Bespoke equipment reveals beneath Dounreay reactor top

20 Mar 2015 01:01 PM

The removal of trapped fuel elements from the Dounreay Fast Reactor moved a step closer with the successful trial of bespoke equipment to lift off the top plate.

Decommissioning the 50-year-old experimental reactor is one of the most technically challenging projects in the NDA estate.

In 2012, a camera looked inside the reactor for the first time. Subsequent inspections over a three-month period enabled the Dounreay Fast Reactor (DFR) team to assess the internal conditions in detail, providing an accurate basis for planning future fuel removal.

The reactor top plate, a stainless steel honeycomb structure, has been submerged in hazardous radioactive alkali metal for decades.

Working with Caithness company Enterprise Engineering Services Ltd, the DFR team has now carried out a series of trials, using specialised equipment to demonstrate that sections of the reactor top plate can be removed to release the trapped elements underneath.

The equipment was manufactured and trialled extensively at the company’s off-site facility, before installation works on the reactor top were completed successfully and on schedule.

Additional work is planned during the summer to prepare for removal and repackaging of the remaining fuel.

Andy Beckwith, project director for fuels, said:

“DFR decommissioning is one of the most technically challenging projects for the NDA estate and the safe removal of the breeder fuel elements is crucial to the site’s closure programme.

“This project proves that with a dedicated and committed team of people all working together these challenges can be achieved safely, allowing future DFR decommissioning projects to progress.”

 Meanwhile, 5 tonnes of cables connected to the hub that once controlled the reactor have been ripped out.

Large quantities of mineral-insulated copper conductors were used because of their resistance to heat and overall strength even when flattened.

The cables fed into equipment used for reactor control, temperature monitoring, trace heating systems and distribution boards. Their removal will allow the DFR decommissioning team to clear old distribution boards and cables from areas next to the reactor floor, in turn making space for the removal of other fixtures and fittings. The work is due to be complete by June.

Project Manager, Suzanne Griffiths, said:

“We have now removed approximately five tonnes of cabling and junction boxes from the sphere skirt and underground duct, which has presented many challenges including the safe removal of asbestos.”

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