View Full Version : Nuclear Power Plant Spent Fuel Types
average guy
Feb4-12, 12:15 AM
nuclear engineers
it does seem like it requires types of
current nuclear power plants.
so what are they and what are
the spent fuels?
Have A Nice Day!
Astronuc
Feb4-12, 06:18 AM
Light water reactors - 359 in operation in the world, of which 104 are in the US.
http://www.iaea.org/NuclearPower/WCR/LWR/
The USA has 104 nuclear power reactors - 69 pressurized water reactors (PWRs) with combined capacity of about 67 GWe and 35 boiling water reactors (BWRs) with combined capacity of about 34 GWe.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf41.html
France has 58 nuclear reactors operated by Electricite de France (EdF), with total capacity of over 63 GWe, supplying 421 billion kWh per year of electricity (net), 78% of the total generated there in 2011.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf40.html
Russia has 33 reactors: 1 FBR, 11 RBMKs, 17 VVERs, and 4 small graphite moderated reactors.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf45.html
The Republic of Korea (S. Korea) has 4 CANDUs and 17 PWRs.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf81.html
Germany has 17 operating nuclear power reactors. Six units are boiling water reactors (BWR), 11 are pressurised water reactors (PWR). All were built by Siemens-KWU.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf43.html
The UK has a fleet of gas-cooled (CO2) reactors, 3 Magnox and 14 AGRs. There is one PWR in the UK.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf84.html
Sweden has 10 LWRs - 7 BWRs (2 BWR units were shutdown, one in 1999 and the other in 2005) and 3 PWRs
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf42.html
Spain has 8 LWRs - 2 BWRs and 6 PWRs
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf85.html
Switzerland has 5 LWRs - 2 BWRs and 3 PWRs.
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/inf86.html
There are a handful of liquid metal (fast) reactors.
More general information - http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/
http://www.world-nuclear.org/info/reactors.html
Fuel is spent when the fissile inventory is depleted and fission products have accumulated to the point where is it not economical to continue operation, or the fuel has reached it's technical (licensed) limits, and the fuel is discharged.
average guy
Feb4-12, 03:02 PM
asto nuke
this was on computer bright and early.
you certainly had your coffee.
that is a FIRST CLASS answer.
thank you sir.
i will respond soon.
Have A Nice Day!
Saurian
Feb13-12, 11:50 AM
Astronuc's answer was excellent. This is my first post and I hope that I have it in the right place. I believe that this question is related, so I will ask it here. The mods can certainly move it if I have posted in the wrong place.
A friend asked me about a statement he read that bombs could be made from spent fuel from most reactors.
1) Is this because the the amount of the fissionable plutonium, while lower than optimum, is still high enough to build a bomb with sufficient effort?
2) Does anyone know of a source that links the spent fuels results to the type of reactor used?
Thanks.
Astronuc
Feb27-12, 06:11 AM
Astronuc's answer was excellent. This is my first post and I hope that I have it in the right place. I believe that this question is related, so I will ask it here. The mods can certainly move it if I have posted in the wrong place.
A friend asked me about a statement he read that bombs could be made from spent fuel from most reactors.
1) Is this because the the amount of the fissionable plutonium, while lower than optimum, is still high enough to build a bomb with sufficient effort?
2) Does anyone know of a source that links the spent fuels results to the type of reactor used?
Thanks.
(The plutonium isotopic composition of used MOX fuel at 45 GWd/tU burnup is about 37% Pu-239, 32% Pu-240, 16% Pu-241, 12% Pu-242 and 4% Pu-238.) Ref: http://world-nuclear.org/info/inf29.html
WG-Pu has better than 90% Pu-239.
With respect to 2), the fuel geometric characteristics are general specific to a reactor design. In PWRs (including VVERs), the control element geometry is fixed, so each unit is restricted to a given geometric (lattice) design, unless the upper head and control guide structures are replaced.
BWRs have more flexibility, and we've seen an evolution from 7x7 to 8x8 to 9x9 and 10x10 lattices over the past 40 years.
CANDUs have similar flexibility and more advanced fuel element designs use more fuel rods in the same lateral envelope.
AGRs are pretty much fixed in what they use.
The discharge burnup depends on energy density, batch fraction and cycle length. Discharge burnups for LWRs are typically in the range of 45-55 GWd/tHM, with BWRs lagging PWRs. CANDUs use much lower enrichment, so their discharge burnup is much less.
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