AN ASSESSMENT OF THE ATTRACTIVENESS OF MATERIAL ASSOCIATED WITH A MOX FUEL CYCLE FROM A SAFEGUARDS PERSPECTIVE

Year
2009
Author(s)
Brian W. Smith - Pacific Northwest National Laborato~
Richard Wallace - Los Alamos National Laboratory
M. William Johnson - Los Alamos National Laboratory
Matrin Robel - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Gordon D. Jarvinen - Los Alamos National Laboratory
Charles G. Bathke - Los Alamos National Laboratory
Bartley B. Ebbinghaus - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Brian Collins - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Keith S. Bradley - Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Abstract
This paper is an extension to earlier studies [1,2] that examined the attractiveness of materials mixtures containing special nuclear materials (SNM) and alternate nuclear materials (ANM) associated with the PUREX, UREX, coextraction, THOREX, and PYROX reprocessing schemes. This study extends the figure of merit (FOM) for evaluating attractiveness to cover a broad range of proliferant State and sub-national group capabilities. This study also considers those materials that will be recycled and burned, possibly multiple times, in LWRs [e.g., plutonium in the form of mixed oxide (MOX) fuel]. The primary conclusion of this study is that all fissile material needs to be rigorously safeguarded to detect diversion by a State and provided the highest levels of physical protection to prevent theft by sub-national groups; no “silver bullet” has been found that will permit the relaxation of current international safeguards or national physical security protection levels. This series of studies has been performed at the request of the United States Department of Energy (DOE) and is based on the calculation of \"attractiveness levels\" that are expressed in terms consistent with, but normally reserved for nuclear materials in DOE nuclear facilities [3]. The expanded methodology and updated findings are presented. Additionally, how these attractiveness levels relate to proliferation resistance and physical security are discussed.