IAEA SSR-3 - Safety of Research Reactors

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IAEA Safety Standards

for protecting people and the environment

Safety of
Research Reactors

Specific Safety Requirements


No. SSR-3

IAEA SAFETY STANDARDS AND RELATED PUBLICATIONS


IAEA SAFETY STANDARDS
Under the terms of Article III of its Statute, the IAEA is authorized to establish or adopt
standards of safety for protection of health and minimization of danger to life and property, and
to provide for the application of these standards.
The publications by means of which the IAEA establishes standards are issued in the
IAEA Safety Standards Series. This series covers nuclear safety, radiation safety, transport
safety and waste safety. The publication categories in the series are Safety Fundamentals,
Safety Requirements and Safety Guides.
Information on the IAEAs safety standards programme is available on the IAEA Internet
site
http://www-ns.iaea.org/standards/
The site provides the texts in English of published and draft safety standards. The texts
of safety standards issued in Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish, the IAEA Safety
Glossary and a status report for safety standards under development are also available. For
further information, please contact the IAEA at: Vienna International Centre, PO Box 100,
1400Vienna, Austria.
All users of IAEA safety standards are invited to inform the IAEA of experience in their
use (e.g. as a basis for national regulations, for safety reviews and for training courses) for the
purpose of ensuring that they continue to meet users needs. Information may be provided via
the IAEA Internet site or by post, as above, or by email to [email protected].
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
The IAEA provides for the application of the standards and, under the terms of Articles III
and VIII.C of its Statute, makes available and fosters the exchange of information relating
to peaceful nuclear activities and serves as an intermediary among its Member States for this
purpose.
Reports on safety in nuclear activities are issued as Safety Reports, which provide
practical examples and detailed methods that can be used in support of the safety standards.
Other safety related IAEA publications are issued as Emergency Preparedness and
Response publications, Radiological Assessment Reports, the International Nuclear Safety
Groups INSAG Reports, Technical Reports and TECDOCs. The IAEA also issues reports
on radiological accidents, training manuals and practical manuals, and other special safety
related publications.
Security related publications are issued in the IAEA Nuclear Security Series.
The IAEA Nuclear Energy Series comprises informational publications to encourage
and assist research on, and the development and practical application of, nuclear energy for
peaceful purposes. It includes reports and guides on the status of and advances in technology,
and on experience, good practices and practical examples in the areas of nuclear power, the
nuclear fuel cycle, radioactive waste management and decommissioning.

SAFETY OF
RESEARCH REACTORS

The following States are Members of the International Atomic Energy Agency:
AFGHANISTAN
ALBANIA
ALGERIA
ANGOLA
ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA
ARGENTINA
ARMENIA
AUSTRALIA
AUSTRIA
AZERBAIJAN
BAHAMAS
BAHRAIN
BANGLADESH
BARBADOS
BELARUS
BELGIUM
BELIZE
BENIN
BOLIVIA, PLURINATIONAL
STATE OF
BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA
BOTSWANA
BRAZIL
BRUNEI DARUSSALAM
BULGARIA
BURKINA FASO
BURUNDI
CAMBODIA
CAMEROON
CANADA
CENTRAL AFRICAN
REPUBLIC
CHAD
CHILE
CHINA
COLOMBIA
CONGO
COSTA RICA
CTE DIVOIRE
CROATIA
CUBA
CYPRUS
CZECH REPUBLIC
DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC
OF THE CONGO
DENMARK
DJIBOUTI
DOMINICA
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
ECUADOR
EGYPT
EL SALVADOR
ERITREA
ESTONIA
ETHIOPIA
FIJI
FINLAND
FRANCE
GABON

GEORGIA
GERMANY
GHANA
GREECE
GUATEMALA
GUYANA
HAITI
HOLY SEE
HONDURAS
HUNGARY
ICELAND
INDIA
INDONESIA
IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF
IRAQ
IRELAND
ISRAEL
ITALY
JAMAICA
JAPAN
JORDAN
KAZAKHSTAN
KENYA
KOREA, REPUBLIC OF
KUWAIT
KYRGYZSTAN
LAO PEOPLES DEMOCRATIC
REPUBLIC
LATVIA
LEBANON
LESOTHO
LIBERIA
LIBYA
LIECHTENSTEIN
LITHUANIA
LUXEMBOURG
MADAGASCAR
MALAWI
MALAYSIA
MALI
MALTA
MARSHALL ISLANDS
MAURITANIA
MAURITIUS
MEXICO
MONACO
MONGOLIA
MONTENEGRO
MOROCCO
MOZAMBIQUE
MYANMAR
NAMIBIA
NEPAL
NETHERLANDS
NEW ZEALAND
NICARAGUA
NIGER
NIGERIA
NORWAY

OMAN
PAKISTAN
PALAU
PANAMA
PAPUA NEW GUINEA
PARAGUAY
PERU
PHILIPPINES
POLAND
PORTUGAL
QATAR
REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA
ROMANIA
RUSSIAN FEDERATION
RWANDA
SAN MARINO
SAUDI ARABIA
SENEGAL
SERBIA
SEYCHELLES
SIERRA LEONE
SINGAPORE
SLOVAKIA
SLOVENIA
SOUTH AFRICA
SPAIN
SRI LANKA
SUDAN
SWAZILAND
SWEDEN
SWITZERLAND
SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC
TAJIKISTAN
THAILAND
THE FORMER YUGOSLAV
REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA
TOGO
TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
TUNISIA
TURKEY
TURKMENISTAN
UGANDA
UKRAINE
UNITED ARAB EMIRATES
UNITED KINGDOM OF
GREAT BRITAIN AND
NORTHERN IRELAND
UNITED REPUBLIC
OF TANZANIA
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
URUGUAY
UZBEKISTAN
VANUATU
VENEZUELA, BOLIVARIAN
REPUBLIC OF
VIET NAM
YEMEN
ZAMBIA
ZIMBABWE

The Agencys Statute was approved on 23 October 1956 by the Conference on the Statute of the
IAEA held at United Nations Headquarters, New York; it entered into force on 29 July 1957.
The Headquarters of the Agency are situated in Vienna. Its principal objective is to accelerate and enlarge
the contribution of atomic energy to peace, health and prosperity throughout the world.

IAEA SAFETY STANDARDS SERIES No. SSR-3

SAFETY OF
RESEARCH REACTORS
SPECIFIC SAFETY REQUIREMENTS
This publication includes a CD-ROM containing the IAEA Safety Glossary:
2007 Edition (2007) and the Fundamental Safety Principles (2006),
each in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish versions.
The CD-ROM is also available for purchase separately.
See: http://www-pub.iaea.org/books

INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY


VIENNA, 2016

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
All IAEA scientific and technical publications are protected by the terms of
the Universal Copyright Convention as adopted in 1952 (Berne) and as revised
in 1972 (Paris). The copyright has since been extended by the World Intellectual
Property Organization (Geneva) to include electronic and virtual intellectual
property. Permission to use whole or parts of texts contained in IAEA publications
in printed or electronic form must be obtained and is usually subject to royalty
agreements. Proposals for non-commercial reproductions and translations are
welcomed and considered on a case-by-case basis. Enquiries should be addressed
to the IAEA Publishing Section at:
Marketing and Sales Unit, Publishing Section
International Atomic Energy Agency
Vienna International Centre
PO Box 100
1400 Vienna, Austria
fax: +43 1 2600 29302
tel.: +43 1 2600 22417
email: [email protected]
http://www.iaea.org/books
IAEA, 2016
Printed by the IAEA in Austria
September 2016
STI/PUB/1751

IAEA Library Cataloguing in Publication Data


Names: International Atomic Energy Agency.
Title: Safety of research reactors / International Atomic Energy Agency.
Description: Vienna : International Atomic Energy Agency, 2016. | Series: IAEA
safety standards series, ISSN 1020525X ; no. SSR-3 | Includes bibliographical
references.
Identifiers: IAEAL 16-01056 | ISBN 9789201048165 (paperback : alk. paper)
Subjects: LCSH: Nuclear reactors Safety measures. | Nuclear reactors Design
and construction. | Radiation Safety measures.
Classification: UDC 621.039.58 | STI/PUB/1751

FOREWORD
by Yukiya Amano
Director General
The IAEAs Statute authorizes the Agency to establish or adopt
standards of safety for protection of health and minimization of danger to life and
property standards that the IAEA must use in its own operations, and which
States can apply by means of their regulatory provisions for nuclear and radiation
safety. The IAEA does this in consultation with the competent organs of the
United Nations and with the specialized agencies concerned. A comprehensive
set of high quality standards under regular review is a key element of a stable and
sustainable global safety regime, as is the IAEAs assistance in their application.
The IAEA commenced its safety standards programme in 1958. The
emphasis placed on quality, fitness for purpose and continuous improvement
has led to the widespread use of the IAEA standards throughout the world. The
Safety Standards Series now includes unified Fundamental Safety Principles,
which represent an international consensus on what must constitute a high level
of protection and safety. With the strong support of the Commission on Safety
Standards, the IAEA is working to promote the global acceptance and use of its
standards.
Standards are only effective if they are properly applied in practice.
The IAEAs safety services encompass design, siting and engineering safety,
operational safety, radiation safety, safe transport of radioactive material and
safe management of radioactive waste, as well as governmental organization,
regulatory matters and safety culture in organizations. These safety services assist
Member States in the application of the standards and enable valuable experience
and insights to be shared.
Regulating safety is a national responsibility, and many States have
decided to adopt the IAEAs standards for use in their national regulations. For
parties to the various international safety conventions, IAEA standards provide
a consistent, reliable means of ensuring the effective fulfilment of obligations
under the conventions. The standards are also applied by regulatory bodies and
operators around the world to enhance safety in nuclear power generation and in
nuclear applications in medicine, industry, agriculture and research.
Safety is not an end in itself but a prerequisite for the purpose of the
protection of people in all States and of the environment now and in the
future. The risks associated with ionizing radiation must be assessed and
controlled without unduly limiting the contribution of nuclear energy to equitable
and sustainable development. Governments, regulatory bodies and operators
everywhere must ensure that nuclear material and radiation sources are used
beneficially, safely and ethically. The IAEA safety standards are designed to
facilitate this, and I encourage all Member States to make use of them.

THE IAEA SAFETY STANDARDS


BACKGROUND
Radioactivity is a natural phenomenon and natural sources of radiation are
features of the environment. Radiation and radioactive substances have many
beneficial applications, ranging from power generation to uses in medicine,
industry and agriculture. The radiation risks to workers and the public and to the
environment that may arise from these applications have to be assessed and, if
necessary, controlled.
Activities such as the medical uses of radiation, the operation of nuclear
installations, the production, transport and use of radioactive material, and the
management of radioactive waste must therefore be subject to standards of safety.
Regulating safety is a national responsibility. However, radiation risks may
transcend national borders, and international cooperation serves to promote and
enhance safety globally by exchanging experience and by improving capabilities
to control hazards, to prevent accidents, to respond to emergencies and to mitigate
any harmful consequences.
States have an obligation of diligence and duty of care, and are expected to
fulfil their national and international undertakings and obligations.
International safety standards provide support for States in meeting their
obligations under general principles of international law, such as those relating to
environmental protection. International safety standards also promote and assure
confidence in safety and facilitate international commerce and trade.
A global nuclear safety regime is in place and is being continuously
improved. IAEA safety standards, which support the implementation of binding
international instruments and national safety infrastructures, are a cornerstone
of this global regime. The IAEA safety standards constitute auseful tool
for contracting parties to assess their performance under these international
conventions.
THE IAEA SAFETY STANDARDS
The status of the IAEA safety standards derives from the IAEAs Statute,
which authorizes the IAEA to establish or adopt, in consultation and, where
appropriate, in collaboration with the competent organs of the United Nations
and with the specialized agencies concerned, standards of safety for protection of
health and minimization of danger to life and property, and to provide for their
application.

