UCS fuel cladding failure analysis
April 12, 2002
The following report has recently been provided to the Environmental History
Archives of The Davistown Museum as a result of a recent request to UCS
for updated information on fuel cladding failures at US NRC supervised
reactors. To the best of our knowledge this UCS report has not previously
been posted on the web. This report, however, contains important
additional information about a variety of precursors that can lead to full
blown fuel cladding failure, i.e. loss of fuel pellets from fuel rods within
fuel assemblies. An understanding of these processes may help to
shed light on the fuel cladding failures at the Maine Yankee Atomic Power
Company (MYAPC) that are documented by confidential
licensee records obtained by the Center for Biological Monitoring in
January of 1999. A selection of confidential
MYAPC documents noting fuel pellets in vacuum filters in the spent
fuel pool was posted on the RADNET website. These documents have
continuing relevance for the decommissioning process now underway at Wiscasset:
as the UCS report makes clear (but with no mention of the MYAPC fuel cladding
failures) failures resulting in the discharge of fuel pellets are infrequent,
or at least poorly documented. The fact that fuel pellets were vacuumed
from the environs of the MYAPC spent fuel pool clearly suggests loss-of-radiological
controls occurred during reactor operations contaminating both the reactor
vessel and the reactor water systems with mass-wasted fuel pellet-derived
spent fuel isotopes. The RADNET website contains numerous documents,
reports, letters and datum which in their totality begin the process of
documenting fuel cladding failures at MYAPC. Unfortunately, the ill
advised decision to rush ahead with physical deconstruction of the MYAPC
facility prior to documenting the source term of fuel cladding failure
releases complicates and enhances the ultimate impact of these failures.
http://www.davistownmuseum.org/cbm/RadxFailedFuelClad.html?goback=.gde_2170900_member_5800203532082626561#!
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