System and process for production and collection of radioisotopes
10446283 ยท 2019-10-15
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02E30/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
G21C23/00
PHYSICS
G21C19/20
PHYSICS
International classification
G21C19/20
PHYSICS
G21C23/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
A means for installing material, through a fuel assembly instrument thimble insert, into the existing instrument thimbles in nuclear fuel assemblies for the purpose of allowing the material to be converted to commercially valuable quantities of desired radioisotopes during reactor power operations during a remainder of a fuel cycle and removing the radioisotopes from the core through the reactor flange opening once the fuel assemblies have been removed for refueling. The invention also describes methods that can be used to harvest the irradiated material so it can be packaged for transportation from the reactor to a location where the desired radioisotope(s) can be extracted from the fuel assembly instrument thimble insert.
Claims
1. A nuclear fuel assembly flux thimble insert comprising: an elongated tubular housing having an axis along its elongated dimension, the elongated tubular housing being closed at a forward end and capped at a rearward end to form a target specimen chamber there between within an interior of the elongated tubular housing, the elongated tubular housing being sized to slide within an instrument thimble of a nuclear fuel assembly, with the rearward end structured to be driven by a drive cable of an existing moveable in-core detector system; and an elongated target specimen captured between a forward axial position plug and a rear axial position plug, wherein the axial position plugs extend across the interior of the elongated tubular housing, wherein the axial position plugs are structured to seat against an interior wall of the elongated tubular housing to hold the target specimen at a preselected axial position within the interior of the elongated tubular housing, wherein the target specimen is nuclear reactor transmutable to produce at least one commercial radioisotope.
2. The nuclear fuel assembly flux thimble insert of claim 1, wherein the at least one commercial radioisotope comprises one or more of Co-60, W-188, Ni-63, Bi-213, and Ac-225.
3. The nuclear fuel assembly flux thimble insert of claim 1, wherein the elongated tubular housing is constructed from zirconium or a zirconium alloy.
4. The nuclear fuel assembly flux thimble insert of claim 1, wherein the axial position plugs maintain their axial position due to friction between interfacing surfaces on the axial position plugs and the interior wall of the elongated tubular housing.
5. The nuclear fuel assembly flux thimble insert of claim 1, wherein the axial position plugs maintain their axial position by fitting in slight recesses in the interior wall of the elongated tubular housing.
6. The nuclear fuel assembly flux thimble insert of claim 5, wherein the axial position plugs have an upper and lower surface that extends substantially orthogonal to the axis with an outer, substantially circular wall extending between the upper and lower surface, wherein the axial dimension of the outer, substantially circular wall is sized to fit in one of the recesses.
7. The nuclear fuel assembly flux thimble insert of claim 6, wherein the interface of the upper and lower surfaces with the outer, substantially circular wall are slanted at an acute angle to facilitate lodging and dislodging of the axial position plugs from the recesses.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A further understanding of the invention can be gained from the following description of the preferred embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(5) One preferred embodiment of the radioisotope production process of this invention utilizes the flux thimbles that provide the access conduit for the existing movable in-core detector fission chambers to the instrument thimble in the fuel assembly to periodically measure the reactor power distribution, to insert the target material to be transmuted into a desired radioisotope, into the fuel assembly instrument thimble. The flux thimble containing the target material, hereafter referred to as the target flux thimble 34, is shown schematically in
(6)
(7) The typical prior art method for producing commercially valuable radioisotopes that require long term irradiation inside commercial nuclear reactors involves inserting one or more fuel pin structures that contain the target material into one or more fuel assemblies. The process offered by this invention avoids the need to perform the very rigorous, time consuming and expensive analysis needed to support modifications to a licensed fuel assembly design to incorporate the modified fuel pin structures. The fuel assembly instrument thimbles that are accessed via the flux thimbles by the moveable in-core detector fission chambers do not require any modifications. Since there are no modifications to the fuel assembly design required by the approach documented herein, there is little cost associated with implementation of this process.
(8) The irradiation of target materials to produce a desired radioisotope is the first step in the production of any commercially valuable radioisotope. Consequently, the potential business is the entire breadth of the longer lived radioisotope production market. Some notable highly desired (and priced) radioisotopes suitable for the production process addressed by this invention include Co-60, W-188, Ni-63, Bi-213, and Ac-225. The process described herein lends itself to the use of radioactive target material since the ability to shield the target material before it is irradiated is supported by the existing features of the moveable in-core detector architecture.
(9) While specific embodiments of the invention have been described in detail, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various modifications and alternatives to those details could be developed in light of the overall teachings of the disclosure. Accordingly, the particular embodiments disclosed are meant to be illustrative only and not limiting as to the scope of the invention which is to be given the full breadth of the appended claims and any and all equivalents thereof.