With a view to ensuring the protection of people and the environment


from harmful effects of ionizing radiation, the IAEA safety standards establish
fundamental safety principles, requirements and measures to control the radiation
exposure of people and the release of radioactive material to the environment, to
restrict the likelihood of events that might lead to a loss of control over a nuclear
reactor core, nuclear chain reaction, radioactive source or any other source of
radiation, and to mitigate the consequences of such events if they were to occur.
The standards apply to facilities and activities that give rise to radiation risks,
including nuclear installations, the use of radiation and radioactive sources, the
transport of radioactive material and the management of radioactive waste.
Safety measures and security measures1 have in common the aim of
protecting human life and health and the environment. Safety measures and
security measures must be designed and implemented in an integrated manner
so that security measures do not compromise safety and safety measures do not
compromise security.
The IAEA safety standards reflect an international consensus on what
constitutes a high level of safety for protecting people and the environment
from harmful effects of ionizing radiation. They are issued in the IAEA Safety
Standards Series, which has three categories (see Fig. 1).
Safety Fundamentals
Safety Fundamentals present the fundamental safety objective and principles
of protection and safety, and provide the basis for the safety requirements.
Safety Requirements
An integrated and consistent set of Safety Requirements establishes
the requirements that must be met to ensure the protection of people and the
environment, both now and in the future. The requirements are governed by the
objective and principles of the Safety Fundamentals. If the requirements are not
met, measures must be taken to reach or restore the required level of safety. The
format and style of the requirements facilitate their use for the establishment, in a
harmonized manner, of a national regulatory framework. Requirements, including
numbered overarching requirements, are expressed as shall statements. Many
requirements are not addressed to a specific party, the implication being that the
appropriate parties are responsible for fulfilling them.

See also publications issued in the IAEA Nuclear Security Series.

Safety Fundamentals

Fundamental Safety Principles


General Safety Requirements
Part 1. Governmental, Legal and
Regulatory Framework for Safety
Part 2. Leadership and Management
for Safety
Part 3. Radiation Protection and
Safety of Radiation Sources

Specific Safety Requirements


1. Site Evaluation for
Nuclear Installations
2. Safety of Nuclear Power Plants
2/1 Design
2/2 Commissioning and Operation

Part 4. Safety Assessment for


Facilities and Activities

3. Safety of Research Reactors

Part 5. Predisposal Management


of Radioactive Waste

4. Safety of Nuclear Fuel


Cycle Facilities

Part 6. Decommissioning and


Termination of Activities

5. Safety of Radioactive Waste


Disposal Facilities

Part 7. Emergency Preparedness


and Response

6. Safe Transport of
Radioactive Material

Collection of Safety Guides


FIG. 1. The long term structure of the IAEA Safety Standards Series.

Safety Guides
Safety Guides provide recommendations and guidance on how to comply
with the safety requirements, indicating an international consensus that it
is necessary to take the measures recommended (or equivalent alternative
measures). The Safety Guides present international good practices, and
increasingly they reflect best practices, to help users striving to achieve high
levels of safety. The recommendations provided in Safety Guides are expressed
as should statements.
APPLICATION OF THE IAEA SAFETY STANDARDS
The principal users of safety standards in IAEA Member States are
regulatory bodies and other relevant national authorities. The IAEA safety
standards are also used by co-sponsoring organizations and by many organizations
that design, construct and operate nuclear facilities, as well as organizations
involved in the use of radiation and radioactive sources.

The IAEA safety standards are applicable, as relevant, throughout the entire
lifetime of all facilities and activities existing and new utilized for peaceful
purposes and to protective actions to reduce existing radiation risks. They can be
used by States as a reference for their national regulations in respect of facilities
and activities.
The IAEAs Statute makes the safety standards binding on the IAEA in
relation to its own operations and also on States in relation to IAEA assisted
operations.
The IAEA safety standards also form the basis for the IAEAs safety review
services, and they are used by the IAEA in support of competence building,
including the development of educational curricula and training courses.
International conventions contain requirements similar to those in
the IAEA safety standards and make them binding on contracting parties.
TheIAEA safety standards, supplemented by international conventions, industry
standards and detailed national requirements, establish a consistent basis for
protecting people and the environment. There will also be some special aspects
of safety that need to be assessed at the national level. For example, many of
the IAEA safety standards, in particular those addressing aspects of safety in
planning or design, are intended to apply primarily to new facilities and activities.
The requirements established in the IAEA safety standards might not be fully
met at some existing facilities that were built to earlier standards. The way in
which IAEA safety standards are to be applied tosuch facilities is a decision for
individual States.
The scientific considerations underlying the IAEA safety standards provide
an objective basis for decisions concerning safety; however, decision makers
must also make informed judgements and must determine how best to balance
the benefits of an action or an activity against the associated radiation risks and
any other detrimental impacts to which it gives rise.
DEVELOPMENT PROCESS FOR THE IAEA SAFETY STANDARDS
The preparation and review of the safety standards involves the IAEA
Secretariat and five safety standards committees, for emergency preparedness
and response (EPReSC) (as of 2016), nuclear safety (NUSSC), radiation
safety (RASSC), the safety of radioactive waste (WASSC) and the safe
transport of radioactive material (TRANSSC), and a Commission on Safety
Standards (CSS) which oversees the IAEA safety standards programme
(see Fig. 2).
All IAEA Member States may nominate experts for the safety standards
committees and may provide comments on draft standards. The membership of

Outline and work plan


prepared by the Secretariat;
review by the safety standards
committees and the CSS

Secretariat and
consultants:
drafting of new or revision
of existing safety standard
Draft

Review by
safety standards
committee(s)

Draft
Member States
Comments

Final draft

Endorsement
by the CSS

FIG. 2. The process for developing a new safety standard or revising an existing standard.

the Commission on Safety Standards is appointed by the Director General and


includes senior governmental officials having responsibility for establishing
national standards.
A management system has been established for the processes of planning,
developing, reviewing, revising and establishing the IAEA safety standards.
Itarticulates the mandate of the IAEA, the vision for the future application of
the safety standards, policies and strategies, and corresponding functions and
responsibilities.
INTERACTION WITH OTHER INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
The findings of the United Nations Scientific Committee on the Effects
of Atomic Radiation (UNSCEAR) and the recommendations of international

expert bodies, notably the International Commission on Radiological Protection


(ICRP), are taken into account in developing the IAEA safety standards. Some
safety standards are developed in cooperation with other bodies in the United
Nations system or other specialized agencies, including the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations, the United Nations Environment Programme,
the International Labour Organization, the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency, the
Pan American Health Organization and the World Health Organization.
INTERPRETATION OF THE TEXT
Safety related terms are to be understood as defined in the IAEA Safety
Glossary (see http://www-ns.iaea.org/standards/safety-glossary.htm). Otherwise,
words are used with the spellings and meanings assigned to them in the latest
edition of The Concise Oxford Dictionary. For Safety Guides, the English version
of the text is the authoritative version.
The background and context of each standard in the IAEA Safety
Standards Series and its objective, scope and structure are explained in Section1,
Introduction, of each publication.
Material for which there is no appropriate place in the body text
(e.g.material that is subsidiary to or separate from the body text, is included
in support of statements in the body text, or describes methods of calculation,
procedures or limits and conditions) may be presented in appendices or annexes.
An appendix, if included, is considered to form an integral part of the
safety standard. Material in an appendix has the same status as the body text,
and the IAEA assumes authorship of it. Annexes and footnotes to the main text,
if included, are used to provide practical examples or additional information or
explanation. Annexes and footnotes are not integral parts of the main text. Annex
material published by the IAEA is not necessarily issued under its authorship;
material under other authorship may be presented in annexes to the safety
standards. Extraneous material presented in annexes is excerpted and adapted as
necessary to be generally useful.

CONTENTS
1.

INTRODUCTION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Background (1.11.3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Objective (1.41.5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Scope (1.61.11) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Structure (1.12) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4

2.

APPLYING THE SAFETY OBJECTIVE, CONCEPTS AND


PRINCIPLES FOR RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES . . . . . . . . 5
General (2.1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Fundamental safety objective (2.22.3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Fundamental safety principles (2.42.5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Radiation protection (2.62.9) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Concept of defence in depth (2.102.14) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Graded approach (2.152.17) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

3.

REGULATORY SUPERVISION FOR RESEARCH


REACTOR FACILITIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Legal and regulatory infrastructure (3.13.3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Authorization process (3.43.5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Requirement 1: Safety analysis report (3.63.12) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Inspection and enforcement (3.133.16) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16

4.

MANAGEMENT FOR SAFETY AND VERIFICATION OF


SAFETY FOR RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Requirement 2: Responsibilities in the management for safety
(4.14.3) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Requirement 3: Safety policy (4.44.6) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Management system . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Requirement 4: Integrated management system (4.74.20) . . . . . . . . 19
Verification of safety . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Requirement 5: Safety assessment (4.214.26) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Requirement 6: Safety committee (4.27) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

5.

SITE EVALUATION FOR RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES


(5.15.12) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

6.

DESIGN OF RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28


General (6.16.5) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Principal technical requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Requirement 7: Main safety functions (6.66.7) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Requirement 8: Radiation protection (6.8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Requirement 9: Design (6.96.12) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Requirement 10: Application of the concept of defence in depth
(6.136.17) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Requirement 11: Interfaces of safety with security and the
State system of accounting for, and control of, nuclear material . . . 33
Requirement 12: Use of the graded approach (6.18) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Requirement 13: Proven engineering practices (6.196.24) . . . . . . . . 33
Requirement 14: Provision for construction (6.256.26) . . . . . . . . . . 34
Requirement 15: Features to facilitate radioactive waste
management and decommissioning (6.276.28) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
General requirements for design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Requirement 16: Safety classification of structures, systems and
components (6.296.32) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Requirement 17: Design basis for items important to safety
(6.336.34) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Requirement 18: Postulated initiating events (6.356.44) . . . . . . . . . . 37
Requirement 19: Internal and external hazards (6.456.57) . . . . . . . . 38
Requirement 20: Design basis accidents (6.586.62) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
Requirement 21: Design limits (6.63) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
Requirement 22: Design extension conditions (6.646.69) . . . . . . . . . 42
Requirement 23: Engineered safety features (6.706.72) . . . . . . . . . . 45
Requirement 24: Reliability of items important to safety
(6.736.75) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Requirement 25: Single failure criterion (6.766.79) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
Requirement 26: Common cause failures (6.80) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Requirement 27: Physical separation and independence of
safety systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Requirement 28: Fail-safe design (6.81) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Requirement 29: Qualification of items important to safety
(6.826.84) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Requirement 30: Design for commissioning (6.85) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48

