|
---|
Category:Backgrounder
MONTHYEARML24303A1272024-10-29029 October 2024 Backgrounder: Negative Ion Products Containing Radioactive Material ML24276A1952024-09-30030 September 2024 Backgrounder: Uranium Import Ban ML24011A0332024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Crossword Puzzle Answers ML24011A0512024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Coloring Page ML24011A0342024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Crossword Puzzle (Easy) ML24011A0352024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Crossword Puzzle (Standard) ML24011A0362024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Hidden Objects ML24011A0372024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Hidden-Objects-Answers ML24011A0382024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Match-Up - Game Sheet ML24011A0392024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Match-Up Answer Key ML24011A0402024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Periodic Table of the Elements ML24011A0412024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Periodic Table of the Elements ML24011A0422024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun & Games ML24011A0432024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Word Scramble Answer Key ML24011A0442024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Word Scramble (Easy) ML24011A0452024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Word Scramble (Standard) ML24011A0462024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Word Search Answer Sheet ML24011A0472024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Word Search (Easy) ML24011A0482024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Word Search (Standard) ML24011A0492024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Coloring Page ML24011A0502024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Coloring Page Typical Boiling-Water Reactor ML24011A0312024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Connect the Dots ML24011A0142024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: What Is Nuclear Energy? ML24011A0162024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Biological Effects of Radiation ML24011A0172024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Reactor Concepts Manual - Radioactive Waste Management ML24011A0182024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Transportation of Radioactive Material ML24011A0192024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Average Dose Worksheet ML24011A0202024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Lesson Plans ML24011A0212024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Unit 2: Uses of Radiation ML24011A0222024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Unit 3: Nuclear Reactors/Energy Generation ML24011A0232024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Unit 4: Radioactive Waste ML24011A0242024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Unit 5: Transportation of Radioactive Materials ML24011A0252024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Nuclear Power for Electrical Generation ML24011A0262024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Fission Process and Heat Production ML24011A0272024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Reactor Concepts Manual - Boiling Water Reactor Systems ML24011A0282024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) ML24011A0292024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Radiation Terminology ML24011A0302024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: Natural and Man-Made Radiation Sources ML24011A0322024-01-11011 January 2024 Fact Sheet: the Student Corner Fun and Games - Connect the Dots Answers ML21264A1642021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Defense in Depth - a War for Safety ML21264A1632021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Crud Another Acronym Bites the Dust ML21264A1772021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Too Cheap to Meter a History of the Phrase ML21264A1752021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: the Mystery of the Trowel - Solved ML21264A1762021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: the Reactor Safety Study the Birth, Death and Rebirth of PRA ML21264A1742021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: the Mystery of the Atomic Energy Commission Trowel - Part I ML21264A1732021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Refresh Putting the Axe to the Scram Myth ML21264A1722021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Radium Part II Trying to Close Pandoras Box ML21264A1712021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Radium Part I - Opening Pandoras Box ML21264A1702021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Penn State Universitys Breazeale Reactor Celebrates 65+ Years ML21264A1692021-09-21021 September 2021 History 101: Part II Ensuring Safety in the First Temple of the Atom 2024-09-30
[Table view]Some use of "" in your query was not closed by a matching "". |
Text
Science 101: What is Spent Nuclear Fuel? You know how a nuclear power plant uses nuclear fuel and chain reactions to produce electricity. So what radioactive as it is used in the reactor core to heat water. After about five years, the fuel is no longer useful and is removed. Reactor operators have to manage the heat and radioactivity that remains in taken out of the reactor. In the U.S., every reactor has at least one pool on the plant site where spent fuel is placed for storage. Plant personnel move the spent fuel underwater from the reactor to the pool. Over time, as the spent fuel is stored in the pool, it becomes cooler as the radioactivity decays away. These pools contain an enormous quantity of waterenough to cover the fuel by about 20 feet. The water serves two purposes: it cools the fuel and shields workers at the plant from radioactivity. Having 20 feet of water above the fuel means there is a lot more water than is needed for cooling and shielding the workers. Also, because of the extra water and the simple design of the pool, there is a lot of time for plant personnel to add water to the pool if needed for any reason. The pools are built to meet strict NRC safety requirements. They have very thick, steel-reinforced concrete walls and stainless-steel liners, and are protected by security personnel. There are no drains that would allow the water level to drop or the pool to become empty. The plants have a variety of extra water sources and equipment to replenish water that evaporates over time, or in case there is a leak. Plant personnel are also trained and prepared to quickly respond to a problem. They keep their skills sharp by routinely practicing their emergency plans and procedures. When the plants were designed, the pools were intended to provide temporary onsite storage. The idea was for the spent fuel to sit in the pool for a few years to cool before it would be fuel. But reprocessing for nuclear power plants and the pools began to fill up. In the early 1980s, nuclear plants began to look for ways to increase the amount of spent fuel they could store at the plant site. One way was to replace spent fuel storage racks in the pools with racks containing a special material that allowed spent fuel to be packed closer together. Another way was to place older, cooler and less radioactive fuel in dry storage casks that could be stored in specially built facilities at the plant site.
Most plants today use both re-designed storage racks and dry storage facilities to store spent fuel. All storage methods must be reviewed in detail and approved by the NRC before a plant is allowed to change storage methods. The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission is an independent federal government agency responsible for regulating the commercial use of nuclear materials. This document is free of copyright and can be reproduced for educational purposes.