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Opportunities, Proposed PhD Topics

PhD position at Uppsala University

PhD student in applied nuclear physics, nuclear safeguards for SMR

Duties

This project is devoted to research on non-proliferation and safeguards aspects related to the introduction and possibly deployment of SMR:s in Sweden. Of particular interest is accounting for and verification of the nuclear material, which means that the reactors themselves are central, but that also that other issues related to e.g. the transportation and storage of fuel could become relevant. In this context, potential challenges include geographically distributed and even transportable reactor systems, systems located at non-traditional sites, and nuclear materials and reactor operations that differ from current commercial large-scale light water reactors. Safeguards solutions need to be comprehensive, cost-efficient, robust, make efficient use of safeguards resources and be as non-intrusive as possible on plant operations. The main objective of this project is to provide safeguards concepts and solutions to ensure that safeguards requirements can be met during development, assessment and licensing of SMRs. The project will also research methods and equipment suitable for safeguards verification of the fuel cycle activities for modular reactor systems. Although this project focuses on the introduction of SMRs in Sweden, the research is highly relevant for the implementation of safeguards on an international level, through the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) as well as on a regional and national level.

Research tasks include studies of selected SMR concepts to better understand safeguards considerations and challenges associated with all parts of the fuel cycle. This may include aspects related to national legislation, deployment scenarios, operation modes, logistic and storage considerations and fuel recycling. The objective is to better understand what implications the deployment of SMRs and or Advanced Modular Reactors could have on nuclear safeguards, from both a technical and non-technical perspective. This work could benefit from considering proliferation assessment studies, diversion pathway analysis or studies on material attractiveness. The research is furthermore expected to include analysis of (national) needs in terms of e.g. new facilities, new logistical solutions and new instruments/approaches/methods. This part of the project is related to the societal impacts of deployment of SMRs, and the work is foreseen to be done in collaboration with other partners and working groups in ANItA.

Another major part of this project is research on the characterization of material flows of fresh and irradiated fuels, and assessments related to future fuel use in the SMRs, as well as safeguards-relevant process materials streams. It is expected that the PhD student will model and simulate for instance used nuclear fuel as well as the detection of radiation from the fuel in order to draw conclusions about how to best verify the nuclear material. This research is expected to also include the use of machine learning methods for data analysis. Also this part of the project will be executed in collaboration and cooperation with other partners and working groups in ANItA.

Placement: Department of Physics and Astronomy

Type of employment: Full time , Temporary position

Pay: Fixed salary

Number of positions: 1

Working hours: 100 %

Town: Uppsala

County: Uppsala län

Country: Sweden

Union representative: ST/TCO tco@fackorg.uu.se
Seko Universitetsklubben seko@uadm.uu.se
Saco-rådet saco@uadm.uu.se

Number of reference: UFV-PA 2023/1069

Last application date: 2023-05-02

A detailed description can be found HERE

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Opportunities

Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Pathways: intensive introductory course for graduate and post-graduate students of engineering disciplines

SIPRI and the European Union Non-Proliferation and Disarmament Consortium (EUNPDC) are pleased to host a second installment of the intensive introductory course on the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction (WMD), mechanisms to control their further spread and pathways to disarmamentThe course will take place on 25 May 2023 online.

Dedicated to graduate and postgraduate students of nuclear and aerospace engineering disciplines, the course will cover the fundamentals of biological, chemical and nuclear weapons, as well as of missiles and other means of WMD delivery; threats associated with the military use of WMD and potential terrorist uses of chemical, biological, radioactive and nuclear (CBRN) material (i.e. CBRN terrorism); arms control treaties; WMD-free zones; non-proliferation treaties and means of their verification; export controls; and mechanisms aimed at achieving disarmament. The course will also discuss the role of the nuclear and aerospace industries in preventing the spread and use of nuclear weapons.

The course will be instructed by renowned experts on WMD non-proliferation, arms control, disarmament, export controls, verification and related subjects from SIPRI and other European research centres, think tanks and international organizations.

Additional information about the course and the application process is available here.

You can browse the main website, at the following link: HERE

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Opportunities

IAEA Lise Meitner Programme (LMP) 2023 for Women

The IAEA Director General has recently announced the IAEA Lise Meitner Programme (LMP) which focuses on career development of women in the nuclear field.