Requirement 31: Calibration, testing, maintenance,


repair, replacement, inspection and monitoring of items
important to safety (6.866.89) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Requirement 32: Design for emergency preparedness and
response (6.906.91) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Requirement 33: Design for decommissioning (6.926.93) . . . . . . . . 50
Requirement 34: Design for radiation protection (6.946.102) . . . . . 51
Requirement 35: Design for optimal operator performance
(6.1036.107) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Requirement 36: Provision for safe utilization and modification
(6.1086.111) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
Requirement 37: Design for ageing management (6.1126.114) . . . . 54
Requirement 38: Provision for long shutdown periods (6.115) . . . . . . 55
Requirement 39: Prevention of unauthorized access to, or
interference with, items important to safety (6.116) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Requirement 40: Prevention of disruptive or adverse interactions
between systems important to safety (6.1176.118) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Requirement 41: Safety analysis of the design (6.1196.125) . . . . . . 56
Specific requirements for design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Requirement 42: Buildings and structures (6.1266.127) . . . . . . . . . . 58
Requirement 43: Means of confinement (6.1286.137) . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Requirement 44: Reactor core and fuel design (6.1386.145) . . . . . . 60
Requirement 45: Provision of reactivity control (6.1466.149) . . . . . 61
Requirement 46: Reactor shutdown systems (6.1506.155) . . . . . . . . 62
Requirement 47: Design of reactor coolant systems and related
systems (6.1566.163) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Requirement 48: Emergency cooling of the reactor core
(6.1646.166) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Requirement 49: Provision of instrumentation and control
systems (6.1676.171) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
Requirement 50: Reactor protection system (6.1726.181) . . . . . . . . 66
Requirement 51: Reliability and testability of instrumentation and
control systems (6.1826.183) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Requirement 52: Use of computer based equipment in systems
important to safety (6.184) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Requirement 53: Control room (6.1856.187) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
Requirement 54: Supplementary control room (6.188) . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Requirement 55: Emergency response facilities on the site (6.189) . . 70
Power supplies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Requirement 56: Electrical power supply systems (6.1906.192) . . . 71
Requirement 57: Radiation protection systems (6.1936.194) . . . . . . 71

Requirement 58: Handling and storage systems for fuel and


core components (6.1956.200) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Requirement 59: Radioactive waste systems (6.2016.203) . . . . . . . . 73
Requirement 60: Performance of supporting systems and
auxiliary systems (6.204) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Requirement 61: Fire protection systems (6.2056.209) . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Requirement 62: Lighting systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Requirement 63: Lifting equipment (6.210) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Requirement 64: Air conditioning systems and ventilation
systems (6.211) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Requirement 65: Compressed air systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Requirement 66: Experimental devices (6.2126.214) . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
7.

OPERATION OF RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES . . . . . . . . . 77


Organizational provisions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Requirement 67: Responsibilities of the operating organization
(7.17.9) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Requirement 68: Structure and functions of the operating
organization (7.107.12) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Requirement 69: Operating personnel (7.137.27) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
Requirement 70: Training, retraining and qualification of
personnel (7.287.31) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Requirement 71: Operational limits and conditions (7.327.43) . . . . 84
Requirement 72: Performance of safety related activities
(7.447.46) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
Commissioning . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
Requirement 73: Commissioning programme (7.477.56) . . . . . . . . . 87
Requirement 74: Operating procedures (7.577.62) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Requirement 75: Main control rooms, supplementary control
room and control equipment (7.637.65) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
Requirement 76: Material conditions and housekeeping
(7.667.67) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
Requirement 77: Maintenance, periodic testing and inspection
(7.687.76) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
Requirement 78: Core management and fuel handling (7.777.84) . . 94
Requirement 79: Fire safety (7.857.87) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
Requirement 80: Non-radiation-related safety (7.88) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Requirement 81: Emergency preparedness (7.897.93) . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Requirement 82: Records and reports (7.947.97) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99

Requirement 83: Utilization and modification of a research


reactor (7.987.106) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
Requirement 84: Radiation protection programme (7.1077.114) . . . 101
Requirement 85: Management of radioactive waste (7.1157.119) . . 103
Requirement 86: Ageing management (7.1207.122) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Requirement 87: Extended shutdown (7.1237.125) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
Requirement 88: Feedback of operating experience (7.1267.129) . . 105
8.

PREPARATION FOR DECOMMISSIONING OF A


RESEARCH REACTOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
Requirement 89: Decommissioning plan (8.18.8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106

9.

INTERFACES BETWEEN SAFETY AND SECURITY FOR


A RESEARCH REACTOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108
Requirement 90: Interfaces between nuclear safety and nuclear
security (9.19.8) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 108

APPENDIX I: SELECTED POSTULATED INITIATING EVENTS


FOR RESEARCH REACTORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
APPENDIX II: OPERATIONAL ASPECTS OF RESEARCH
REACTORS WARRANTING PARTICULAR
CONSIDERATION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
REFERENCES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
ANNEX I:

SELECTED SAFETY FUNCTIONS FOR RESEARCH


REACTORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119

ANNEX II:

OVERVIEW OF THE APPLICATION OF THE


SAFETY REQUIREMENTS TO SUBCRITICAL
ASSEMBLIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 121

DEFINITIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
CONTRIBUTORS TO DRAFTING AND REVIEW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125

1. INTRODUCTION
BACKGROUND
1.1. This publication supersedes the Safety Requirements publication Safety of
Research Reactors,1 which was issued in 2005 as IAEA Safety Standards Series
No.NS-R-4. Account has been taken of IAEA Safety Standards Series No.SF-1,
Fundamental Safety Principles[1], published in 2006. Requirements for nuclear
safety are intended to ensure the highest level of safety that can reasonably be
achieved for the protection of workers and other on-site personnel, and the public,
and the protection of the environment from harmful effects of ionizing radiation
arising from nuclear facilities. It is recognized that technology and scientific
knowledge advance, and that nuclear safety and the adequacy of protection
against radiation risks need to be considered in the context of the present state of
knowledge. Safety requirements will change over time; this Safety Requirements
publication reflects the present international consensus.
1.2. This Safety Requirements publication establishes requirements for all the
important areas of the safety of research reactors, with particular emphasis on
requirements for design and operation2.
1.3. A number of requirements for the safety of nuclear research reactors
are the same as, or similar to, those for nuclear power reactors. In view of
the important differences between power reactors and research reactors and
between the different types of research reactor,3 including critical assemblies and

INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Safety of Research Reactors,


IAEA Safety Standards Series No.NS-R-4, IAEA, Vienna(2005).
2
The important areas of research reactor safety include all activities performed to
achieve the purpose for which the research reactor was designed and constructed or modified.
This includes: maintenance, testing and inspection; fuel handling and handling of radioactive
material (including the production of radioisotopes); the installation, testing and operation of
experimental devices; the use of neutron beams; research and development work and education
and training using the research reactor systems; and other associated activities.
3
A research reactor is a nuclear reactor used mainly for the generation and utilization
of neutron flux and ionizing radiation for research and other purposes, including experimental
facilities associated with the reactor and storage, handling and treatment facilities for radioactive
materials on the same site that are directly related to safe operation of the research reactor.
Facilities commonly known as critical assemblies and subcritical assemblies are included.

subcritical assemblies, these requirements are to be applied in accordance with


the potential hazards associated with the reactor by means of a graded approach
(see paras 2.152.17 and IAEA Safety Standards Series No.SSG-22, Use of a
Graded Approach in the Application of the Safety Requirements for Research
Reactors[2]).
OBJECTIVE
1.4. The main objective of this Safety Requirements publication is to provide
a basis for safety and for safety assessment for all stages in the lifetime of a
research reactor by establishing requirements on aspects relating to regulatory
supervision, management for safety, site4 evaluation, design, manufacture,
construction, commissioning, operation, including utilization and modification,
and planning for decommissioning.
1.5. Technical and administrative requirements for the safety of research reactors
are established in accordance with this objective. This publication is intended for
use by organizations involved in the design, manufacture, construction, operation,
modification, maintenance and decommissioning of research reactors, in safety
analysis, verification and review, and in the provision of technical support, as
well as by regulatory bodies.
SCOPE
1.6. The safety requirements established in this publication are applicable for
the site evaluation, design, manufacture, construction, commissioning, operation,
including utilization and modification, and decommissioning of research reactors,
including critical assemblies and subcritical assemblies. The safety requirements
established in this publication are also to be applied to existing research reactors
to the extent practicable.

Within this context, the site area is the geographical area that contains an authorized
facility, authorized activity or radiation source, and within which the management of the
authorized facility or authorized activity may directly initiate emergency actions. The site
boundary is the perimeter of the site area.

1.7. For the purposes of this publication, a research reactor is a nuclear reactor
(including critical assemblies and subcritical assemblies) used for nuclear
research and for the generation and utilization of radiation for research and other
purposes. This definition excludes nuclear reactors used for the production of
electricity, naval propulsion, desalination or district heating. The term covers
the reactor core, radioactive sources used, experimental devices5, all systems
needed for their operation, installations managed by the facility that contain
nuclear material (irradiated or not), and radioactive waste management facilities
and all other facilities relevant to either the reactor or its associated experimental
facilities and devices located on the reactor site.
1.8. Research reactors with power levels in excess of several tens of megawatts,
fast reactors and reactors using experimental devices such as high pressure and
temperature loops and cold or hot neutron sources may require the application
of supplementary measures or even the application of requirements for power
reactors and/or additional safety measures (e.g. in the case of reactors used for
testing hazardous material). For such facilities, the requirements (and engineering
standards) to be applied, the extent of their application and any additional safety
measures that may need to be taken are required to be proposed by the operating
organization and to be subject to approval by the regulatory body. Homogeneous
reactors and accelerator driven systems are out of the scope of this publication.
1.9. All the requirements established here are to be applied unless it can be
justified that, for a specific research reactor, critical assembly or subcritical
assembly, the application of certain requirements may be graded. Each case
in which the application of requirements is graded shall be identified, with
account taken of the nature and possible magnitude of the hazards presented by
the given facility and the activities conducted. Hereafter, subcritical assemblies
will be mentioned separately only if a specific requirement is not relevant for,
or is applicable only to, subcritical assemblies. Paragraph 2.17 sets out factors
to be considered in deciding whether the application of certain requirements
established here may be graded.

For the purposes of this safety standard, the term experimental devices includes
devices installed in or around a reactor to utilize the neutron flux and ionizing radiation from
the reactor for research, development, isotope production or any other purpose.

