PNNL has developed and continues to develop innovative methods for characterizing irradiated materials from nuclear reactors and particle accelerators for various clients and collaborators around the world. The continued development of these methods, in addition to the ability to perform unique scientific investigations of the effects of radiation on materials could be greatly enhanced with easy access to irradiation facilities. A Tunable Irradiation Testbed with customized targets (a 30 MeV, 1mA cyclotron or similar coupled to a unique target system) is shown to provide a much more flexible and cost-effective source of irradiating particles than a test reactor or isotopic source. The configuration investigated was a single shielded building with multiple beam lines from a small, flexible, high flux irradiation source. Potential applications investigated were the characterization of radiation damage to materials applicable to advanced reactors, fusion reactor, legacy waste, (via neutron spectra tailored to HTGR, molten salt, LWR, LMR, fusion environments); 252Cf replacement; characterization of radiation damage to materials of interest to High Energy Physics to enable the neutrino program; and research into production of short lived isotopes for potential medical and other applications.
Revised: April 18, 2019 |
Published: September 4, 2017
Citation
Wootan D.W., A.M. Casella, D.M. Asner, and D.J. Senor. 2017.TUNABLE IRRADIATION TESTBED. In 13th International Topical Meeting on Nuclear Applications of Accelerators (AccApp 2017), July 31-August 4, 2017, Quebec City, Quebec, Canada, 436-447. La Grange Park, Illinois:American Nuclear Society.PNNL-SA-129034.