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Designing Safety into a High-power Neutron Spallation Source

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Presentation on theme: "Designing Safety into a High-power Neutron Spallation Source"— Presentation transcript:

1 Designing Safety into a High-power Neutron Spallation Source
Yacine Kadi (CERN) Karel Samec (Formerly Paul Scherrer Institute currently ENSI / CERN) Lessons learned from developing neutron spallation sources Application to a proposed new design Possible applications and current opportunities 1

2 Purpose of a compact neutron source
Neutron sources are used in laboratories SINQ - Villigen Switzerland, JSNS –Hokkaido Japan, SNS - Oakridge USA Further installations are planned (ESS in Lund SE, MYRRHA in BE) Life sciences / Material sciences / Nuclear physics Industrial applications are possible: power from Thorium / spent Uranium / ADS Isotope production for medical purposes Irradiation facility for nuclear materials 2

3 Neutron spallation source development
2006 MEGAPIE with iradiation First Liquid Metal neutron source Megawatt range 2009 EURISOL without iradiation High speed compact Liquid metal source 4 MW range 2011 ESS Liquid metal vs Solid target 4 to 10 MW range

4 Relevant Safety Guideline
Lessons learnt Relevance Relevant Safety Guideline System Multiple containment strategy is vital Natural circulation is of little value Leaks must not flow into the path of the beam Leak analysis and mitigation strategy in place No organic cooling liquid inside source Development using multi-physics analysis Component Calibrated electro-magnetic pumps are reliable High-grade finishes reduce drag losses T91 /316 stainless steel are an appropriate choice Signal Diversify flow-meter instrumentation Instruments in- and outside of source (beam) Ensure leak detection using diverse sensors Pressure transducers and TCs are resilient

5 MW Class proposal  50 cm  20 cm Proton beam
Upper Heat exchanger Liquid Metal flow Flow of Liquid metal in source External Heat Exchanger Electromagnetic Pump Proton beam Evacuated beam tube for proton beam Guide tube directing Liquid Metal flow Beam window (where beam enters target) n n Containment n n Spallation zone in liquid metal n Existing neutron flux n  20 cm 5

6 Modularity  50 cm 4 MW  50 cm 2 MW  50 cm 4 m 1 MW 2 m 1 m 1 m 1 m
n 4 MW  50 cm n 2 MW  50 cm 4 m n 1 MW 2 m 1 m 1 m 1 m 1 m  20 cm  20 cm  20 cm 6

7 Small Power units < 100 kW
 5 cm  30 cm  10 cm  20 cm 0.6 m Neutron irradiation Section HEX Section Beam Deposition  10 cm 3 cm

8 New Design

9 Way Forward Design, build and test with end-use focus
Key goals : Output: Build and test thermally at 4 MW or 100 kW (test data) Demonstrate capability 10 kW - 10 MW (analysis) Demonstrate neutronic performance (analysis) Design test under irradiation (drawings)

10 Tests for validating the source
Hydraulics inside the target. Electromagnetic Pump trips Thermal cooling at the beam window under normal operations and during pump trips. (strain gauges / TCs) Structural integrity of the target under the impact of a water leak from the heat exchanger Hydraulic performance of the heat exchanger, in particular transients consecutive to a pump trip Structural integrity of the containment under a double perforation of the target leading to liquid metal leaking

11 Thank you


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