1.10. This publication does not address:


(a) Requirements that are specifically covered in other IAEA Safety
Requirements publications (e.g. Refs[37]);
(b) Matters relating to nuclear security (other than the interfaces between
nuclear safety and nuclear security, addressed in Section9) or to the State
system of accounting for, and control of, nuclear material;
(c) Conventional industrial safety matters that under no circumstances could
affect the safety of the research reactor;
(d) Non-radiological impacts arising from the operation of the research reactor
facility.
1.11. Terms in this publication are to be understood as defined and explained in
the IAEA Safety Glossary[8], unless otherwise stated (see Definitions).
STRUCTURE
1.12. This Safety Requirements publication follows the relationship between
the safety objective and safety principles, and between requirements for nuclear
safety functions and design criteria and operational criteria for safety. It consists
of nine sections, two appendices and two annexes. Section 2, which draws on
SF-1[1], introduces the general safety objectives, concepts and principles for
the safety of nuclear installations, with emphasis on the radiation safety and
nuclear safety aspects of research reactors. Section 3, which draws on IAEA
Safety Standards Series No.GSR Part 1 (Rev. 1), Governmental, Legal and
Regulatory Framework for Safety [3], deals with the general requirements
on legal and regulatory infrastructure as far as these are relevant for research
reactors. Section4 deals with requirements on topics relating to the management
and verification of safety. This section is based on IAEA Safety Standards
Series No.GSR Part 2, Leadership and Management for Safety [4]. Section 5
establishes requirements regarding the evaluation and selection of the research
reactor site and deals with the evaluation of new sites and the sites of existing
research reactor facilities. This section is based on IAEA Safety Standards Series
No.NS-R-3 (Rev. 1), Site Evaluation for Nuclear Installations [5]. Section 6
establishes requirements for the safe design of all types of research reactor, with
account taken of the considerations mentioned in paras1.8 and 1.9. Coherence
is ensured with the Safety Requirements publication on the same subject for
nuclear power plants, IAEA Safety Standards Series No.SSR-2/1 (Rev.1), Safety

of Nuclear Power Plants: Design[9]. Section7 establishes requirements for the


safe operation of research reactors, including commissioning, maintenance,
utilization and modification. Coherence is likewise ensured with the Safety
Requirements publication on the same subject for nuclear power plants, IAEA
Safety Standards Series No.SSR-2/2 (Rev.1), Safety of Nuclear Power Plants:
Commissioning and Operation[10]. Section 8 establishes requirements for the
preparation of the safe decommissioning of research reactors on the basis of IAEA
Safety Standards Series No.GSR Part 6, Decommissioning of Facilities[11],
while Section 9 establishes requirements for the interfaces between safety and
security. Appendix I provides a list of the selected postulated initiating events
to be considered in the safety analysis for a research reactor. AppendixII deals
with the operational aspects warranting particular consideration. Annex I lists
selected safety functions of the safety systems for research reactors and of other
safety related items usually included in the design of research reactor. AnnexII
provides an overview of the application of the safety requirements to subcritical
assemblies.

2. APPLYING THE SAFETY OBJECTIVE, CONCEPTS AND


PRINCIPLES FOR RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES
GENERAL
2.1. SF-1[1] establishes the fundamental safety objective and ten fundamental
safety principles that provide the basis for requirements and measures to protect
people and the environment from harmful effects of ionizing radiation and for the
safety of facilities and activities that give rise to radiation risks.
FUNDAMENTAL SAFETY OBJECTIVE
2.2. The fundamental safety objective is to protect people and the environment
from harmful effects of ionizing radiation. This fundamental safety objective has
to be achieved, and the ten safety principles have to be applied, without unduly
limiting the operation of facilities or the conduct of activities that give rise to
radiation risks. To ensure that research reactors are operated and activities are
conducted to achieve the highest standards of safety that can reasonably be

achieved, measures have to be taken to achieve the following (see para.2.1 of


SF-1[1]):
(a) To control the radiation exposure of people and the release of
radioactive material to the environment;
(b) To restrict the likelihood of events that might lead to a loss of control
over a nuclear reactor core, nuclear chain reaction, radioactive source
or any other source of radiation;
(c) To mitigate the consequences of such events if they were to occur.
2.3. Paragraph2.2 of SF-1[1] states that:
The fundamental safety objective applies for all facilities and activities
and for all stages over the lifetime of a facility or radiation source, including
planning, siting, design, manufacturing, construction, commissioning and
operation [and utilization], as well as decommissioning and closure. This
includes the associated transport of radioactive material and management
of radioactive waste.
FUNDAMENTAL SAFETY PRINCIPLES
2.4. Paragraph2.3 of SF-1[1] states that:
Ten safety principles have been formulated, on the basis of which safety
requirements are developed and safety measures are to be implemented in
order to achieve the fundamental safety objective. The safety principles
form a set that is applicable in its entirety; although in practice different
principles may be more or less important in relation to particular
circumstances, the appropriate application of all relevant principles is
required.
2.5. The requirements presented in this publication are derived from the
fundamental safety objective of protecting people and the environment, and the
related safety principles[1]:

Principle 1: Responsibility for safety


The prime responsibility for safety must rest with the person or organization6
responsible for facilities and activities that give rise to radiation risks.
Principle 2: Role of government
An effective legal and governmental framework for safety, including an
independent regulatory body, must be established and sustained.
Principle 3: Leadership and management for safety
Effective leadership and management for safety must be established and
sustained in organizations concerned with, and facilities and activities that
give rise to, radiation risks.
Principle 4: Justification of facilities and activities
Facilities and activities that give rise to radiation risks must yield an overall
benefit.
Principle 5: Optimization of protection
Protection must be optimized to provide the highest level of safety that can
reasonably be achieved.
Principle 6: Limitation of risks to individuals
Measures for controlling radiation risks must ensure that no individual
bears an unacceptable risk of harm.
Principle 7: Protection of present and future generations
People and the environment, present and future, must be protected against
radiation risks.

For research reactor facilities, this is the operating organization.

Principle 8: Prevention of accidents


All practical efforts must be made to prevent and mitigate nuclear or
radiation accidents.
Principle 9: Emergency preparedness and response
Arrangements must be made for emergency preparedness and response for
nuclear or radiation incidents.
Principle 10: Protective actions to reduce existing or unregulated radiation
risks
Protective actions to reduce existing or unregulated radiation risks must be
justified and optimized.
The requirements derived from these principles must be applied to minimize
and control the radiation risks to workers and other personnel, the public and the
environment.
RADIATION PROTECTION
2.6. In order to satisfy the safety principles, it is required that, for all operational
states of a research reactor and for any associated activities including experiments,
doses from exposure to radiation within the research reactor facility or exposure
due to any planned radioactive release from the facility be kept below the dose
limits and kept as low as reasonably achievable (protection and safety is required
to be optimized[7]).
2.7. To apply the safety principles, it is also required that research reactors be
designed and operated so as to keep all sources of radiation under strict technical
and administrative control. However, these principles do not preclude limited
exposures or the release of authorized amounts of radioactive substances to
the environment from the research reactor facility in operational states. Such
exposures and radioactive releases are required to be strictly controlled, to be
recorded and to be kept as low as reasonably achievable, in compliance with
regulatory and operational limits as well as radiation protection requirements.

2.8. Although measures are taken to limit radiation exposure in all operational
states to levels that are as low as reasonably achievable and to minimize the
likelihood of an event that could lead to the loss of normal control over the source
of radiation, there will remain a probability albeit very low that an accident
could happen. Emergency arrangements shall therefore be applied to ensure that
the consequences of any accident that do occur are mitigated. Such measures
and arrangements include: engineered safety features; safety features for design
extension conditions; on-site emergency plans and procedures established by the
operating organization; and possibly off-site emergency intervention measures
put in place by the appropriate authorities in accordance with IAEA Safety
Standards Series No. GSRPart7, Preparedness and Response for a Nuclear or
Radiological Emergency[6].
2.9. The safety philosophy that is followed to meet the principles stated
in SF-1 [1] relies on the concept of defence in depth and on the adoption of
measures for the management and verification of safety over the entire lifetime
of the research reactor facility. The safety philosophy addresses the means with
which the organization supports individuals and groups to perform their tasks
safely, with account taken of the interactions between humans, technology and
organizational aspects.
CONCEPT OF DEFENCE IN DEPTH
2.10. The primary means of preventing accidents in a research reactor facility and
mitigating the consequences of accidents if they do occur is the application of the
concept of defence in depth. This concept is applied to all safety related activities,
whether organizational, behavioural or design related, in all operational states.
2.11. Application of the concept of defence in depth throughout design and
operation provides protection against anticipated operational occurrences and
accidents, including those resulting from equipment failure or inappropriate
human actions within the installation and events induced by external hazards.
2.12. Application of the concept of defence in depth in the design of a research
reactor provides a series of levels of defence (based on inherent features,
equipment and procedures) that are aimed at preventing accidents and ensuring
adequate protection of people and the environment against harmful effects of
radiation and mitigation of the consequences in the event that an accident does
occur. Paragraph 3.31 of SF-1 [1] states that The independent effectiveness
of the different levels of defence is a necessary element of defence in depth.
9

However, the concept of defence in depth shall be applied with account taken of
the graded approach. There are five levels of defence:
(1) The purpose of the first level of defence is to prevent deviations from
normal operation and the failure of items important to safety. This leads
to the requirement that the research reactor facility shall be soundly and
conservatively sited, designed, constructed, operated and maintained, in
accordance with the management system and proven engineering practices,
such as the application of redundancy, independence and diversity. To meet
this objective, careful attention is paid to the selection of appropriate design
codes and materials, and control of the fabrication of components and
control of the construction, commissioning, operation and maintenance of
the research reactor.
(2) The purpose of the second level of defence is to detect and control
deviations from normal operational states in order to prevent anticipated
operational occurrences from escalating to accident conditions. This is
in recognition of the fact that some postulated initiating events are likely
to occur at some point over the operating lifetime of the research reactor,
despite the precautions taken to prevent them. This level of defence
necessitates the provision of specific systems and features in the design,
as determined in the safety analysis, and the establishment of operating
procedures to prevent or minimize damage resulting from such postulated
initiating events.
(3) For the third level of defence, it is assumed that, although very unlikely,
the escalation of certain anticipated operational occurrences or postulated
initiating events might not be controlled at a preceding level of defence and
a more serious event may develop. These unlikely events are anticipated
in the design basis for the research reactor, and inherent safety features,
fail-safe design, additional equipment and procedures are provided to
control their consequences and to achieve stable and acceptable states
of the research reactor facility following such events. This leads to the
requirement that engineered safety features be capable of transferring
the research reactor first to a controlled state and subsequently to a safe
state. The radiological objective is to have no, or only a minor, off-site
radiological impact.
(4) The purpose of the fourth level of defence is to mitigate the consequences
of accidents that result from failure of the third level of defence. The most
important objective for this level is to ensure that the confinement function
is maintained, thus ensuring that radioactive releases are kept as low as
reasonably achievable.

10

(5) The purpose of the fifth and final level of defence is to mitigate the
radiological consequences of radioactive releases that could potentially
result from accidents. This requires the provision of adequately equipped
emergency response facilities and emergency plans and procedures for
on-site and, if necessary, off-site emergency response.
2.13. A relevant aspect of the application of the concept of defence in depth for a
research reactor is to include in the design a series of physical barriers, as well as
a combination of active, passive and inherent safety features that contribute to the
effectiveness of the physical barriers in confining radioactive material at specified
locations. The number of barriers that will be necessary will depend upon the
potential source term in terms of the amount and the isotopic composition of the
radionuclides, the effectiveness of the individual barriers, the possible internal
and external hazards, and the potential consequences of barrier failures.
2.14. The defence in depth concept is applied mainly through the safety analysis
and the use of sound engineering practices based on research and operating
experience. This analysis is carried out in the design to ensure that the safety
objectives are met. It includes a systematic critical review of the ways in which
the research reactor structures, systems and components could fail and identifies
the consequences of such failures. The safety analysis examines: all planned
normal operational modes of the research reactor facility; and its performance
in anticipated operational occurrences, design basis accident conditions and if
necessary, event sequences that may lead to design extension conditions (see
Requirement 22 and paras 6.646.68). Requirements for the safety analysis of
the design are presented in paras6.1196.125. These analyses are independently
reviewed by the operating organization and by the regulatory body (see
paras3.13.3).
GRADED APPROACH
2.15. Research reactors are used for special and varied purposes, such as research,
training, education, radioisotope production, neutron radiography and materials
testing. These purposes call for different design features and different operational
regimes. Design and operating characteristics of research reactors may vary
significantly, since the use of experimental devices may affect the performance
of reactors. In addition, the need for flexibility in their use requires a different
approach to achieving and managing safety.

