Title: In the Name of God
1In the Name of God
- Isfahan University of Technology
- Department of Chemistry
2Nuclear Fuel Cycle
- By Habib Soleimani
- Supervisor Dr. Ghaziaskar
3Contents
- Definitions
- Uranium and its compounds
- Uranium Mining and Milling
- Uranium Conversion
- Uranium enrichment
- Fuel fabrication
- Spent fuel
- Reprocessing
4Definitions
- Radioactivity ( radioactive decay )
- 1 Becquerel 1 decays/S
- 1 Curie 37 billion decays/S
- Half-life
5Definitions
- Radiation
- particles neutrons, alpha particles, and
beta particles - energy waves of pure energy, such as
gamma and X-rays. -
6Fission
7 Element Sym-bol Atomic number Half-life Decay mode
Actinium Ac 89 22 y a,b-
Astatine At 85 8.3 h a
Francium Fr 87 22 min a,b-
Plutonium Pu 94 3.8 105 y a
Polonium Po 84 138.4 d a
Thorium Th 90 1.4 1010 y a
Uranium U 92 4.5 109 y a
8Uranium
- Uranium is present in the Earths crust at an
average concentration of 2 ppm. Its natural
abundance is equal that of Sn. - Acidic rocks with high silicate, such as granite,
have higher than average concentrations of
uranium. - sedimentary and basic rocks have lower than
average concentrations . - Isotopes U-233, U-234, U-235, U-236, U-237,
U-238 and U-239 - Specific activity 24.9 103 Bq/g
- All isotopes decay by emission of a-radiation
with a radiation energy between 4.2 and 5.2 MeV.
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10Uranium Compounds
- Uranium metal
- Uranium dioxide ( UO2 )
- Thriuranium octaoxide ( U3O8 )
- Uranium tetrafluoride ( UF4 )
- Uranium hexafluoride ( UF6 )
11Uranium metal
- Uranium metal is heavy, silvery white, malleable,
ductile, and softer than steel . - d 19 g/cm3 , 1.6 times more dense than lead.
- it is subject to surface oxidation.
- Water attacks uranium metal slowly at room
temperature and rapidly at higher temperatures. - Uranium metal powder or chips will ignite
spontaneously in air at ambient temperature.
12Uranium metal
13Uranium dioxide ( UO2 )
- It is an basic oxide.
- Most commonly used as a nuclear reactor fuel.
- It is a stable ceramic that can be heated almost
to its melting point, 5,212F (2,878C), without
serious mechanical deterioration . - It does not react with water to any significant
level. - At ambient temperatures, UO2 will gradually
convert to U3O8. - Particle density 10.96 g/cm3 ,
bulk density 2.0 - 5.0 g/cm3 - Uranium dioxide (UO2) will ignite spontaneously
in heated air and burn brilliantly .
14Uranium dioxide ( UO2 )
15Thriuranium octaoxide ( U3O8 )
- It is an amphoteric oxide.
- Triuranium octaoxide (U3O8) occurs naturally as
the olive-green-colored mineral pitchblende. - In the presence of oxygen (O2), uranium dioxide
(UO2) and uranium trioxide (UO3) are oxidized to
U3O8. - It is generally considered for disposal purposes
because, under normal environmental conditions,
U3O8 is one of the most kinetically and
thermodynamically stable forms of uranium. - It is insoluble in water
- Particle density 8.3 g/cm3
bulk density 1.5
- 4.0 g/cm3
16Thriuranium octaoxide ( U3O8 )
17Uranium tetrafluoride ( UF4 )
- Uranium tetrafluoride (UF4) is a green
crystalline solid. - m.p. 1,760F (96C)
- It is formed by the reaction UF6 H2 in a
vertical tube-type reactor or by the action
HFUO2 . - It is generally an intermediate in the conversion
of UF6 to either uranium oxide (U3O8 or UO2) or
uranium metal. - Uranium tetrafluoride (UF4) reacts slowly with
moisture at ambient temperature, forming UO2 and
HF, which are very corrosive. - Bulk density 2.0 - 4.5 g/cm3.
