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Nuclear Fuel Cycle (NFC) Technology and Policy Program

A System Dynamics Study of the Nuclear Fuel Cycle with Recycling: Options and Outcomes for the US and Brazil

Rodney Busquim e Silva, Mujid S. Kazimi, and Pavel Hejzlar

MIT-NFC-TR-103 (November 2008)

Abstract

resources, uranium enrichment services, and fuel reprocessing facilities, and on total cost of nuclear electricity over the next few decades. Introduction of fuel recycling reduces the future demand for uranium, and the long-term need for storage of radioactive spent fuel. However, the timing of introduction of recycling is important for proper technology development, and the rate of deployment is restrained by the industrial capacity as well as the desire for high utilization factor of the deployed facilities over their life time, and that is reflected in the assessments.

The nuclear fuel cycle is modeled as a high level structure diagram, which provides an overview of the interconnections among its blocks without showing all details, and as a structure-policy diagram which details the decision rules applied to the structure. The high level structure diagram represents the nuclear fuel cycle; the fleet of thermal and fast reactors; the separation and reprocessing plants; the waste repository; the spent fuel storage; and the paths for the fuel and waste mass transfer. In addition, an economic model is added to study different cases under the same assumptions. The economic model is based on the forecasted need for advanced reactors and recycling facilities, assuming that all costs are recovered within the nuclear energy system.

Different recycling technology options are included in the code: (1) Recycling in thermal spectrum LWRs using Combined Non-Fertile and UO2 Fuel (CONFU), (2) Recycling of TRU in fertile-free fast spectrum cores of Actinide Burner Reactors (ABR); and (3) Recycling of TRU with UO2 in self-sustaining Gas-cooled Fast Reactors (GFR). Case studies for different advanced technology introduction dates and for distinct TRU depletion rates are examined. In iv particular, the code is equipped to simulate the introduction of two recycling technology options with a prescribed allocation of the TRU supply between them.

The simulation results show that early introduction of the GFR recycling scheme leads to the most significant reduction in uranium consumption and enrichment requirements, thus delaying the eventual depletion date of uranium ore. The GFR requires less uranium resources due to the use of TRU as recycled fuel and near unity fissile conversion ratio. However, in a nonbreeding reactor system, the consumption of U continues to grow, and the TRU needed to start fast reactors will be growing at a constrained rate. On the other hand, the CONFU recycling scheme keeps the TRU inventory in the entire system well below other schemes, and guarantees equilibrium between the generation and consumption of transuranics without investments in fast reactors. CONFU incinerates more TRU than the GFR and ABR schemes during the simulation period. Also, it reduces the TRU sent to the repository for disposal by orders of magnitude. The ABR scheme does the same but requires the introduction of fast reactors. Nevertheless, the CONFU and ABR schemes have no significant impact on uranium ore or enrichment requirements. Economic analysis indicates that the CONFU technology is more attractive at current uranium prices, and that fast recycling becomes as attractive as thermal recycling at higher uranium prices.

The results also show that if a nuclear fuel cycle state/reactor state collaboration with Brazil is started, there will eventually be a significant impact on the U.S. cumulative TRU inventory at interim storage, enrichment requirements, uranium consumption, and number of advanced fuel facilities. The results show that a nuclear partnership after the introduction of advanced nuclear recyle technologies would have advantages for the U.S. by ensuring the availability of TRU as a fuel feed for the advanced technologgy. In addition, the partnership relieves the pressure on Brazil to develop its own spent fuel technology until deployment of a large number of nuclear plants.