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Uranyl Salt Reactors for Mo-99 Production. Chris Cooling. Molybdenum 99. Fission product Half life of 66 hours Decays to Tc-99m Tc-99m has a half life of 6 hours Tc-99m a radioactive tracer used in diagnostic medicine Demand is currently exceeding supply. Current Production Methods.
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Uranyl Salt Reactors for Mo-99 Production Chris Cooling
Molybdenum 99 • Fission product • Half life of 66 hours • Decays to Tc-99m • Tc-99m has a half life of 6 hours • Tc-99m a radioactive tracer used in diagnostic medicine • Demand is currently exceeding supply
Current Production Methods • Bombarding targets with neutrons • HEU targets to induce fission • Mo-98 • Current reactors • NRU, Canada • HFR, Netherlands • SAFARI-1, South Africa • BR2, Belgium • OSIRIS, France • Opal, Australia
Uranyl Salt Reactors • Uranyl Sulphate or Uranyl Nitrate dissolved in acid (100-300gU/l) • Water acts as the moderator • Low temperatures • LEU or natural uranium • Many research reactors in early days of nuclear
Uranyl Salt Reactors • Reactivity Feedback • Void production • Thermal feedback • Challenges • Materials challenges • Complex multi-physics • Regulatory challenges
Advantages of Uranyl Salt Reactors in the Production of Mo-99 • LEU as opposed to HEU • Lower power • Continuous processing possible
The Medical Isotope Production System (MIPS) • AHR designed to produce Mo-99 • Uranyl Nitrate • Array of 4x220kW reactors • ~80l of fuel • Cooled internally by water-filled cooling coils
My Work • Modelling of MIPS for regulatory and optimisation purposes • 2D and 3D multi-physics models • Point kinetics models
FETCH • Based upon AMCG’s FLUIDITY program • Couples fluid mechanics and neutronics calculations • Multi-phase flow • Embedded cooling coils
FETCH Example – CRAC 43 • Increase in solution height • Void and temperature feedback
Goals • Improve heat transfer models • Implement boiling models • Validate point kinetics model