OF THE ATOMINSTITUT DER ÖSTERREICHISCHEN
UNIVERSITÄTEN, VIENNA, AUSTRIA
The TRIGA Mark-II reactor was installed by General Atomic
(San Diego, California, U.S.A.) in the years 1959 through
1962, and went critical for the first time on march 7, 1962.
Operation of the reactor since that time has averaged 220
days per year, without any long outages. The TRIGA-reactor
is purely a research reactor of the swimming-pool type that
is used for training, research and isotope production (Training,
Research, Isotope Production, General Atomic = TRIGA). Throughout
the world there are more than 50 TRIGA-reactors in operation,
Europe alone accounting for 10 of them.
The TRIGA-reactor Vienna has a maximum continuous power
output of 250 kW (thermal). The heat produced is released
into a channel of the river Danube via a primary coolant
circuit (deionised, distilled water at temperatures between
20 and 40 °C) and a secondary coolant circuit (ground
water at temperatures between 12 and 18 °C), the two
circuits being separated by a heat exchanger.
The reactor core consists of some 80 fuel elements (3.75
cm in diameter and 72.24 cm in length), which are arranged
in an annular lattice. Two fuel elements have thermocouples
implemented in the fuel meat which allow to measure the
fuel temperature during reactor operation. At nominal power
(250 kW), the centre fuel temperature is about 200 °C.
Because of the low reactor power level, the burn-up of the
fuel is very small and most of the fuel elements loaded
into the core in 1962 are still there. Should these fuel
elements ever become unserviceable, they will be sent back
to the United States.
Inside the fuel element cladding (aluminium or steel),
the fuel is in the form of a uniform mixture of 8 wt% uranium,
1 wt% hydrogen and 91 wt% zirconium, the zirconium-hydride,
being the main moderator. Since the moderator has the special
property of moderating less efficiently at high temperatures,
the TRIGA-reactor Vienna can also be operated in a pulsed
mode (with a rapid power rise to 250 MW for roughly 40 milliseconds).
The power rise is accompanied by an increase in the maximum
neutron flux density from 1x1013 cm-2s-1 (at 250 kW) to
1x1016 cm-1 (at 250 MW). This negative temperature coefficient
of reactivity, as it is called, brings the power level back
to approximately 250 kW after the excursion, the maximal
pulse rate is 12 per hour, since the temperature of the
fuel elements rises to about 360 °C during the pulse
and, therefore, the fuel is subjected to strong thermal
stress.
The reactor is controlled by three control rods which contain
boron carbide as absorber material. When these rods are
fully inserted into the reactor core, the neutrons continuously
emitted from a start-up source (Sb-Be photoneutron source)
are absorbed by the rods and the reactor remains sub-critical.
If the absorber rods are withdrawn from the core two of
them by an electric motor and one pneumatically, the number
of fissions in the core and the power level increases. The
start-up process takes roughly one minute for the reactor
to reach a power level of 250 kW from the sub-critical state.
The reactor can be shut-down either manually or automatically
by the safety system. It takes about 1/10 of a second for
the control rods to fall into the core.
The reactor is controlled by four nuclear channels their
signals are displayed both at a colour graphic-monitor and
at bar graph indicators.
a) The auto-ranging wide-range channel NM-1000 controls
the reactor power from the source level (around 5 mW) up
to nominal power of 250 kW. It uses a Campbell fission chamber,
the signal is controlled by a microprocessor.
b) Two independent linear channels, NMP-Ch and NMP-Ph control
the reactor power from the source level up to nominal power.
The signals pass over a range switch which selects the power
range. If the signal of one of these two channels exceeds
the selected power range for more than 5%, the reactor is
shut down automatically. Both channels use compensated ionisation
chambers as sensors.
c) For the control of reactor pulse operation an uncompensated
ionisation chamber is used. This chamber measures the shape
of the reactor pulse which is displayed on the graphic monitor.
Further pulse data like integrated power are calculated
from this signal.
