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  • Standardization of Subsized Specimens for Post-Irradiation Examination and Advanced Characterization of Fuel and Structural Materials for Small Modular Reactor and Advanced Reactor Applications

    Open for proposals

    Project Type

    Coordinated Research Project

    Project Code

    T12033

    CRP

    2339

    Approved Date

    16 November 2022

    Status

    Active - Ongoing

    Start Date

    8 December 2023

    Expected End Date

    30 November 2028

    Participating Countries

    Canada
    China
    Czech Republic
    Indonesia
    Jordan
    Kingdom of the Netherlands
    Nigeria
    Republic of Korea
    United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

    Description

    The proposed Coordinated Research Project (CRP) will support interested IAEA Member States in their efforts to support new or advanced fuel developments for use in innovative reactors. Post-irradiation examination (PIE) has remained a vital component in the understanding, development, qualification and continued surveillance of irradiated reactor fuels and related structural materials. Considering that it usually takes a long period to generate PIE data and more work is still required to develop the PIE data for new or advanced fuel types for innovative reactors, multi-laboratory collaboration has been proposed as an effective means of developing such PIE data for new or advanced fuel developments and thus obtaining adequate fuel/fuel assembly qualification information to support the safe operation of specific new or advanced fuel types. Under this CRP, a multi-laboratory round-robin PIE plan will be developed and executed to assess the feasibility of expanding PIE capabilities of an individual laboratory that may suffer equipment availability issues, resource issues, etc., through the application of multi-laboratory collaboration, to support advanced characterization of advanced/next-generation fuels and structural materials for innovative reactors. Effective multi-laboratory collaboration strategies can be realized through efficient and standardized sample preparation and testing, packaging and radioactive material shipping/transport mechanisms from one laboratory to another.??

    Objectives

    To support Member States by demonstrating that collaborative efforts for advanced characterization of innovative fuel types can be performed and the required fuel performance parameters for a given fuel type or material can be properly assessed, sample preparation guidelines are well defined and similar across laboratories, and irradiated sample transport is viable.

    Specific objectives

    To develop a ‘PIE roadmap’ (for a given fuel and/or structural material type such as TRISO, SiC, graphite, new or existing alloys) that incorporates advanced characterization techniques and harmonizes manufacture, preparation, testing, and characterization methods across collaborating laboratories.

    To execute the round-robin PIE exercise for a given fuel and/or structural material type that includes both non-destructive examination (NDE) and destructive examination (DE).

    To demonstrate and look for efficiencies associated with transport of small /sub-sized samples to and from collaborating laboratories.

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