It aims to boost women professional careers with a multiweek visiting professional programme to expand their vision and experience with technical and managerial activities, in addition to creating a community of women nuclear professionals.

The programme will be launched on International Women’s Day on 8 March 2023 during an IAEA event.

 

Further information can be found HERE

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Opportunities

ETRAP Conference and EUTERP Workshop

The EUTERP Workshop will take place 26-27 June, 2023;

The ETRAP2023 Conference will be held in the same week from 27 to 30 June, 2023.

The Venue will be the Academy building of the University of Groningen in The Netherlands.

The deadline for abstract submission for ETRAP2023 is extended to 15 February, 2023.

Further information at the conference website: https://www.etrap.net/ (this includes the workshop!)

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Opportunities

ELINDER “Summer School on Nuclear Decommissioning and Waste Management”

ELINDER “Summer School on Nuclear Decommissioning and Waste Management”

a learning path for post-graduate students on 10-14 July 2023, in JRC Ispra, Italy

 

The European Commission Joint Research Centre (JRC) is hosting a 5-days Decommissioning Summer School (DSS) on 10-14 July, in Ispra, Italy. This unique practice-oriented training also includes visits of the nuclear installations in Ispra and illustrative case studies.

The 2023 Edition of the DSS is organised in the frame of the European Learning Initiatives for Nuclear Decommissioning and Environmental Remediation (ELINDER).

The course targets students who have completed their first cycle of studies in the fields of engineering, science and technology, and who would like to enrich their curriculum during the holidays’ time. Preference will be given to students who are already enrolled in a Master’s or PhD programme and have no remunerated professional activity.

Participation is free of charge for admitted students. The JRC supports the courses and accommodation. Travel costs might be subject to partial reimbursement through the EU ENEN2plus project

The DSS is limited to 40 participants and applications are open until 16 April 2023, 23:59 CEST.

To express their interest, students are encouraged to complete the application form and send it together with a copy of their student card to: JRC-DSS@ec.europa.eu

Flyer available for download, HERE

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Opportunities

Job Opportunities at JRC Geel

2 Vacancies as Contract Agent are open at JRC Geel

 

Nuclear Science, Safeguards and Security

Auxiliary Contract Staff positions

Code: 2023-GEE-GII5-FGIV-022508 – GEEL
CONTRACT AGENT FGIV – Project Officer – Scientific

Deadline: 20/03/2023 23:59 Brussels time    APPLY

Auxiliary Contract Staff positions

Code: 2023-GEE-GII5-FGIV-022509 – GEEL
CONTRACT AGENT FGIV – Project Officer – Scientific

Deadline: 20/03/2023 23:59 Brussels time    APPLY

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Opportunities

ANIMMA Conference and Summer School

The eighth of a series of conferences devoted to endorsing and promoting scientific and technical activities based on nuclear instrumentation and measurements.

ANIMMA conference brings together scientific, academic and industrial communities interested or actively involved in the R&D related to nuclear instrumentation and measurement methods.

The program is focused on instrumentation but emphasizes the latest developments in all measurement stages: signal detection, modelling, electronics treatment, signal acquisition and analysis, modelling interpretation and associated training/education activities.
ANIMMA offers an outstanding opportunity for scientists and engineers to meet and discuss new ways to address complex problems and find advanced solutions in nuclear instrumentation and measurement sciences and technologies.

A very new proposition would be to have a Laboratory in nuclear measurement instrumentation application to explain a series of security systems to better address nuclear security applications by guarding against threats, theft, sabotage, unauthorized access, illegal transfer or other malicious acts involving high-level radioactive wastes and nuclear facilities.

further information at the Conference website: https://animma.com/

ANIMMA International Summer School

A new three full days international school for a maximum of 32 students with an advanced program of courses will be proposed and will be held at the University of Pisa on June 10-12, 2023.

Starting from the physical principles, the courses will present a selection of applications of radiation detectors as well as nuclear measurements in various fields, including a hands-on demonstration session with state-of-the-art nuclear instrumentation equipment.

