Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

Burn-up unit of measure

Status
Not open for further replies.
Feb 24, 2006
8
0
0
DE
In old publications from the 80's and 90's I find the burn-up expressed in "a/o".
For example it reads that a certain fuel rod has reached a burn-up of 6.2 a/o.
What does it mean ? How can I convert this a/o in MWd/kg HM ?

Thanks in advance.

 
Replies continue below

Recommended for you

Yes, it is "a/o".
Searching on the internet I found that "a/o" means "total atom per cent". A colleague of mine told me that "a/o" corresponds to what is called "%FIMA", that is, "fissions per initial metal atom": the percentage of atoms of heavy metal having undergone fission. This includes also the fissionable nuclei.
If you google after "total atom percent" you can find a little bit of information.

Thanks anyway for the answer.

 
I know nothing of this subject. However, found this on the net:


From the Measurement of burnup section of the Wiki write up:

Converting between percent and energy/mass requires knowledge of κ, the thermal energy released per fission event. A typical value is 193.7 MeV (3.1×10−11 J) of thermal energy per fission (see Nuclear fission). With this value, the maximum burnup of 100%, which includes fissioning not just fissile content but also the other fissionable nuclides, is equivalent to about 909 GWd/t. Nuclear engineers often use this to roughly approximate 10% burnup as just less than 100 GWd/t.

Hope this helps.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top