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The Effect of Boron and Gadolinium Burnable Poisons on the Hot-to-Cold Reactivity Swing of a Pressurized Water Reactor Assembly

Alex Galperin, Meir Segev, Alvin Radkowsky

Nuclear Technology / Volume 75 / Number 2 / November 1986 / Pages 123-126

Technical Paper / Fission Reactor / dx.doi.org/10.13182/NT86-A33854

Control requirements for advanced pressurized water reactor designs must be met with heavy loadings of burnable poison rods, the required reactivity hold-down typically amounting to 30% or more in a poisoned subassembly. Two apparent choices for poisons are natural boron rods and natural gadolinium rods. Studied and analyzed is the effect of these two poisons on the hot-to-cold reactivity upswing. Compared with an upswing of 2.9% in a nonpoisoned assembly, the upswing in the gadolinium-poisoned assembly is 3.0%, and the upswing in the boron-poisoned assembly is 8.8%. Thus the hot-to-cold control penalty is almost nil for the choice of gadolinium and is considerable for the choice of boron.