Spent Nuclear Fuel—Waste to Resource, Part 1: Effects of Post-Reactor Cooling Time and Novel Partitioning Strategies in Advanced Reprocessing on Highly Active Waste Volumes in Gen III(+) UOx Fuel Systems

Holdsworth, Alistair F. orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-9250-9650, Ireland, Edmund and Eccles, Harry orcid iconORCID: 0000-0002-1652-3370 (2025) Spent Nuclear Fuel—Waste to Resource, Part 1: Effects of Post-Reactor Cooling Time and Novel Partitioning Strategies in Advanced Reprocessing on Highly Active Waste Volumes in Gen III(+) UOx Fuel Systems. Journal of Nuclear Engineering, 6 (3). p. 29.

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.3390/jne6030029

Abstract

Some of nuclear power’s primary detractors are the unique environmental challenges and impacts of radioactive wastes generated during fuel cycle operations. Key benefits of spent fuel reprocessing (SFR) are reductions in primary high active waste (HAW) masses, volumes, and lengths of radiotoxicity at the expense of secondary waste generation and high capital and operational costs. By employing advanced waste management and resource recovery concepts in SFR beyond the existing standard PUREX process, such as minor actinide and fission product partitioning, these challenges could be mitigated, alongside further reductions in HAW volumes, masses, and duration of radiotoxicity. This work assesses various current and proposed SFR and fuel cycle options as base cases, with further options for fission product partitioning of the high heat radionuclides (HHRs), rare earths, and platinum group metals investigated. A focus on primary waste outputs and the additional energy that could be generated by the reprocessing of high-burnup PWR fuel from Gen III(+) reactors using a simple fuel cycle model is used; the effects of 5- and 10-year spent fuel cooling times before reprocessing are explored. We demonstrate that longer cooling times are preferable in all cases except where short-lived isotope recovery may be desired, and that the partitioning of high-heat fission products (Cs and Sr) could allow for the reclassification of traditional raffinates to intermediate level waste. Highly active waste volume reductions approaching 50% vs. PUREX raffinate could be achieved in single-target partitioning of the inactive and low-activity rare earth elements, and the need for geological disposal could potentially be mitigated completely if HHRs are separated and utilised.


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