11

2.16. Most research reactors give rise to fewer potential hazards to the public
than nuclear power plants, but they may pose greater potential hazards to
operators, researchers and other users owing to the relative ease of access to
radiation or radioactive materials. Qualitative categorization of the facility shall
be performed on the basis of the potential hazard associated with the research
reactor (see SSG-22[2]).
2.17. The factors to be considered in deciding whether the application of certain
requirements established here may be graded include:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)
(h)
(i)
(j)
(k)

The reactor power;


The potential source term;
The amount and enrichment of fissile and fissionable material;
Spent fuel elements, high pressure systems, heating systems and the storage
of flammable materials, which may affect the safety of the reactor;
The type of fuel elements;
The type and the mass of moderator, reflector and coolant;
The amount of reactivity that can be introduced and its rate of introduction,
reactivity control, and inherent and additional safety features (including
those for preventing inadvertent criticality);
The quality of the containment structure or other means of confinement;
The utilization of the reactor (experimental devices, tests and reactor
physics experiments);
The site evaluation, including external hazards associated with the site and
the proximity to population groups;
The ease or difficulty in changing the overall configuration.

3. REGULATORY SUPERVISION FOR


RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES
LEGAL AND REGULATORY INFRASTRUCTURE
3.1. GSRPart1 (Rev.1)[3] requires the government to ensure that an adequate
legal infrastructure for a research reactor facility is established. This shall
provide for the regulation of nuclear activities and for the clear assignment
of responsibilities for safety in all stages in the lifetime of the facility. The
government is responsible for the adoption of legislation that assigns the prime
responsibility for safety to the operating organization and establishes a regulatory
12

body. The regulatory body is responsible for the establishment of regulations that
results in a system of authorization7 for the regulatory control of nuclear activities
and for the enforcement of the regulations. These principles are established in
section3 (Principles1 and2) of SF-1[1].
3.2. General safety requirements to fulfil these principles are established in
GSR Part 1 (Rev. 1) [3]. GSR Part 1 (Rev. 1)[3] covers the essential aspects
of the governmental and legal framework for establishing a regulatory body
and for taking actions necessary to ensure the effective regulatory control of
facilities and activities existing and new utilized for peaceful purposes.
Other responsibilities and functions are also covered, such as liaison within the
global safety regime and liaison for providing the necessary support services for
the purposes of safety (including radiation protection), emergency preparedness
and response, nuclear security8, and the State system of accounting for, and
control of, nuclear material. These general safety requirements apply to the legal
and governmental infrastructure for the safety of research reactors during site
evaluation, design, construction, commissioning, operation, including utilization
and modification, and decommissioning. The application of a graded approach
that is commensurate with the potential hazards of the facility is essential and
shall be used in the determination and application of adequate safety requirements
(see paras2.152.17).
3.3. GSRPart1 (Rev.1)[3] requires the government to establish and maintain
an effectively independent regulatory body for the regulatory control of facilities
and activities (see Requirements 3 and 4 of GSR Part 1 (Rev. 1) [3]). To be
effective, the regulatory body shall be provided with the statutory legal authority
and resources necessary to ensure that it can fulfil its responsibilities and fulfil
its functions. This includes the authority to review and assess safety related
information submitted by the operating organization during the authorization
process and to apply the relevant regulations (e.g. by issuing, amending or
revoking authorizations or their conditions), including carrying out compliance
inspections and audits, taking enforcement actions and providing other competent
authorities and the public with information, as appropriate.

Authorization to operate a facility or to conduct an activity may be granted by the


regulatory body or by another governmental body to an operating organization or to a person.
Authorization includes approval, written permission, licensing, certification or registration.
See Ref.[8] and Requirement23 of GSRPart1 (Rev.1)[3].
8
The IAEA issues guidance on nuclear security in the IAEA Nuclear Security Series
publications.

13

AUTHORIZATION PROCESS
3.4. The authorization process is ongoing, starting at the site evaluation stage
and continuing up to and including the release of the facility from regulatory
control. The authorization process may vary among States, but the major stages
of the authorization process for nuclear research reactors shall include the
following:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)

Site evaluation;
Design;
Construction;
Commissioning;
Operation, including utilization and modification9;
Decommissioning;
Release from regulatory control.

3.5. In some cases, several stages may be authorized by a single licence, but
conditions are attached to it to control the subsequent stages. Despite these
differences between national practices, a detailed demonstration of safety in the
form of a safety analysis report that includes an adequate safety analysis shall be
submitted by the operating organization to the regulatory body for review and
assessment as part of the authorization process.
Requirement 1: Safety analysis report
A safety analysis report shall be prepared by the operating organization
for a research reactor facility. The safety analysis report shall provide
a justification of the site and the design and shall provide a basis for the
safe operation of the research reactor. The safety analysis report shall be
reviewed and assessed by the regulatory body before the research reactor
project is authorized to progress to the next stage. The safety analysis report
shall be periodically updated over the research reactors operating lifetime
to reflect modifications made to the facility and on the basis of experience
and in accordance with regulatory requirements.

Although the utilization and modification of research reactors are activities that
are normally included under operation, they may be considered separate stages in the
authorization process, since their safety implications give rise to a large number of review
and assessment activities that are repeated many times over the lifetime of the reactor facility
(see paras7.987.106).

14

3.6. The safety analysis report is one of the main documents for the
authorization of the research reactor facility and an important link between
the operating organization and the regulatory body. The safety analysis report
shall contain a detailed description of the reactor site, the reactor facility and
experimental devices, and shall include all other facilities and activities with
safety significance. It shall describe in detail the general safety principles and
criteria applied to the design for the safety of the reactor, the protection of
operating personnel10 and the public, and the protection of the environment. The
safety analysis report shall contain the analyses of the potential hazards from the
operation of the reactor. The safety analysis report shall include safety analyses
of accident sequences and shall describe the safety features incorporated in the
design to avoid or to minimize the likelihood of occurrence of accidents, or to
mitigate their consequences in accordance with the defence in depth concept.
3.7. The safety analyses in the safety analysis report shall form the basis for
the operational limits and conditions for the reactor. The safety analysis report
shall provide details about the operating organization, the conduct of operations
and the management system throughout the lifetime of the research reactor
facility. The safety analysis report shall also provide information on emergency
arrangements for the research reactor, although this does not preclude the need
for detailed emergency arrangements, in accordance with Requirement81.
3.8. The safety analysis report shall include information to demonstrate
compliance with national legislation and requirements issued by the regulatory
body. The level of detail of the information to be presented in the safety
analysis report shall be determined using a graded approach. For reactors with
high power levels, the safety analysis report will usually require more detail in
discussions such as those of reactor design and accident scenarios. For some
reactors (e.g. research reactors with low potential hazard, critical or subcritical
assemblies), the requirements for the safety analysis report content may be much
less extensive. However, in all cases, the safety analysis report shall cover every
topic in paras3.63.7.
3.9. The safety analysis report shall cite references that may be necessary for
its thorough review and assessment. This reference material shall be readily
available to the regulatory body and shall not be subject to any classification or
limitation that would prevent its adequate review and assessment.

10

The operating personnel comprise the reactor manager, the shift supervisors, the
operators, the maintenance staff and the radiation protection staff.

15

Review and assessment by the regulatory body


3.10. A review and assessment of the information (usually in the form of a
safety analysis report) submitted by the operating organization in support of its
application for authorization shall be performed by the regulatory body. The
specific objectives of the regulatory review and assessment are provided in
GSRPart1 (Rev.1)[3]. The review and assessment shall be commensurate with
the magnitude of the potential radiation risk associated with the research reactor
facility in accordance with a graded approach. If necessary, the regulatory body
may request additional information depending on national practices.
3.11. A schedule for the submission of documents for review and assessment for
the stages in the authorization process shall be established early in the research
reactor project and made available to the operating organization.
Acceptance criteria
3.12. Each State shall develop its own approach to acceptance criteria depending
upon its particular legal and regulatory infrastructure. Acceptance criteria
based on principles for safe design and operation shall be made available to the
operating organizations.
INSPECTION AND ENFORCEMENT
3.13. Paragraph 2.5 (10) of GSR Part 1 (Rev. 1) [3] states that an effective
governmental, legal and regulatory framework for safetyshall set
out[p]rovision for the inspection of facilities and activities, and for the
enforcement of regulations, in accordance with a graded approach.
3.14. Paragraph4.50 of GSRPart1 (Rev.1)[3] states that:
The regulatory body shall develop and implement a programme of
inspection of facilities and activities, to confirm compliance with regulatory
requirements and with any conditions specified in the authorization. In this
programme, it shall specify the types of regulatory inspection (including
scheduled inspections and unannounced inspections), and shall stipulate the
frequency of inspections and the areas and programmes to be inspected, in
accordance with a graded approach.

16

3.15. Requirement30 of GSRPart1 (Rev.1)[3] states that:


The regulatory body shall establish and implement an enforcement policy
within the legal framework for responding to non-compliance by authorized
parties with regulatory requirements or with any conditions specified in the
authorization.
3.16. If there is evidence of a deterioration in the level of safety, or in the event
of serious violations that, in the judgement of the regulatory body, could pose
an imminent radiological hazard to workers and other personnel, the public or
the environment, the regulatory body shall require the operating organization
to curtail its activities and to take any further actions necessary to restore an
adequate level of safety. In the event of continual, persistent or extremely serious
non-compliance, the regulatory body shall direct the operating organization to
cease its activities and may suspend or revoke the authorization.

4. MANAGEMENT FOR SAFETY AND VERIFICATION OF


SAFETY FOR RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES
Requirement 2: Responsibilities in the management for safety
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall have the
prime responsibility for the safety of the research reactor over its lifetime,
from the beginning of the project for site evaluation, design, construction,
commissioning, operation, including utilization and modification, and
decommissioning, until its release from regulatory control.
4.1. In order to ensure rigour and thoroughness at all levels of the staff in the
achievement and maintenance of safety, the operating organization:
(a) Shall establish and implement safety policies and shall ensure that safety
matters are given the highest priority;
(b) Shall clearly define responsibilities and accountabilities with corresponding
lines of authority and communication;
(c) Shall ensure that it has sufficient staff with appropriate qualifications and
training at all levels;

17

(d) Shall develop and strictly adhere to sound procedures for all activities that
may affect safety, ensuring that managers and supervisors promote and
support good safety practices, while correcting poor safety practices;
(e) Shall review, monitor and audit11 all safety related matters on a regular
basis, and shall take appropriate corrective actions where necessary;
(f) Shall develop and sustain a strong safety culture, and shall prepare a
statement of safety policy and safety objectives, which is disseminated to
and understood by all staff.
4.2. Whenever a change of stage in the lifetime of a research reactor is to be
initiated by the operating organization, it shall submit a detailed demonstration of
safety, which shall include an adequate safety analysis, for review and assessment
by the regulatory body before the project is authorized to progress to the next
stage.
4.3. The operating organization shall submit to the regulatory body in a timely
manner any information that it has requested. The operating organization shall
be responsible for making arrangements with vendors and suppliers to ensure
the availability of any information that has been requested by the regulatory
body. The operating organization shall also be responsible for informing the
regulatory body of any additional new information on the research reactor and
of any changes to information submitted previously. All information provided
by the operating organization to the regulatory body shall be complete and
accurate. The format and content of documents submitted to the regulatory body
by the operating organization in support of the authorization shall be based on
the requirements presented in paras 3.63.9. The functions and responsibilities
of the operating organization for ensuring safety at each stage of the lifetime of
the research reactor are presented in Section3 (see Requirement1) and here in
Section4 as well as in the relevant paragraphs of Sections 5 to 9.
Requirement 3: Safety policy
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish and
implement safety policies that give safety the highest priority.
11

Independent assessments such as audits or surveillance are carried out to determine


the extent to which the requirements for the management system are fulfilled, to evaluate the
effectiveness of the management system and to identify opportunities for improvement. They
can be conducted by, or on behalf of, the organization itself for internal purposes, by interested
parties such as customers and regulators (or by other persons on their behalf), or by independent
external organizations.

