Generic method to assess transmutation feasibility for nuclear waste treatment and application to irradiated graphite
Mathieu Rasson, Julien Fuchs, Gr\'egoire Aug\'e, Jean-Louis Qu\'eri,, G\'erard Laurent

TL;DR
This study evaluates the feasibility of using laser-driven particle beams to transmute long-lived C14 in irradiated graphite, finding the energy costs prohibit practical industrial application despite identifying a suitable nuclear reaction channel.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative method to assess transmutation schemes using particle beams directly on nuclear waste materials, specifically applied to irradiated graphite.
Findings
Protons between 1 and 5 MeV can transmute C14 without creating long-lived radionuclides.
The identified transmutation channel has a high energy cost, limiting practical feasibility.
The method can be generalized to other transmutation assessments.
Abstract
Graphite-moderated nuclear reactors have already produced more than 250000 tons of irradiated nuclear graphite, or i-graphite, world-wide. The sustainability of this technology relies on the end-of-life management of its moderator, which is activated into a long-lived nuclear waste, by neutron fluxes, during operating time. In particular, C14 is created. Nuclear transmutation, enabled by laser-driven particle acceleration, has been envisioned as a potential novel treatment scheme for long-lived nuclear waste. By triggering controlled nuclear reactions with energetic particles, long-lived radionuclides could be transformed into stable isotopes. Such a system could treat the C14 nuclei trapped within the i-graphite matrix, which is difficult to isolate by other means. This work performs a quantitative preliminary study of this transmutation scheme, in order to assess its feasibility at an…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear Physics and Applications · Graphite, nuclear technology, radiation studies · Radiation Therapy and Dosimetry
