The Interim Staff Guidance on burnup credit (ISG-8) issued by the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission's (U.S. NRC) Spent Fuel Project Office recommends restricting the use of burnup credit to assemblies that have not used burnable absorbers. This recommended restriction eliminates a large portion of the currently discharged spent fuel assemblies from cask loading, and thus severely limits the practical usefulness of burnup credit. In the absence of readily available information on burnable poison rod (BPR) design specifications and usage in U.S. pressurized-water-reactors (PWRs), and the subsequent reactivity effect of BPR exposure on discharged spent nuclear fuel (SNF), NRC staff has indicated a need for additional information in t...
Knowledge of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) source term (decay heat, reactivity, nuclide inventory, other ...
In the past, criticality safety analyses for spent fuel storage and transport canisters assumed the ...
Fuel rods with burnup values beyond 50GWd/t are characterised by relatively large amounts of fission...
The Interim Staff Guidance on burnup credit (ISG-8) for pressurized water reactor (PWR) spent nuclea...
The concept of taking credit for the reduction in reactivity of burned or spent nuclear fuel (SNF) d...
This report presents studies to assess reactivity margins and loading curves for pressurized water r...
Spent fuel transportation and storage cask designs based on a burnup credit approach must consider i...
One of the significant issues yet to be resolved for using burnup credit (BUC) for spent nuclear fue...
This report proposes and documents a computational benchmark problem for the estimation of the addit...
When representing the behavior of commercial spent nuclear fuel (SNF), credit is sought for the redu...
A methodology for performing and applying nuclear criticality safety calculations, for PWR spent nuc...
This paper summarizes efforts related to developing a technically justifiable approach for addressin...
Calculations for long-term-disposal criticality safety of spent nuclear fuel requires the applicatio...
Burnable poisons are used in all modern nuclear reactors to permit higher loading of fuel without th...
Knowledge of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) source term (decay heat, reactivity, nuclide inventory, other ...
Knowledge of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) source term (decay heat, reactivity, nuclide inventory, other ...
In the past, criticality safety analyses for spent fuel storage and transport canisters assumed the ...
Fuel rods with burnup values beyond 50GWd/t are characterised by relatively large amounts of fission...
The Interim Staff Guidance on burnup credit (ISG-8) for pressurized water reactor (PWR) spent nuclea...
The concept of taking credit for the reduction in reactivity of burned or spent nuclear fuel (SNF) d...
This report presents studies to assess reactivity margins and loading curves for pressurized water r...
Spent fuel transportation and storage cask designs based on a burnup credit approach must consider i...
One of the significant issues yet to be resolved for using burnup credit (BUC) for spent nuclear fue...
This report proposes and documents a computational benchmark problem for the estimation of the addit...
When representing the behavior of commercial spent nuclear fuel (SNF), credit is sought for the redu...
A methodology for performing and applying nuclear criticality safety calculations, for PWR spent nuc...
This paper summarizes efforts related to developing a technically justifiable approach for addressin...
Calculations for long-term-disposal criticality safety of spent nuclear fuel requires the applicatio...
Burnable poisons are used in all modern nuclear reactors to permit higher loading of fuel without th...
Knowledge of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) source term (decay heat, reactivity, nuclide inventory, other ...
Knowledge of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) source term (decay heat, reactivity, nuclide inventory, other ...
In the past, criticality safety analyses for spent fuel storage and transport canisters assumed the ...
Fuel rods with burnup values beyond 50GWd/t are characterised by relatively large amounts of fission...