November 1, 2011
Conference Paper

Preserving Physics Knowledge at the Fast Flux Test Facility

Abstract

One of the goals of the Department of Energy’s Office of Nuclear Energy, initiated under the Fuel Cycle Research and Development Program (FCRD) and continued under the Advanced Reactor Concepts Program (ARC) is to preserve the knowledge that has been gained in the United States on Liquid Metal Reactors (LMRs) that could support the development of an environmentally and economically sound nuclear fuel cycle. The Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF) is the most recent LMR to operate in the United States, from 1982 to 1992, and was designed as a fully instrumented test reactor with on-line, real time test control and performance monitoring of components and tests installed in the reactor. The 10 years of operation of the FFTF provided a very useful framework for testing the advances in LMR safety technology based on passive safety features that may be of increased importance to new designs after the events at Fukushima. Knowledge preservation at the FFTF is focused on the areas of design, construction, and startup of the reactor, as well as on preserving information obtained from 10 years of successful operating history and extensive irradiation testing of fuels and materials. In order to ensure protection of information at risk, the program to date has sequestered reports, files, tapes, and drawings to allow for secure retrieval. A disciplined and orderly approach has been developed to respond to client’s requests for documents and data in order to minimize the search effort and ensure that future requests for this information can be readily accommodated.

Revised: December 13, 2012 | Published: November 1, 2011

Citation

Wootan D.W., R.P. Omberg, B.J. Makenas, D.L. Nielsen, J.V. Nelson, and D.L. Polzin. 2011. Preserving Physics Knowledge at the Fast Flux Test Facility. In International Conference on the Physics of Reactors (PHYSOR 2012): Advances in Reactor Physics, April 15-20, 2012, Knoxville, Tennessee, 4, 3464-3477. Lagrange Park, Illinois:American Nuclear Society. PNNL-SA-83641.