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Safeguards Material Control And Accountancy Considerations For Molten Salt Reactors...

by Karen K Hogue, Philip W Gibbs, Michael P Dion
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Journal Name
Proceedings of the INMM & ESARDA Joint Virtual Annual Meeting
Book Title
Proceedings of the INMM & ESARDA Joint Annual Meeting
Publication Date
Page Numbers
1 to 10
Issue
Proceeding
Publisher Location
New Jersey, United States of America
Conference Name
INMM and ESARDA Joint Annual Meeting
Conference Location
Virtual, Tennessee, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
INMM and ESARDA
Conference Date

Molten salt reactors are a class of nuclear reactor designs with features and operational characteristics that vary significantly. Variations in design features include the physical, chemical, and isotopic composition of fresh and irradiated fuel, neutron energy spectrums, breeding ratios, and the design’s plans for chemical processing. Specific designs within these variations affect the material control and accountancy approaches implemented by both domestic and international nuclear safeguards. This paper identifies safeguards-relevant design features for molten salt reactors and describes how each feature might influence both domestic and international nuclear safeguards implementation. Additionally, this paper describes two potential general categories of material control and accountancy approaches that may be appropriate for molten salt reactors: a black box material-balance approach with measurements on the feed and waste streams combined with robust containment and surveillance on the nuclear material within the reactor or an approach that aims to quantify the nuclear material throughout the reactor (i.e., a process monitoring approach). This paper describes the benefits and challenges of these approaches to meet technical safeguards objectives and identifies gaps in current technologies.