18

4.4. The safety policy established and implemented by the operating


organization shall give safety the highest priority, overriding all other demands,
including the demands of production and of reactor users. The safety policy
shall promote a strong safety culture, including a questioning attitude and a
commitment to excellent performance in all activities important to safety.
4.5. The safety policy shall stipulate clearly the leadership role of the
highest level of management in safety matters. Senior management12 shall be
responsible for communicating and implementing the provisions of the safety
policy throughout the organization. All personnel in the organization shall
be made aware of the safety policy and of their responsibilities for ensuring
safety. The expectations of management for safety performance shall be clearly
communicated to all personnel, and it shall be ensured that such expectations are
understood and followed within the organization.
4.6. The safety policy of the operating organization shall include a commitment
to achieving enhancements in operational safety. The strategy of the operating
organization for enhancing safety and for finding more effective ways of
applying and, where feasible, improving existing standards shall be continuously
monitored, periodically revised and supported by means of a clearly specified
programme with clear objectives and targets.
MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
Requirement 4: Integrated management system
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish,
implement, assess and continuously improve an integrated management
system.

12

Senior management means the person who, or group of people that, is accountable for
meeting the terms established in the licence and directs, controls and assesses an organization
at the highest level. Many different terms are used, including, for example: board of directors,
chief executive officer, director general, executive team, plant manager, top manager, chief
regulator, site vice-president, managing director and laboratory director.

19

4.7. The requirements for an integrated management system13 for facilities and
activities are established in GSRPart2[4]. These requirements and the associated
objectives and principles shall be taken into account in the establishment and
implementation of the management system for the research reactor by means of
a graded approach on the basis of the importance to safety of each item, service
or process. The level of detail of the management system that is required for
a particular research reactor or experiment shall be governed by the potential
hazard of the reactor and the experiment (see paras 2.152.17 on the graded
approach and SSG-22[2]).
4.8. The operating organization shall ensure through the establishment and use
of an integrated management system that the research reactor is sited, designed,
constructed, commissioned, operated and utilized (including the associated
activities such as those mentioned in AppendixII), and decommissioned, in a safe
manner and within the limits and conditions that are specified in the operational
limits and conditions and established in the authorization.
4.9. The management system shall be developed and established at a time
consistent with the schedule for accomplishing activities at all stages in the
lifetime of the research reactor. In particular, activities for site investigation,
which are usually initiated a long time before the establishment of a project, shall
be covered by the management system.
4.10. The management system shall include all the elements of management so
that processes and activities important to safety are established and conducted
in accordance with relevant requirements, including those relating to leadership,
protection of health, human performance, emergency preparedness and response,
protection of the environment, security and quality.
4.11. The management system shall identify and include the following
requirements:
(a) The statutory and regulatory requirements of the State;
(b) The relevant IAEA safety standards;
13

An integrated management system is a single coherent management system in which


all constituents of an organization are integrated to enable the organizations objectives to be
achieved. Such constituents include the organizational structure, resources and organizational
processes. This system integrates all elements of management, including safety, health,
environmental, security, quality, human-and-organizational-factor, societal and economic
elements, so that safety is not compromised.

20

(c) Any requirements formally agreed with interested parties.


4.12. The documentation of the management system shall be reviewed and
made subject to approval at appropriate levels of management in the operating
organization and shall be submitted to the regulatory body for review and
assessment as requested.
4.13. The provisions of the management system shall be based on four functional
categories:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)

Management responsibility;
Management of resources;
Management of processes and activities;
Measurement, assessment and improvement of the management system.

Management responsibility
4.14. Management shall be responsible for providing the means and support
needed to achieve the organizations objectives. In this regard, the management
system shall include provisions for effective communication and clear assignment
of responsibilities to ensure that processes and activities important to safety are
controlled and performed in a manner that ensures that safety objectives are
achieved.
Resource management
4.15. Resource management shall ensure that the resources14 essential to the
implementation of the organizational strategy and the achievement of the
organizations objectives are identified and made available. The management
system shall ensure that:
(a) Suppliers, manufacturers and designers of structures, systems and
components important to safety have an effective integrated management
system in place, with audits to confirm its effectiveness;
(b) External personnel (including suppliers and experimenters) are adequately
trained and qualified and perform their activities under the same controls
and to the same standards as the reactor personnel;

14

Resources includes individuals, infrastructure, the working environment, information


and knowledge, and suppliers, as well as material and financial resources.

21

(c) The equipment, tools, materials, hardware and software necessary to


conduct the work in a safe manner are identified, provided, checked, and
verified and maintained.
Process implementation
4.16. The management system shall include provisions for the implementation of
processes to ensure that the design, including subsequent changes, modifications
or safety improvements, construction, commissioning, operation and utilization,
and decommissioning of the reactor are performed in accordance with established
codes, standards, specifications, procedures and administrative controls. Items
and services important to safety shall be specified and controlled to ensure their
proper use, maintenance and configuration.
4.17. In the manufacturing and construction of structures, systems and
components of the research reactor, including its associated experimental
facilities and devices and modification projects, processes shall be established
to ensure that the relevant regulations and safety requirements are met and that
the construction work is properly implemented. Such processes shall enable the
operating organization to ensure that the manufacturing and construction of items
important to safety are performed in accordance with the design requirements
and the regulatory requirements.
4.18. As part of the management system, processes for utilization and
modification shall be established and shall be graded on the basis of their safety
significance. Such processes shall include the design, review, assessment and
approval, fabrication, testing and implementation of a utilization and modification
project. Relevant procedures describing the processes shall be put into effect by
the operating organization early in the reactor operation stage.
4.19. The management system shall ensure that items and services under
procurement meet established requirements and perform as specified. Suppliers
shall be evaluated and selected on the basis of specified criteria. Requirements
for reporting deviations from procurement specifications shall be specified in
the procurement documents. Evidence that purchased items and services meet
procurement specifications shall be made available for verification before the
items are used or the services are provided.

22

Assessment and improvements


4.20. The effectiveness of the management system shall be regularly measured
and assessed through independent assessments and self-assessments. Weaknesses
in processes shall be identified and corrected. The operating organization
shall evaluate the results of such assessments and shall determine and take the
necessary actions for continuous improvements.
VERIFICATION OF SAFETY
Requirement 5: Safety assessment
The adequacy of the design of the research reactor shall be verified in
accordance with the management system by means of comprehensive
deterministic safety analysis and complementary probabilistic analysis
as appropriate and shall be validated by independent verification by
individuals or groups independent from those who originally performed
the design work. The safety assessment shall be continued throughout all
the stages of the reactors lifetime (in periodic safety reviews) and shall be
conducted in accordance with the potential magnitude and nature of the
hazards associated with the particular facility or activity.
4.21. Verification, validation and approval of the reactor design shall be
completed as soon as practicable in the design and construction processes, and in
any case before commissioning of the facility is commenced.
4.22. Safety assessment15 shall be part of the design process, with iterations
made between the design activities and the confirmatory analytical activities and
with increases in the scope and the level of detail of the safety assessment as the
design progresses.
4.23. Safety assessment shall commence at an early stage in the design process.
Deterministic safety analysis shall be the primary tool for safety assessment of
research reactors. Probabilistic safety analysis may be used as a complementary
tool for detecting potential weaknesses and improving the safety assessment.

15

Requirements for safety assessment for facilities and activities are established in
IAEA Safety Standards Series No.GSRPart4 (Rev.1), Safety Assessment for Facilities and
Activities[12].

23

4.24. The safety assessments (and periodic safety reviews) shall be documented
to facilitate their evaluation.
4.25. Systematic periodic safety reviews of the research reactor in accordance
with the regulatory requirements shall be performed throughout its operating
lifetime, with account taken of operating experience, the cumulative effects
of ageing, applicable safety standards and safety information from all relevant
sources. The operating organization shall verify by analysis, surveillance,
testing and inspection that the physical state of the reactor facility, including
experimental devices and facilities, is as described in the safety analysis report
and other safety documents, and that the facility is commissioned and operated
in accordance with safety requirements and the safety analysis and operational
limits and conditions.
4.26. Activities for systematic periodic safety reassessments include, among
others, periodic safety reviews such as self-assessments and peer reviews16 to
confirm that the safety analysis report and other selected documents (such as
documentation for operational limits and conditions, maintenance, training
and qualification) for the facility remain valid in view of current regulatory
requirements, or, if necessary, to update or make improvements to the extent
practicable. In such reviews, changes in the site characteristics, changes in the
utilization programme, cumulative effects of ageing and modifications, changes
to procedures, the use of feedback from operating experience and technical
developments shall be considered. It shall be verified that selected structures,
systems and components and software comply with the design requirements.
Specific design requirements are established in Section 6 and functional
requirements are established in Section7.
Requirement 6: Safety committee
A safety committee (or an advisory group) that is independent from the
reactor manager shall be established to advise the operating organization on
all the safety aspects of the research reactor.
16

A peer review is a review conducted by a team of independent experts with technical


competence and experience in the areas of evaluation. Judgements are based on the combined
expertise of the team members. The objectives, scope and size of the review team are tailored
to the review that is to be conducted. A review is neither an inspection nor an audit against
specific standards. Instead, it consists of a comprehensive comparison of the practices applied
by organizations with internationally accepted good practices, and an exchange of expert
judgement.

24

4.27. The safety committee (or advisory group) shall advise the operating
organization on: (i) the safety assessment of design, commissioning and
operational issues; and (ii)relevant aspects of the safety of the reactor and the
safety of its utilization.17 Members of the safety committee shall be experts in
different fields associated with the design and operation of research reactors.
The safety committee shall be fully functioning before the design of the research
reactor begins. The list of items that the safety committee is required to consider,
provide advice on, or recommend approval of shall also be established. Such a
list shall include, among other things, the following:
(a) The design of structures, systems and components and in particular the
design and qualification of nuclear fuel elements18 and reactivity control
elements;
(b) Safety documents and their modifications;
(c) Proposed new tests, experiments, equipment, systems or procedures that
have significance for safety;
(d) Proposed modifications to items important to safety and changes in
experiments that have implications for safety;
(e) Violations of the operational limits and conditions, of the licence and of
procedures that are significant to safety;
(f) Events that are required to be reported or that have been reported to the
regulatory body;
(g) Periodic reviews of the operational performance and the safety performance
of the research reactor facility;
(h) Reports on routine radioactive discharges to the environment;
(i) Reports on radiation doses to the personnel at the facility and to the public;
(j) Reports to be provided to the regulatory body;
(k) Reports on regulatory inspections.

17

In some States, an additional safety committee (or advisory group) is established to


advise the reactor manager on the safety aspects of the day to day operation and utilization of
the reactor (see para.7.26).
18
The nuclear fuel elements are the elements containing fissionable and fissile nuclear
material that are used in the core of a research reactor for the purpose of generating neutrons.
Adequate design and safety margins are established to take into account unknown behaviour of
experimental fuel that is not yet qualified.

