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Postclosure Criticality Consequence Analysis - Scoping Phase

Price, Laura L.; Alsaed, Abdelhalim A.; Brady, Patrick V.; Gross, M.B.; Hardin, Ernest H.; Nole, Michael A.; Prouty, J.L.; Banerjee, K.; Davidson, G.G.

Commercial generation of energy via nuclear power plants in the United States (U.S.) has generated thousands of metric tons of spent nuclear fuel (SNF), the disposal of which is the responsibility of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) (Nuclear Waste Policy Act of 1982). Any repository licensed to dispose of the SNF must meet requirements regarding the long-term performance of the repository. In evaluating the long-term performance of the repository, one of the events that may need to be considered is the SNF achieving a critical configuration. Of particular interest is the potential behavior of SNF in dual-purpose canisters (DPCs), which are currently being used to store the SNF but were not designed for permanent disposal. As part of a multiyear plan that is currently being developed for the DOE, a two-phase study has been initiated to examine the potential consequences, with respect to long-term repository performance, of criticality events that might occur during the postclosure period in a hypothetical repository containing DPCs. Phase I, a scoping phase, consists of generating an approach intended to be a starting point for the development of the modeling tools and techniques that may eventually be required either to exclude criticality from or include criticality in a performance assessment (PA) as appropriate. The Phase I approach will be used to guide the analyses and simulations done in Phase II to further the development of these modeling tools and techniques as well as the overall knowledge base. The purpose of this report is to document the approach created during Phase I. The study discussed herein focuses on the consequences of criticality in a DPC; it does not address the probability of occurrence of a criticality event. This approach examines two types of criticality events for SNF disposed of in a single type of DPC: a steady-state criticality and a transient criticality. The steady-state critical event is characterized by a relatively low constant power output over 10,000 years, while the transient critical event is characterized by a power spike that lasts on the order of seconds. Possible effects of the criticality are an increase in the radionuclide inventory; an increase in temperature; and a change in the chemistry inside the waste package, along with a change in radionuclide solubilities, fuel degradation rates, and steel corrosion rates. Additionally, for transient criticality the possibility of mechanical damage to the engineered and natural barriers also exists.