In accordance with its purpose as a research reactor, the
TRIGA Mark-II is equipped with a number of irradiation devices:
5 reflector irradiation tubes
1 central irradiation tube
1 pneumatic transfer system (transfer time 3 s)
1 fast pneumatic transfer system (transfer time 20 ms)
4 neutron beam holes
1 thermal column
1 neutron radiography facility
In the reflector irradiation tubes 10 containers can be
irradiated simultaneously. In the central irradiation tube
samples up to 38.4 mm in diameter can be exposed to neutrons
at a neutron flux density of 1013 cm-2s-1, while the pneumatic
transfer system allows to transfer the materials to be activated
into the reactor from a chemistry laboratory and back again
after the required period of irradiation, without the experimentalist
having to leave his working place. The four neutron beam
tubes permit extraction of neutron beams of all energies
into the reactor hall for the purpose of neutron and solid-state
physics experiments. The thermal column is used to extract
with a thermal spectrum into the reactor hall, unlike the
beam holes, the space between the reactor core and the hall
is in this case filled with graphite to slow down the neutrons.
The neutron radiography facility is used to investigate
components by neutron irradiation similar to X-ray radiography.
However, neutrons show especially hydrogen or neutron absorber
material in solid matter.
TECHNICAL DATA
1. REACTOR CORE
| fuel-moderator material |
8 wt% uranium
91 wt% zirconium
1 wt% hydrogen |
| uranium enrichment |
20% uranium-235 |
| fuel element dimensions |
3.75 cm in diameter
72.24 cm in length |
| cladding |
0.76 mm aluminum or 0.51 mm steel |
| active core volume |
max. 49.5 cm diameter, 35.56 cm high |
| core loading |
2.3 kg of uranium-235 |
2. REFLECTOR
| material |
graphite with aluminum cladding |
| radial thickness |
30.5 cm |
| top and bottom thickness |
10.2 cm |
3. CONSTRUCTION
| reactor mounting |
heavy and standard concrete
6.55 m high
6.19 m wide
8.76 m long |
| reactor tank |
1.98 m in diameter
6.40 m in depth |
4. SHIELDING
| radial: |
30.5 cm of graphite;
45.7 cm of water and at least
206 cm of heavy concrete |
| vertical: |
above the core 4.90 m of water and
10.2 cm graphite;
underneath the core 61.0 cm water,
10.2 cm graphite and at least
91 cm standard concrete. |
5. IRRADIATION DEVICES
- four beam holes 15.2 cm in diameter
- one central irradiation tube (middle of core)
- five reflector irradiation tubes
- one pneumatic transfer system (near core edge)
- a thermal column with cross section 1.22x1.22 m and
length 1.68 m
- experimental tank with surface area 2.44x2.74 m and
depth 3.66 m; connected to the reactor by means of a neutron
radiography collimator 0.61x0.61 m in cross section and
1.22 m long.
6. CONTROL SYSTEM
- Two boron carbide control rods with electric motor
and rack and pinion drive (Fig. 5);
- One boron carbide pulse rod with compressed air drive
(5 bars; Fig. 6);
- Maximum reactivity insertion rate - time rate of change
(excluding
pulse operation): 0.04% dk/k per second
- Total rod worth about 4.8% dk/k.
7. CHARACTERISTICS IN CONTINUOUS OPERATION
| Thermal power output: |
250 kW |
| Fuel element cooling: |
natural convection of the tank
water below 100 kW,
pump circulation cooling above 100 kW |
| tank water cooling: |
heat exchanger |
| thermal flux: |
1x1013 cm-2s-1
in the central irradiation tube
1.7x1012 cm-2s-1 in the irradiation
tubes |
| prompt temperature coefficient: |
-1.2x10-4 dk/k°C |
| mean prompt neutron lifetime: |
6.0x10-5 s |
8. CHARACTERISTICS IN TRANSIENT OPERATION
| peak power |
250 MW |
| prompt pulse energy yield |
10 MW s |
| prompt pulse lifetime |
40 ms |
| total energy yield |
16 MW s |
| minimal period |
10 ms |
| maximum reactivity insertion |
1.6% dk/k = 2$ |
| maximum repetition frequency |
12/h |
| number of fissions during a pulse |
3x1017 |
| maximum fuel temperature: during
the pulse |
240 °C |
| 9 seconds after the pulse |
360 °C |
9. BRIEF STATISTICAL DATA
|
1997 |
1998 |
1999 |
|
power produced (MWh)
|
216 |
213 |
187 |
|
irradiation experiments
|
205 |
289 |
269 |
|
beam hole experiments
|
3 |
5 |
20 |
|
number of reactor pulses
|
2 |
47 |
4 |
|
number of visitors
|
2686 |
2536 |
2305 |
|