Further information on the dedicated website: https://animma.com/scope/international-summer-school/

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Opportunities, Proposed PhD Topics

PhD Opportunity in Molten Salt Reactor

Detailed title of the PhD thesis:
Contributions to the design and performance evaluation of an actinide converter type molten
salt reactor

Description of the subject
Molten salt nuclear reactors (MSRs) have great potential in terms of safety and flexibility. These are reactors in which the fuel is dissolved in a mixture of molten salts (liquid), acting also as the coolant. The salt circulates in the fuel circuit through an area called the “core” where it is made critical by geometry, producing heat, which is extracted by passing through a heat exchanger, thus allowing the energy produced to be used, either in the form of heat (heat-generating role) or electricity (power-generating role). This type of reactor is characterized by its intrinsically core stable behavior, and its versatility (choice of the cycle, choice of neutron spectrum, choice of salt composition, etc.) and therefore the versatility of its applications (power reactor on a range from very small to very large power, burner of high activity and long-life waste by transmutation, etc.). As these qualities are sought after in the current nuclear context, it is attracting renewed interest in France, in Europe and in the world.

For about twenty years, the CNRS, through the MSFR (Molten Salt Fast Reactor) team of LPSC (Laboratoire de Physique Subatomique et de Cosmologie), has been studying this type of reactor in various forms, and in particular the so-called reference MSFR, a high-power breeder reactor operating in the Thorium cycle and with a fluoride salt. The SEN (Structure and Nuclear Energy) team of SUBATECH (Laboratoire de Physique SUBAtomique et TECHnologies Associées) joined this theme a few years ago with a particular interest in the aspects of neutronics and associated calculations of residual power.

Taking into account the renewed interest for this promising technology, new collaborations have been set up, and new studies are in progress, in particular, those around the MSR concepts of chloride salt actinide converter: among which the ARAMIS (Advanced Reactor for Actinides Management in Salt) reactor carried by the CEA and studied in the framework of the national ISAC (Innovative System for Actinides Conversion) project which began in the first half of 2022 and whose partners are: CEA, CNRS, EDF, FRAMATOME and ORANO. The ISAC project aims to study the capacity of a breakthrough technology, in this case the MSR, to reduce the inventory of actinides from the existing reactor fleet via the transmutation of minor actinides, by carrying out a sketch study (evaluation of design options, performances of the concept, operational and safety analysis) and by associating with it the first small-scale experiments on the main barriers of this technology: the chemistry of the salts, treatment/recycling, and the prevention of corrosion applied to the materials making up the primary circuit. Scenario studies will be associated in order to evaluate the final impact on the inventory and the type of waste to be stored according to different hypotheses.

The subject of the PhD thesis proposed here will contribute to the definition of the outline in collaboration with the different partners of the consortium, via the neutronic studies of the ARAMIS reactor. The thesis will focus on the calculation of the core and cycle performances, on the sensitivities to nuclear data, as well as on the study of the residual power. Other studies may be undertaken by the PhD student, depending on the progress of the thesis and of the ISAC project, particularly in connection with safety studies: core behavior in accident situations, participation in risk analysis in collaboration with EDF and Framatome. The thesis, which will be supported by the two laboratories LPSC and SUBATECH, will be carried out 50% in Nantes at SUBATECH and 50% in Grenoble at LPSC.

The neutronic studies will be performed with the SERPENT evolution code for core characterization taking into account the on-line fuel processing scheme for the defined concept. Developments of the SERPENT code, specific to the MSR technology (constraints on the reactivity and/or the fuelcomposition during evolution) are currently underway at the SUBATECH laboratory. The results of these studies will also be compared to those obtained with the REM code developed in Grenoble since more than 20 years and which is currently the reference evolution code for the MSR concepts. Sensitivity studies to nuclear data will be performed with the Coconust and Cocodrilo codes developed at SUBATECH and LPSC. A work on the needs for improvement of nuclear data related to residual power will be carried out in the framework of the thesis. The PhD student may also use the coupled multiphysics codes developed at LPSC for the calculation of normal and accidental transients of MSR, in particular the coupled 3D code TFM-OpenFOAM and the system code LiCore. Also, part of the studies could focus on the optimization of the fuel circuit of the ARAMIS concept, with the LPSC multicriteria
optimization code Songe.

In addition, the LPSC and SUBATECH laboratories are collaborating in the European projects SAMOSAFER (Simulation Models and Safety Assessment for Fluid-fuel Energy Reactors) and MIMOSA (MultI-recycling strategies of LWR SNF focusing on MOlten SAlt technology), and the PhD student will have the opportunity to present his/her work in these European frameworks and also to contribute to the working groups of these projects in relation to the PhD thesis subject.

