Research

Radiation Science and Engineering Center receives $1 million DOE grant

Shaina Blunt, senior reactor operator and undergraduate student intern, at the Breazeale Nuclear Reactor control console. Credit: Penn State. Creative Commons

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Penn State’s Radiation Science and Engineering Center (RSEC) has received a $1 million grant from the U.S. Department of Energy’s University Infrastructure Grants program. Supplemented with an additional $600,000 in RSEC funds and equipment donations, the award will be used to update the control console and modernize the safety system at the Penn State Breazeale Reactor (PSBR).

Constructed in 1955 under the “Atoms for Peace” program, the PSBR is the longest-operating licensed research nuclear reactor in the United States. The reactor’s current control console, installed in 1991, has operated continuously since then with only minor updates of computer components. However, as is the case with all operating nuclear reactors, obsolescence issues must eventually be addressed by replacing both hardware and software.

Kenan Ünlü, director of the RSEC, professor of nuclear engineering, and co-principal investigator for the award, recounted the history of the reactor console at the PSBR.

“The original Training, Research, Isotopes, General Atomics (TRIGA) control system, installed in 1965, used first-generation, discrete-component, solid-state devices,” he explained. “By the mid-1980s, some components in the 1965 control console had been updated, and a new reactor console system was planned. An Atomic Energy Canada Limited (AECL) console system was installed in 1991.”

The AECL console, a “hybrid” system, combined the latest industrial control computers with the newest nuclear-grade analog reactor safety circuits. “The system provided a large inventory of features not previously available to support research and education and proved to be the most reliable full-featured console of its era,” stated Ünlü.

The PSBR’s new console will be 21st century state-of-the-art, using completely digital technology.

“Many older university research reactors in the U.S. are interested in pursuing analog-to-digital upgrades,” noted James Turso, assistant director for irradiation services and operations at the RSEC, senior research associate, and principal investigator for the award. “Penn State’s console replacement will be the first of its kind in the country, with off-the-shelf digital control and safety systems, provided by a controls company, that have been proven for decades in industry. Due to the modularity and programmability of the new system, the RSEC staff will have the capability to enhance and improve the equipment as necessary and pre-empt future obsolescence issues. Additionally, all design, software and regulatory aspects of the new system will be openly available to other members of the research reactor community to expedite their adoption of the technology.”

Although the current console continues to provide excellent features and unrivaled reliability, Ünlü, Turso and their colleagues are looking forward to having a fully digital integrated control and protection system.

“This new system will enable students and researchers to implement advanced reactor control algorithms,” Ünlü said. “In parallel to this development, new computer code and equipment architecture will be developed for the Penn State TRIGA control system.”

Turso added, “Our new console will enhance the capabilities of our already ultra-safe reactor. With its programmable/modular architecture, functions such as power instrument calibration and control rod capability measurements could potentially be automated. Penn State will be the model for successful application of digital control and safety technology, not only for the research reactor community, but for the entire nuclear power industry.”

Replacement of the PSBR control console and implementation of the new safety system are expected to be completed by 2021.

Last Updated September 15, 2017

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