18Uranium tetrafluoride ( UF4 )
19Uranium hexafluoride ( UF6 )
- Uranium hexafluoride (UF6) is the chemical form
of uranium that is used during the uranium
enrichment process. - Within a reasonable range of temperature and
pressure, it can be a solid, liquid, or gas. - Disadvantage
UF62H2O(g/l)
4HF(g)UO2F2 - UF6 is not considered a preferred form for
long-term storage or disposal because of its
relative instability.
20Uranium hexafluoride ( UF6 )
- UF6 is characterised by an unusually high vapour
pressure for a solid. - UF6 is not flammable and is inert in dry air.
Temperat-ure (oC) Vapor Pressure(mbar)
0 24
20 107
56 1013.5
64 1516.5
21UF6
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23Mining
- Excavation Excavation may be underground and
open pit mining . - In situ leaching (ISL) oxygenated acidic or
basic groundwater is circulated through a very
porous orebody to dissolve the uranium and bring
it to the surface.
24Milling
- The ore is first crushed and ground to liberate
mineral particles. - The amphoteric oxide is then leached with
sulfuric acid ( Leaching) - UO3(s) 2H(aq) UO22(aq) H2O
- UO22(aq) 3SO42-(aq)
UO2(SO4)34-(aq) - The basic oxide is converted by a similar process
to that of a water soluble UO2(CO3)34-(aq) ion.
25Milling
- Two methods are used to concentrate and purify
the uranium ion exchange and solvent extraction
( more common ). - solvent extraction uses tertiary amines in an
organic kerosene solvent in a continuous process
- 2 R3N(org) H2SO4(aq)
(R3NH)2SO4(org) - 2(R3NH)2SO4(org) UO2(SO4)34-(aq)
- (R3NH)4UO2(SO4)3(org
) 2SO42-(aq)
26Milling
- The solvents are removed by evaporating in a
vacuum . - Ammonium diuranate, (NH4)2U2O7 , is
precipitated by adding ammonia to neutralize the
solution. - Then
- (NH4)2U2O7 heat U3O8 (yellow
cake)
27Refining and converting U3O8 toUO3
- U3O8HNO3
UO2(NO3)2 6H2O - Uranyl nitrate, UO2(NO3)2 6H2O, is fed into a
continuous solvent extraction process. The
uranium is extracted into an organic phase
(kerosene) with tributyl phosphate (TBP), and the
impurities remain again in the aqueous phase. -
- Washing from kerosene with dilute nitric acid and
concentrated by evaporation to pure UO2(NO3)2
6H2O . - Then
- UO2(NO3)2 6H2O heat
UO3 (pure)
28Continuous solvent extraction
29Converting UO3 to UF6
- The UO3 is reduced with hydrogen in a kiln
- UO3(s) H2(g) UO2(s) H2O(g)
- then
- UO2(s) 4HF(g) UF4(s)
4H2O(g) - The tetrafluoride is then fed into a fluidized
bed reactor and reacted with gaseous fluorine to
obtain the hexafluoride - UF4(s) F2(g) UF6(g)
30Production of uranium metal
- Uranium metal is produced by reducing the uranium
tetrafluoride with either calcium or magnesium,
both active group IIA metals that are excellent
reducing agents. -
- UF4(s) 2Ca(s) U(s)
2CaF2(s)
31Enrichment
32Enriched uranium grades
- Highly Enriched Uranium ( HEU ) gt 20 235U
- 20 weapon-usable, 85 weapon-grade
- Low Enriched Uranium ( LEU ) lt 20 235U
- 12 - 19.75 used in research reactors
- 3 - 5 used in Light Water Reactors
- Slightly enriched Uranium ( SEU ) 0.9 - 2
235U - used in Heavy Water Reactors instead of
natural uranium - Recovered Uranium ( R U )
- recovered from spent fuel of Light Water
Reactors -
-
33Enrichment Methods
- Thermal Diffusion
- Gaseous Diffusion
- The Gas Centrifuge
- Aerodynamic Process
- Electromagnetic Isotope Separation( EMIS )
- Laser Processes
- Chemical Methods
- Plasma Separation
34Basic Facts of Separation Physics
35Laser Processes
- Atomic Vapor Laser Isotope Separation (AVLIS)
- Molecular Laser Isotope Separation (MLIS)
36Diffusion Cell
37separation factor of asingle diffusion process
step isdetermined as follows
38Gaseous Diffusion Cascade
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40Separation factor Separative power of
centrifuge
- M1, M2 Molecular weight of the molecules to be
separated - R gas constant
- D diffusion constant of the process gas
- ? density of the process gas
- T temperature in degrees Kelvin
- d diameter of the rotor
- L length of the rotor
- V circumferential velocity of the rotor
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42P1-centrifuge
43Gas Centrifuge Cascade
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45Design of enrichment plants
- Several centrifuges are therefore operated in
parallel in the separation stages of a centrifuge
cascade. - Centrifuge plants, are built of several operating
units, which themselves consist of several
cascades working in parallel. - Diffusion plants consist of a single large
cascade with approximately 1,400 stages.
