Early experiments of JAERI fuel cleanup system at the tritium systems test assembly
1991
Abstract The Tritium Process Laboratory (TPL) at the Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute (JAERI) has developed a Fuel Cleanup System (FCU) which accepts simulated fusion reactor exhaust and produces pure hydrogen isotopes and tritium-free waste. Under the collaboration program of USDOE and JAERI, an integrated process, the “JAERI Fuel Cleanup System” (JFCU) was designed and fabricated for testing at the Tritium Systems Test Assembly (TSTA) as a major subsystem of the simulated fusion fuel cycle. The JFCU has the capability to continuously process a mixture of hydrogen isotopes and impurities of 15 mol/h. The major components are: a palladium diffuser for hydrogen isotopes purification, a catalytic reactor for oxidation of tritium in impurities, cold traps for separation of tritiated water to produce exhaust containing a very low level of tritium, a ceramic electrolysis cell for decomposition of tritiated water, and zirconium-cobalt beds for hydrogen isotopes storage. In early 1990, the JFCU was installed in the TSTA and preliminary testing without tritium was initiated. Components such as the palladium diffuser, cold traps, catalytic reactor, scroll pump and electrolysis cell were tested independently as well as in the integrated process tests.
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