25

5. SITE EVALUATION FOR RESEARCH REACTOR


FACILITIES
5.1. The main safety objective in evaluating the site for a research reactor is
the protection of the public and the protection of the environment against the
radiological consequences of normal and accidental releases of radioactive
material (see NS-R-3 (Rev. 1) [5]). Information shall be collected in sufficient
detail to support the safety analysis to demonstrate that the research reactor
facility can be safely operated at the proposed site. For research reactors with
low potential hazard and critical and subcritical assemblies, the amount of detail
to be provided can be substantially reduced below that required for a medium
power research reactor or high power research reactor (see also paras1.61.9).
The results of the site evaluation shall be documented and presented in sufficient
detail to permit an independent assessment by the regulatory body.
5.2. In the evaluation of the suitability of a particular site for a research reactor,
the characteristics of the site, which may affect aspects of the safety of the
research reactor and associated emergency arrangements, shall be investigated
and assessed by the operating organization. The objective of the assessment is
to demonstrate how these site characteristics will influence the design criteria
and operating criteria for the facility and to demonstrate the adequacy of the site
characteristics in terms of the effects on safety and on emergency preparedness
and response.
5.3. The site evaluation shall establish the boundaries of the site area,
including exclusion and monitoring areas satisfying the main safety objective
(see para.5.1) and the exact location of the reactor and associated facilities (the
operations area), which is under the control of the reactor management19 and its
legal rights within the site area. Any activities that are unrelated to the operation
of the research reactor within these boundaries shall be evaluated and justified.
5.4. In the evaluation of the suitability of a site for a research reactor, the
following aspects shall be considered:
(a) The effects of natural and human induced external events (e.g. seismic
events, fire or flooding) that may occur in the region of the site;
19

The reactor management comprises the members of the operating organization to


whom the responsibility and the authority for directing the operation of the research reactor
facility have been assigned.

26

(b) The characteristics of the site and its environment that could influence the
transfer of released radioactive material to humans;
(c) The population density and population distribution and other characteristics
in the vicinity of the site having relevance to emergency arrangements, and
the need to evaluate the risks to individuals and the population;
(d) Other collocated site facilities such as other research reactors, radioisotope
plants, fuel cycle related facilities, post-irradiation examination or
non-nuclear facilities (e.g. chemical facilities);
(e) The capability for an ultimate heat sink at the site, as appropriate;
(f) The on-site and off-site emergency plans aimed at mitigating the
consequences for the public and the environment in the event of a
substantial release of radioactive material to the environment.
5.5. If the evaluation of the site and the operations area for these six aspects,
including their foreseeable evolution, indicates that deficiencies of the site or
the operations area cannot be compensated for by means of design features,
site protection measures or administrative procedures, the site shall be deemed
unsuitable. (Design features and site protection measures are the preferred means
of compensating for deficiencies.)
5.6. Hazards arising from external events (or from a combination of events)
shall be considered in the design of the reactor. Consideration shall be given to
those cases in which anticipated operational occurrences or accidents are caused
by a combination of the external and consequential internal events and where
there is a need to consider long lasting external events (such as flooding) and
long post-event recovery times.
5.7. Information and records relating to the occurrence and severity of important
natural phenomena and postulated worst combinations of low probability but high
consequence events that may exceed those conditions assumed for design basis
accidents shall be collected for the region in which the potential facility site is
located and shall be carefully analysed for reliability, accuracy and completeness
(see paras2.142.21 of NS-R-3 (Rev.1)[5]).
5.8. During the site evaluation and before the start of construction of the
research reactor, it shall be confirmed that off-site emergency arrangements,
where appropriate, will be available prior to the start of reactor operation
(see GSRPart7[6] and paras2.262.29 of NS-R-3 (Rev.1)[5]).

27

5.9. The external events to be considered for the site evaluation include the
following (see section3 of NS-R-3 (Rev.1)[5]):
(a) Earthquakes, volcanoes and surface faulting;
(b) Meteorological events, including extreme values of meteorological
phenomena and rare events such as lightning, tornadoes and tropical
cyclones;
(c) Flooding, including water waves induced by earthquakes or other
geological phenomena or floods and waves caused by the failure of water
control structures;
(d) Geotechnical hazards, including slope instability, collapse, subsidence or
uplift of the site surface, and soil liquefaction;
(e) Human induced external events (present and future), including security
related incidents, transportation events, such as aircraft crashes, and
accidents at surrounding activities, such as chemical explosions.
5.10. The characteristics of natural and human induced hazards, as well as the
demographic, meteorological and hydrological conditions of relevance to the
research reactor, shall be monitored throughout its lifetime, commencing no later
than the start of construction and continuing through to decommissioning and
release from regulatory control.
5.11. Changes in site characteristics such as climate, population or use of nearby
facilities that may affect the safety of the research reactor facility shall be
investigated and periodically reassessed.
5.12. When a new research reactor project is planned for an existing site such as
a research centre or university campus in an urban or suburban environment, the
capacity of the site to accommodate a research reactor facility shall be carefully
analysed to ensure regulations relating to radiation risk to site personnel and the
public will be met.

6. DESIGN OF RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES


GENERAL
6.1. The research reactor shall be designed in such a way that the fundamental
safety objective (see paras 2.2 and 2.3) is achieved. The general design
28

requirements in this section shall be applied in the design of all types of research
reactor. Additionally, a set of specific design requirements shall be applied as
appropriate to the design of structures, systems and components for particular
reactor types.
6.2. Application of the design requirements is an interactive process and the
requirements shall be implemented throughout the design, with full consideration
of the results of the safety analysis (see paras6.1196.125).
6.3. The achievement of a safe design requires that close liaison be maintained
between the reactor designer and the operating organization. The designer shall
arrange for the orderly preparation, presentation and submission of design
documents to the operating organization for use in the preparation of the safety
analysis report.
6.4. The design of the reactor facility shall consider not only the reactor itself
but also any associated facilities, such as experimental devices, that may affect
safety. In addition, the reactor design shall consider the effects of the reactor on
the associated facilities at all the stages of the reactors lifetime (e.g. in terms of
service conditions, electromagnetic fields and other sources of interference).
6.5. The design of the research reactor facility shall consider the different
modes of operation (e.g. operation on demand rather than continuous operation,
operation at different power levels, pulsed operation, operation with different core
configurations, changes in the overall configuration of the reactor or assembly
and operation with different nuclear fuels). In the design of the safety systems,
due consideration shall be given to the stability of the reactor at different modes
of operation.
PRINCIPAL TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS
Requirement 7: Main safety functions
The design for a research reactor facility shall ensure the fulfilment of the
following main safety functions for the research reactor for all states of the
facility: (i) control of reactivity; (ii) removal of heat from the reactor and
from the fuel storage; and (iii) confinement of the radioactive material,
shielding against radiation and control of planned radioactive releases, as
well as limitation of accidental radioactive releases.

29

6.6. A systematic approach shall be taken to identifying those items important


to safety that are necessary to fulfil the main safety functions and to defining the
conditions and inherent features that contribute to, or affect the fulfilment of, the
main safety functions for all states of the facility.
6.7. Means of monitoring the status of the reactor facility shall be provided for
ensuring that the main safety functions are fulfilled for all states of the facility.
Requirement 8: Radiation protection
The design of a research reactor facility shall be such as to ensure that
radiation doses to workers and other personnel at the research reactor
facility and to members of the public do not exceed the established dose
limits, and that they are kept as low as reasonably achievable for operational
states for the entire lifetime of the research reactor facility, and that they
remain below acceptable limits and as low as reasonably achievable in, and
following, accident conditions.
6.8. The design shall ensure that facility states that could lead to high radiation
doses or large radioactive releases are practically eliminated20 and that there are
no, or only minor, potential radiological consequences for facility states with a
significant likelihood of occurrence.21
Requirement 9: Design
The design of a research reactor facility shall ensure that the reactor facility
and items important to safety have the appropriate characteristics to ensure
that the safety functions can be performed with the necessary reliability,
that the research reactor can be operated safely within the operational limits
and conditions for its entire lifetime and can be safely decommissioned, and
that impacts on the environment are minimized.
6.9. The design of a research reactor shall be such as to ensure that the
requirements of the operating organization, the requirements of the regulatory
20

The possibility of certain conditions occurring is considered to have been practically


eliminated (i.e. eliminated from further consideration) if it is physically impossible for the
conditions to occur or if the conditions can be considered with a high level of confidence to be
extremely unlikely to arise.
21
Requirements on radiation protection and the safety of radiation sources for facilities
and activities are established in GSRPart3[7].

30

body and the requirements of relevant legislation, as well as applicable national


and international codes and standards, are all met. The design shall consider
human capabilities and limitations and factors that could influence human
performance. Adequate information on the design shall be provided for ensuring
the safe operation, utilization, maintenance and decommissioning of the reactor
facility, and to allow subsequent modifications to be made and new experiments
to be implemented.
6.10. The design shall take due account of relevant available experience that has
been gained in the design, construction and operation of other research reactors,
and of the results of relevant research and development programmes.
6.11. The design shall take due account of the results of deterministic safety
analyses and, as appropriate, complementary probabilistic safety analyses to
ensure that due consideration has been given to the prevention of accidents and to
mitigation of the consequences of any accidents that do occur.
6.12. The design shall be such as to ensure that the generation of radioactive
waste and discharges are kept to the minimum practicable in terms of both
activity and volume and that wastes and discharges are classified.
Requirement 10: Application of the concept of defence in depth
The design of a research reactor shall apply the concept of defence in depth.
The levels of defence in depth shall be independent as far as is practicable.
6.13. The defence in depth concept (see paras 2.102.14) shall be applied to
provide several levels of defence that are aimed at preventing consequences
of accidents that could lead to harmful effects on people and the environment,
and at ensuring that appropriate measures are taken for the protection of people
and the environment and for the mitigation of consequences in the event that
prevention fails.
6.14. The design:
(a) Shall provide for successive verifiable physical barriers to the release of
radioactive material from the reactor;
(b) Shall use conservative margins, and the manufacturing and construction
shall be of high quality so as to provide assurance that failures and
deviations from normal operation are minimized and that accidents are
prevented as far as is practicable;
31

(c) Shall provide for the control of reactor behaviour by means of inherent
and engineered features, such that failures and deviations from normal
operation requiring actuation of safety systems are minimized or excluded
to the extent possible;
(d) Shall provide for automatic actuation of safety systems, such that failures
and deviations from normal operation that exceed the capability of control
systems can be controlled with a high level of confidence, and the need
for operator actions in the early phase of such failures or deviations from
normal operation is minimized;
(e) Shall provide for structures, systems and components and procedures to
control the course of and, as far as practicable, to limit the consequences of
failures and deviations from normal operation that exceed the capability of
safety systems;
(f) Shall provide effective means for ensuring that each of the main safety
functions is performed, thereby ensuring the effectiveness of the barriers
and mitigating the consequences of any failure or deviation from normal
operation.
6.15. To ensure that the concept of defence in depth is maintained, the design
shall prevent, as far as is practicable:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)

Challenges to the integrity of physical barriers;


The failure of one or more barriers;
The failure of a barrier as a consequence of the failure of another barrier;
The possibility of harmful consequences of errors in operation and
maintenance.

