Activation analysis for sequential reactions of a fusion demo-reactor

被引:0
|
作者
Yamauchi, M. [1 ]
Nishitani, T.
Nishio, S.
Hori, J.
Kawasaki, H.
机构
[1] Japan Atom Energy Agcy, Tokai, Ibaraki 3191195, Japan
[2] Kyoto Univ, Inst Res Reactor, Osaka 5900494, Japan
[3] ITOCHU Techno Solut Corp, Tokai, Ibaraki 3191195, Japan
关键词
D O I
10.13182/FST07-A1585
中图分类号
TL [原子能技术]; O571 [原子核物理学];
学科分类号
0827 ; 082701 ;
摘要
Low activation material is one of the important factors for constructing high power fusion reactors in future. Unexpected activation, however, may be produced through sequential reactions due to charged particles created by primary neutron reactions. In the present work, the effect of the sequential activation reaction was studied for candidate low activation materials of a fusion demoreactor. The calculations were conducted by the ACT4 code developed in JAEA for the activation analysis of fusion reactor designs and revised for dealing with the sequential activation reactions. The results say that the real dose rate around vanadium alloy becomes larger after the cooling for 3 years by considering the reaction. Although metal hydrate is regarded as an excellent low activation shield material, the reactions due to recoil protons are influential and the dose rate around vanadium hydrate is several orders of magnitude larger than the value calculated without the sequential process after 2 weeks cooling. In case of liquid breeders, the effect of sequential reactions is popularly observed and it affects the breeder reprocessing and the shield design of circulation loop.
引用
收藏
页码:781 / 785
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] THE IMPORTANCE OF SEQUENTIAL (X,N) REACTIONS ON ELEMENT ACTIVATION OF FUSION-REACTOR MATERIALS
    CIERJACKS, S
    HINO, Y
    JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MATERIALS, 1990, 170 (02) : 134 - 139
  • [2] System analysis study for Korean fusion DEMO reactor
    Yeom, Jun Ho
    Kim, Keeman
    Lee, Young Seok
    Kim, Hyoung Chan
    Oh, Sangjun
    Im, Kihak
    Kessel, Charles
    FUSION ENGINEERING AND DESIGN, 2013, 88 (6-8) : 742 - 745
  • [3] Fusion DEMO reactor design based on nuclear analysis
    Someya, Youji
    Tobita, Kenji
    Hiwatari, Ryoji
    Sakamoto, Yoshiteru
    FUSION ENGINEERING AND DESIGN, 2018, 136 : 1306 - 1312
  • [4] Design and analysis of robot for the maintenance of divertor in DEMO fusion reactor
    Li, Changyang
    Wu, Huapeng
    Eskelinen, Harri
    Siuko, Mikko
    Loving, Antony
    FUSION ENGINEERING AND DESIGN, 2019, 146 : 2092 - 2095
  • [5] Performance Analysis of the NbTi PF Coils for the EU DEMO Fusion Reactor
    Zappatore, Andrea
    Bonifetto, Roberto
    Bruzzone, Pierluigi
    Corato, Valentina
    Di Zenobio, Aldo
    Savoldi, Laura
    Sedlak, Kamil
    Turtu, Simonetta
    Zanino, Roberto
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON APPLIED SUPERCONDUCTIVITY, 2018, 28 (04)
  • [6] Neutronics analysis of inboard shielding capability for a DEMO fusion reactor CFETR
    Liu, Songlin
    Li, Jiangang
    Zheng, Shanliang
    Mitchell, Neil
    FUSION ENGINEERING AND DESIGN, 2013, 88 (9-10) : 2404 - 2407
  • [7] Development of fusion blanket technology for the DEMO reactor
    Colling, B. R.
    Monk, S. D.
    APPLIED RADIATION AND ISOTOPES, 2012, 70 (07) : 1370 - 1372
  • [8] Design of the DEMO Fusion Reactor Following ITER
    Garabedian, Paul R.
    McFadden, Geoffrey B.
    JOURNAL OF RESEARCH OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY, 2009, 114 (04) : 229 - 236
  • [9] ITER, the "Broader approach", a DEMO fusion reactor
    Janeschitz, G.
    Bahm, W.
    ATW-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR NUCLEAR POWER, 2007, 52 (8-9): : 536 - +
  • [10] ACTIVATION ANALYSIS FOR A He/LiPb DUAL COOLANT BLANKET FOR DEMO REACTOR
    Catalan, J. P.
    Ogando, F.
    Sanz, J.
    FUSION SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, 2011, 60 (02) : 738 - 742