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Design of a High-Assay Low-Enriched Uranium Tri-Structural Isotropic Critical Experiment for Advanced Reactor Validation

Holly Trellue, Theresa Cutler, Erik Luther, Nick Wynne, Justin Lee, John Downey, Scott Stinson, Kristin Stolte, Rene Sanchez, Alexis Maldonado, Hannah Morbach

Nuclear Technology / Volume 212 / Number 6 / June 2026 / Pages 1609-1622

Regular Research Article / dx.doi.org/10.1080/00295450.2025.2504149

Received:January 31, 2025
Accepted:May 4, 2025
Published:May 15, 2026

High-assay low-enriched uranium (HALEU) fuel is a key component of many small modular reactor designs. Critical experiments are an important way to understand the neutronic performance of systems by obtaining nuclear data validations through measurements. Data reduce uncertainty and risk by showing that systems respond as predicted to changes such as temperature, subsequently advancing the overall technology readiness level of the materials within. Numerous critical experiments have been performed at the National Criticality Experiments Research Center (NCERC) operated by Los Alamos National Laboratory at the Nevada National Security Site since it became operational in 2011. However, the first experiment with HALEU fuel did not occur until 2024. Through extensive engineering, the experiment described in this paper was successfully designed and executed for the Comet vertical lift assembly at NCERC to perform measurements with HALEU tri-structural isotropic fuel that will assist in validation of nuclear data and computational modeling of small modular reactors for years to come.