSBR Performance as a Function of Protactinium Processing Efficiency.
11
Table L.
Production of Volatile Radicactive Isotopes in an MSBR Continuous Processing Plant
Rate {gram-atoms/Mwc) at Which Voiatile Radiocactive Isotopes Are:
Recovered Total
Recovered from Evolved from from Fluori- Activity
Removed by Evolved from Fluorinator in Salt in Rare- nator in Rare~ Production
Sparging Separated Pa Isolation Earth Process- Earth Process- Produced Rate
Isotope Half-Life with Helium Noble Metals System ing Plant ing Plaat (Total) {curies/Mwd )
% . ~ -7 e -
“1 12.26 y 4.L8 x 10 ---- ---- L8 x 107! 1.6y x 1677
§7m, | -5 | -5 /. - -& ,
<K 1.86 h 1..8 x 107 £.90 x 10 7 .82 x 10 c 7.72 % 10 & ---- L.35 x 10 - 7.2% x 107
| “ - - =5 . el . -& - . !
Eomy b4 h 8.75 x 1077 1.66 x 1077 5.680 x 107 1.0% x 10 © - 1.00 x 1077 6.75 x 16
&+ . -6 . -5 ! - - -6 -
Tkt 10.76 y S .6k x 1070 5.61 x 107 8.75 x 10 Y 236 % 1077 545 x 1070 5.06 x 107
&7 . -k - ; -1 . -
Tkr 76 m 1.8% x 10 ---- 5.02 x 1077 9.60 x 1071 ---- 1,85 x 107 LA x 10
88 -k - - ] 3
Kr 2.80 h 2.21 x 10 ---- 1.0k x 10 7 6.9% x 10 7 --=- .ot ox 107 2041 x 107
o o -4 L . =& - -4 '
Total Kr® - 8.6L x 10 1.09 x 167" L0 % 10 5 vooh x 1077 ---- 5.9% x 10 2000 % 107
189I 1.7 % IOT ¥ - .35 x 107 1.18 x LO_b -——- 2 LhO x 10_T 849 x 1677 L.7h x 167" R3
131 - -5 = o -y L
5 I 8.05 d -——— 1.720 x 1C 1,19 x 10 “ ~--- 2413 x 10 7 .21 x 1o 1.91 x 1o’
2 -4 ‘ -& , -4 oo 5
15 T .26 h ———- 1.94% x 10 1.4% x 10 © ———— ---- 1.9k x 10 2257 x 107
133 ~ ., -4 | -7 L b ok
I 20.3 h _———- 2.30 x 10 G.ab o x 10 —_——— -— 2051 x 10 4.56 x 10
i3k 5.20 m S 2.20 x 10'L’ 3,07 x 10'8 S ———- 2,20 x ;(;“L’ 765 x LG
32 6.68 h ——-- 2.8 x 1077 1.32 x 10'6 S - 2.97 x 1077 1.25 x 10
: - - o -7 - -4 ,
Total Ia --- ~—-- ¢.7h x 10 L.hs x 10 6 - .90 = 10 : o.ou ox 10 107 x 10
131 - -& . =7 . -9 =8 -1li -6 i
> Xe it.6 d 1,89 x 10 © 9.60 x 10 ° 3.60 % 10 7 1.9% x 10 1.70 x 10 °° 1.12 % 10 1.21 x 17
%%y : -7 - -G -& ' e j -
Ly 2.26 d 750 x 107 .5l x 1070 Lok x 1070 5.01L x 107 ---- 620 x 107 Seobox LU
1%5. o o -5 o -L . 7 . b i N
Xe 5.27 @ Z.90 x 10 2.30 x 10 6.0 w1t 1.30 x 10 ---- 2.60 x 10 £.26 x 1C
Loomye 15.6 m L.66 x 107 8.51 x 1076 7.96 x 1071 £.0% x 107 ---- 5.61 x 107 £.59 x 107
L0 %e 3.1 n 1.64% x 107 2.8L x 1077 1.22 x 10'6 5,01 x 1077 —-- 1,96 x 10 &by x 10
- 3 .“’I = -6 = .;L - 5 -4 o T
Total Xea --- LOT7 = 10 5 7.18 x 10 ! 2.21 x 10 ¢ 2.5% x 10 1.70 x 10 L 1.7% x 10 7 2.8k x 10
a . . . .
Total preduction rates include stable isotopes not shown.
Total activity includes very short-lived
isotopes not shown.
radionuclides; thus the chemical behavior of the neoble metals in the
fuel salt will greatly influence the design of the processing plant.
Smaller amounts of volatile fission products will be evelved in the
fluorinaters and in the rare-earth decay tanks.
The noble-gas and noble-metal fission~product groups have been
examined in more detail using the ORIGEN isotope generation and decay
code. 1t was assumed that these materials migrated to circulating
helium bubbles with a 50~sec residence time in the fuel salt, and that
the helium bubbles were stripped from the salt on a 110-s2c cycle. 1In
this investigation, the MATADOR material~balance code was used to com-