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48Fuel fabrication
- Enriched UF6 is converted into uranium UO2 powder
which is then processed into pellet form - UF6H2 (g)
UF4(S)2HF(g) - UF4(S)H2O
UO2(S)2HF(g)
49Fuel fabrication
- The pellets are then fired in a high temperature
sintering furnace (with H2) to create hard,
ceramic pellets of enriched uranium. - Fuel rods corrosion resistant metal alloy (
zirconium ). -
-
50Fuel bundle fuel pellet
51Fuel assembly
52Chain reaction
53Nuclear reactor
54Spent fuel
- Used fuel
- About 95 U-238
- About 1 U-235 that has not fissioned
- About 1 plutonium
- 3 fission products, which are highly radioactive
- With other transuranic elements formed in the
reactor.
55Spent fuel storage
56Reprocessing
- The PUREX process is a liquid-liquid extraction
method used to reprocess spent nuclear fuel, in
order to extract uranium and plutonium,
independent of each other, from the fission
products. - PUREX is an acronym standing for Plutonium and
Uranium Recovery by Extraction.
57Reprocessing
- Dissolving of fuel into nitric acid
- Remove the fine insoluble solids
- Organic solvent 30 tributyl phosphate (TBP)
in odorless kerosene (or hydrogenated propylene
trimer) - The extraction of U(VI) and Pu(IV)
- Reduction of Pu(IV) to Pu(III)
- Back extraction (stripping) of U(VI) by a low
nitric acid concentration
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59References
- www.nrc.gov
- www.stpnoc.com
- www.urenco.com
- http//chemcases.com
- www.wikipedia.com
- www.jnfl.co.jp
- www.globalsecurity.com
- http//daneshnameh.roshd.ir
- www.isotopetrace.com
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62Uranium hexafluoride ( UF6 )
- With most metals and alloys (for example, Fe, Co,
Cr, Al, Mg, high grade steel, brass) UF6 reacts
slowly at room temperature to form metal
fluorides and reacts somewhat faster at higher
temperatures( grey, brown or green deposits). - Absolutely dry glass and dry quartz sand are not
attacked by UF6. - Metals such as Ni and Pt and most of their alloys
are practically resistant, even at 100 C. - Synthetic polymers, for example Teflon and some
copolymers, - demonstrate similar resistance towards UF6.
- ether, ester, ketone and saturated and
unsaturated hydrocarbons react at room
temperature by fluorinating with UF6.
63Refining and converting U3O8 to UF6
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65Basic Facts of Separation Physics
- The ability of the separation element to separate
235Uand 238U is described by its separation
factor. - If N concentration of 235U
- NF is its concentration in feed stream(F)
- NP is its concentration in product stream(P)
- NT is its concentration in Tails stream(T)
-
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69Basic Facts of Separation Physics
- However, the separation factor alone does not
describe fully the efficiency of a separation
element. - To determine the "work that must be applied for
separation, P, NP, NF and NT must be given. - Mass balance 0PT-F
- Isotope balance 0PNP TNT -FNF
-
-
70Separative Work and Power
- dUPV(NP)TV(NT)-FV(NF)
- The value function V(N) is determined using
mathematical methods so that the calculated
separative work is independent of the 235U
concentrations in the separation element and
depends only on the archieved change in
concentration and throughput. - Kg SW/S or SWU/S
-
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