September 1, 2017
Conference Paper

UF6 Density and Mass Flow Measurements for Enrichment Plants using Acoustic Techniques

Abstract

A key enabling capability for enrichment plant safeguards being considered by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) is high-accuracy, noninvasive, unattended measurement of UF6 gas density and mass flow rate. Acoustic techniques are currently used to noninvasively monitor gas flow in industrial applications; however, the operating pressures at gaseous centrifuge enrichment plants (GCEPs) are roughly two orders magnitude below the capabilities of commercial instrumentation. Pacific Northwest National Laboratory is refining acoustic techniques for estimating density and mass flow rate of UF6 gas in scenarios typical of GCEPs, with the goal of achieving 1% measurement accuracy. Proof-of-concept laboratory measurements using a surrogate gas for UF6 have demonstrated signatures sensitive to gas density at low operating pressures such as 10–50 Torr, which were observed over the background acoustic interference. Current efforts involve developing a test bed for conducting acoustic measurements on flowing SF6 gas at representative flow rates and pressures to ascertain the viability of conducting gas flow measurements under these conditions. Density and flow measurements will be conducted to support the evaluation. If successful, the approach could enable an unattended, noninvasive approach to measure mass flow in unit header pipes of GCEPs.

Revised: September 11, 2019 | Published: September 1, 2017

Citation

Good M.S., L.E. Smith, G.A. Warren, A.M. Jones, P. Ramuhalli, S. Roy, and T.L. Moran, et al. 2017. UF6 Density and Mass Flow Measurements for Enrichment Plants using Acoustic Techniques. In 58th Annual Meeting of the Institute of Nuclear Materials Management (INMM 2017), July 16-20, 2017, Indian Wells, California, 3, 1846-1853. Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois:Institute of Nuclear Materials Management. PNNL-SA-127406.