Independent Verification of Research Reactor Operation (Analysis of the Georgian IRT-M Reactor by the Isotope Ratio Method)

Year
2010
Author(s)
GV Tsiklauri - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
David Gerlach - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
J.B. Cliff - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
C.J. Gesh - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
W.W. Little - Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
Sh. Ambramidze - E. Andronikashvili Institute of Physics
G. Kaknadze - E. Andronikashvili Institute of Physics
Abstract
ecurity (NA-24) develops technologies to aid in implementing international nuclear safeguards. The Isotope Ratio Method (IRM) was successfully developed in 2005 2007 by Pacific Northwest National Laboratory !\"# $ %&'*+/ % !technology to verify the declared operation of water-moderated research reactors, independent of spent fuel inventory. IRM estimates the energy produced over the operating lifetime of a fission reactor by measuring the ratios of the isotopes of trace impurity elements in non-fuel reactor components. Trace impurities are present at the parts-per-billion level or higher, and their isotopes are transmuted by neutron irradiation in a predictable manner. Extremely sensitive mass-spectrometric methods currently available allow accurate and precise measurements of the altered impurity element isotope ratios. Standard reactor % %% /% $; &