摘要

The most widely used and versatile medical radioisotope today is Tc-99m. Roughly 30 million people depend on this radioisotope for diagnostic imaging procedures each year, and this demand is expected to grow. Although there are numerous ways of producing this isotope, the most common is from fission product Mo-99, which is produced in all nuclear reactors fueled with U-235 as a fission fragment with a yield of around 6.1%. Molybdenum-99 has a half-life of just over 2.5 days, and it will decay to Tc-99m 87% of the time. The Reduced Enrichment for Research Test Reactors program was established at Argonne National Laboratory in 1978 to investigate technology that would aid in converting highly enriched uranium (HEU) facilities to low-enriched uranium (LEU) fuel. Since the majority of all Mo-99 produced currently comes from the irradiation of HEU fuel targets, there has been a growing effort to design LEU targets that can yield comparable quantities of high specific activity Mo-99. Recently, a novel LEU target design has been developed for use in TRIGA reactors for the production of Mo-99. The simulation tool MCNP5 was used to examine the neutronic behavior of multiple core configurations fueled solely with this new target.

  • 出版日期2016-5