 

Context of the work
The PhD student under CNRS contract will be based during the first half of the thesis at the SUBATECH laboratory in Nantes and during the second half at the LPSC laboratory in Grenoble.

The research work will be multidisciplinary, ranging from reactor physics, nuclear data and safety analysis.

The candidate must have a Master’s degree in nuclear or reactor physics or equivalent. He or she must:
– Have a good knowledge of reactor physics (neutronics, thermal-hydraulics, safety…)
– Have a good knowledge of the use of an evolving neutronic code, dealing with the coupling of Boltzmann (neutron transport) and Bateman (material evolution) equations
– Be able to work in a team in the context of a wide range of collaborations
– Be used to developing computer code, especially in Python and Java
– Ability to produce large amounts of data
– Fluency in scientific English, both spoken and written
– Basics in French and will to learn!
– Be rigorous: know how to report, and respect deadlines.

The position is foreseen to be fulfilled between March 2023 and October 2023.

Both students who are already graduated or are looking for a PhD for the new fall semester are invited to apply.

The application (CV, cover letter, reference letters, transcript of Master’s results) is to be sent first via email to

Axel Laureau (axel.laureau@cnrs.fr)

Elsa Merle (elsa.merle@lpsc.in2p3.fr)

Lydie Giot (giot@subatech.in2p3.fr).

A detailed description can be downloaded HERE (French first and English follows)

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Opportunities, Proposed PhD Topics

PhD Topics available at SCK CEN

SCK CEN is welcoming PhD Applications until MARCH 23, 2023

Fields are diverse: radiochemistry, reactor engineering, nuclear technology, materials, radiation protection, waste & disposal, decommissioning, etc…

The list of available topics:

  • A whole-body physiologically based pharmacokinetic model for personalized 161Tb-PRRT

    Research in Dosimetric Applications

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  • Application of Lemna-based technologies to remediate radioactively polluted water and investigation of valorisation potential of residual phases

    Biosphere Impact Studies

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  • Changing of the Guard: Managing safety and security interactions in a context of nuclear technological innovation

    Nuclear Science and Technology Studies

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  • Developing flexible matrices for transmutation targets

    Fuel Materials

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  • Development of a molten salt electrorefining process suited for the recycling of HALEU fuel production scraps

    Radiochemistry

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  • Development of a novel laser spectroscopy apparatus for high-precision studies of radioactive isotopes at ISOL@MYRRHA

    Physics and Target Research

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  • Development of organ-on-chip sensors to monitor cardiac tissue

    Radiobiology

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  • Evaluation of the corrosion rate and mechanism of metallic uranium (BR1 fuel) in highly alkaline and anaerobic conditions

    R&D Waste Packages

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  • First generation targets for the ISOL facility of MYRRHA – A Si/Ti target for Al and Mg isotopes

    Physics and Target Research

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  • In vivo and in silico assessment of circular RNAs as novel long-term biomarkers of radiation exposure for biodosimetry

    Radiobiology

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  • Innovative detector set-ups for the robust quantification of radiological data acquired with Unmanned Aerial Vehicles

    Crisis Management and Decision Support

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  • Neutronic experiments at VENUS-F in support of lead-cooled small modular reactor deployment

    Nuclear Systems Measurements

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  • Novel assays of ‘difficult-to-measure’ radionuclides in the context of a sustainable waste management

    Low-level Radioactivity Measurements

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  • Oxidation and corrosion mechanisms in actinide oxide systems

    Fuel Materials

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  • Personal online dosimetry of astronauts using computational methods

    Research in Dosimetric Applications

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  • Screening of airborne radioxenon measurements for Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty verification

    Crisis Management and Decision Support

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  • Separation and purification of medical radioisotopes by solvent extraction in milliflow reactors

    Radiochemistry

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  • Shape controlled thorium dioxide precipitation routes

    Fuel Materials

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  • Super-resolved analysis of lamin-mediated DNA damage repair after high LET irradiation and its applicability to predictive modelling of individual radiation sensitivity in cancer patients

    Radiobiology

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  • Towards insights of formation, growth and degradation of thin oxide films on steels in liquid lead as applied for Lead-cooled Small Modular Reactors (SMRs)

    Reactor Research & Engineering

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  • Understanding the RNA regulatory interactome landscape of radiation response in glioblastoma.

    Radiobiology

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