6.16. The design shall ensure, as far as is practicable, that the first, or at most
the second, level of defence in depth is capable of preventing an escalation to
accident conditions for all failures or deviations from normal operation that are
likely to occur over the operating lifetime of the research reactor.
6.17. The levels of defence in depth shall be independent as far as practicable to
avoid a failure of one level reducing the effectiveness of other levels. In particular,
safety features for design extension conditions (especially features for mitigating
the consequences of accidents involving the melting of fuel) shall as far as is
practicable be independent of safety systems.

32

Requirement 11: Interfaces of safety with security and the State system of
accounting for, and control of, nuclear material
Safety measures, nuclear security measures and arrangements for the State
system of accounting for, and control of, nuclear material for a research
reactor shall be designed and implemented in an integrated manner so that
they do not compromise one another.
Requirement 12: Use of the graded approach
The use of the graded approach in application of the safety requirements for
a research reactor shall be commensurate with the potential hazard of the
facility and shall be based on safety analysis and regulatory requirements.
6.18. The use of a graded approach in the application of the safety requirements
shall not be considered as a means of waiving safety requirements and shall not
compromise safety. Grading of the application of requirements shall be justified
and supported by safety analysis or engineering judgement.
Requirement 13: Proven engineering practices
Items important to safety for a research reactor shall be designed in
accordance with the relevant national and international codes and standards.
6.19. Items important to safety shall preferably be of a design that has previously
been proven in equivalent applications, and if not, shall be items of high quality
and of a technology that has been qualified and tested.
6.20. National and international codes and standards that are used as design rules
for items important to safety shall be identified and evaluated to determine their
applicability, adequacy and sufficiency, and shall be supplemented or modified
as necessary to ensure that the quality of the design is commensurate with the
associated safety function.
6.21. Codes and standards applicable to structures, systems and components
shall be identified and their use shall be in accordance with the classification of
the structures, systems and components (see paras6.29 and 6.32). In particular,
if different codes and standards are used for different types of item (e.g. for piping
or for electrical systems), consistency between the codes and standards shall be
demonstrated.

33

6.22. In the case of structures, systems and components for which there are no
appropriate established codes or standards, an approach derived from existing
codes or standards for similar equipment having similar environmental and
operational requirements may be applied, or, in the absence of such codes and
standards, the results of experience, tests, analysis or a combination of these may
be applied. The use of such a results based approach shall be justified.
6.23. Where an unproven design or feature is introduced or where there is a
departure from an established engineering practice, a process shall be established
under the management system to ensure that safety is demonstrated by means
of appropriate supporting research programmes, performance tests with specific
acceptance criteria or the examination of operating experience from other relevant
applications. The new design or feature or new practice shall be adequately tested
to the extent practicable before being brought into service, and shall be monitored
in service to verify that the behaviour of the reactor facility is as expected.
6.24. Acceptance criteria shall be established for operational states and for
accident conditions. In particular, the design basis accidents considered in the
design of the research reactor and selected design extension conditions shall be
identified for the purposes of establishing acceptance criteria. For the design
of structures, systems and components, acceptance criteria may be applied in
the form of engineering design rules. These rules may include requirements
in relevant codes and standards established in the State or internationally. The
acceptance criteria shall be reviewed by the regulatory body.
Requirement 14: Provision for construction
Items important to safety for a research reactor facility shall be designed so
that they can be manufactured, constructed, assembled, installed and erected
in accordance with established processes that ensure the achievement of the
design specifications and the required level of safety.
6.25. In the provision for construction, due account shall be taken of relevant
experience that has been gained in the construction of similar facilities and their
associated structures, systems and components. Where good practices from other
relevant industries are adopted, such practices shall be shown to be appropriate to
the specific nuclear application.
6.26. The construction shall start only after the operating organization has
verified that the main safety issues in the design have been resolved and after
the regulatory body has granted an authorization (e.g. a construction licence
34

or an authorization for modification). The responsibility for ensuring that the


construction is in accordance with the design lies with the operating organization.
Requirement 15: Features to facilitate radioactive waste management and
decommissioning
Special consideration shall be given at the design stage of a research reactor
facility to the incorporation of features to facilitate radioactive waste
management and the future decommissioning of the facility.
6.27. In particular, the design shall take due account of:
(a) The choice of materials so that amounts of radioactive waste will be
minimized to the extent practicable and decontamination will be facilitated;
(b) The access capabilities and the means of handling that might be necessary;
(c) The facilities necessary for the processing (i.e. pretreatment, treatment and
conditioning) and storage of radioactive waste generated in operation and
provision for managing the radioactive waste that will be generated in the
decommissioning of the research reactor facility.
6.28. This requirement shall also be considered in the design of any modifications,
new utilizations and experiments.
GENERAL REQUIREMENTS FOR DESIGN
Requirement 16: Safety classification of structures, systems and components
All items important to safety for a research reactor facility shall be identified
and shall be classified on the basis of their safety function and their safety
significance.
6.29. The method for classifying the safety significance of items important to
safety22 shall be based primarily on deterministic methods complemented, where

22

Safety classification reflects the significance for nuclear safety of the structures, systems
and components. Its purpose is to establish a grading in the application of the requirements
for design. There are other possible classifications or categorizations of structures, systems
and components in accordance with other aspects (e.g. seismic or environmental qualification,
or quality categorization of structures, systems and components).

35

appropriate, by probabilistic methods (if available), with due account taken of


factors such as:
(a) The safety function(s) to be performed by the item;
(b) The consequences of failure to perform a safety function;
(c) The frequency with which the item will be called upon to perform a safety
function;
(d) The time following a postulated initiating event at which, or the period for
which, the item will be called upon to perform a safety function.
6.30. The design shall be such as to ensure that any interference between items
important to safety will be prevented, and in particular that any failure of items
important to safety in a system in a lower safety class will not propagate to a
system in a higher safety class.
6.31. Equipment that performs multiple functions shall be classified in a
safety class that is consistent with those functions having the highest safety
significance.
6.32. Structures, systems and components, including software, that are important
to safety shall be first identified and then classified in accordance with their
function and significance for safety. The basis for the safety classification of the
structures, systems and components shall be stated and the design requirements
shall be applied in accordance with their safety classification.
Requirement 17: Design basis for items important to safety
The design basis for items important to safety for a research reactor facility
shall specify the necessary capability, reliability and functionality for the
relevant operational states, for accident conditions and for conditions arising
from internal and external hazards, to meet the specific acceptance criteria
over the lifetime of the research reactor.
6.33. The design basis for each item important to safety shall be systematically
justified and documented. The documentation shall provide the necessary
information for the operating organization to operate the reactor safely.
6.34. The challenges that the reactor may be expected to face during its operating
lifetime shall be taken into consideration in the design process. These challenges
include all the foreseeable conditions and events relating to stages in the

36

operating lifetime of the reactor and to operational states and accident conditions,
site characteristics and modes of operation.
Requirement 18: Postulated initiating events
The design for the research reactor shall apply a systematic approach to
identifying a comprehensive set of postulated initiating events such that
all foreseeable events with the potential for serious consequences and all
foreseeable events with a significant frequency of occurrence are anticipated
and are considered in the design.
6.35. Postulated initiating events shall be selected appropriately for the purpose
of analysis (see AppendixI). It shall be shown that the set of postulated initiating
events selected covers all credible accidents that may affect the safety of the
research reactor.
6.36. The postulated initiating events shall be identified on the basis of
engineering judgement, operating experience feedback and deterministic
assessment, complemented, where appropriate and available, by probabilistic
methods.
6.37. The postulated initiating events shall include all foreseeable failures of
structures, systems and components of the reactor facilities and experiments as
well as operating errors and possible failures arising from internal and external
hazards for all operational and shutdown states.
6.38. An analysis of the postulated initiating events shall be made to establish the
preventive and protective measures that are necessary to ensure that the required
safety functions will be performed.
6.39. The expected behaviour of the reactor in any postulated initiating event
shall be such that the following conditions can be achieved, in order of priority:
(1) A postulated initiating event would produce no safety significant effects
and would produce only a change towards a safer and more stable condition
by means of inherent safety characteristics of the reactor.
(2) Following a postulated initiating event, the reactor would be rendered
safe by means of passive safety features or by the action of systems that
are operating continuously in the state necessary to control the postulated
initiating event.

37

(3) Following a postulated initiating event, the reactor would be rendered safe
by the actuation of active items important to safety that need to be brought
into operation in response to the postulated initiating event.
(4) Following a postulated initiating event, the reactor would be rendered safe
by following specified procedures.
6.40. The postulated initiating events used for developing the performance
requirements for the items important to safety in the overall safety assessment and
the detailed analysis of the reactor facility shall be grouped into representative
event sequences that identify bounding cases and that provide the basis for the
design and the operational limits for the items important to safety.
6.41. A technically supported justification shall be provided for the exclusion
from the design of any initiating event that is identified in accordance with the
comprehensive set of postulated initiating events.
6.42. Where prompt and reliable action would be necessary in response to a
postulated initiating event, provision shall be made in the design for automatic
safety actions for the actuation of safety systems to prevent progression to more
severe reactor conditions.
6.43. Where prompt action in response to a postulated initiating event would not
be necessary, it is permissible for reliance to be placed on the manual initiation
of systems or on other operator actions. For such cases, the time interval between
detection of the postulated initiating event or accident and the required action shall
be sufficiently long, and adequate procedures (such as administrative, operational
and emergency procedures) shall be specified to ensure the performance of such
actions. An assessment shall be made of the potential for an operator to worsen an
event sequence through erroneous operation of equipment or incorrect diagnosis
of the necessary recovery process.
6.44. The operator actions necessary to diagnose the state of the reactor following
a postulated initiating event and to put it into a stable long term shutdown
condition in a timely manner shall be facilitated by the provision in the design of
adequate instrumentation to monitor the status of the reactor, and adequate means
for the manual operation of equipment.
Requirement 19: Internal and external hazards
All foreseeable internal hazards and external hazards for a research reactor,
including the potential for human induced events directly or indirectly to
38

affect the safety of the research reactor, shall be identified and their effects,
both individually and in credible combinations, shall be evaluated. Hazards
shall be considered in designing the layout of the facility and in determining
the postulated initiating events and generated loadings for use in the design
of relevant items important to safety for the reactor facility.
6.45. Items important to safety shall be designed and located with due
consideration of other implications for safety, to withstand the effects of hazards
or to be protected, in accordance with their importance to safety, against hazards
and against common cause failure mechanisms generated by hazards. This also
applies to non-permanent equipment.
Internal hazards
6.46. An analysis of the postulated initiating events shall be made to establish all
those internal events that could affect the safety of the research reactor facility.
These events may include equipment failures or malfunctions.
6.47. The potential for internal hazards such as fires and explosions, flooding,
missile generation, pipe whip, jet impact or the release of fluid from failed
systems or from other installations on the site shall be taken into account in the
design of the research reactor facility. Appropriate preventive and mitigatory
measures shall be taken to ensure that nuclear safety is not compromised. Some
external events could initiate internal fires or floods or lead to the generation
of missiles. Such combinations of external and internal events shall also be
considered in the design where appropriate.
Fire and explosion
6.48. Structures, systems and components important to safety shall be designed
and located, subject to compliance with other safety requirements, so as
to minimize the effects of fires and explosions. A fire hazard analysis and an
explosion hazard analysis shall be carried out for the research reactor facility
to determine the necessary ratings of the fire barriers and means of passive
protection and physical separation against fires and explosions. The design shall
include provisions:
(a) To prevent fires and explosions;
(b) To detect and extinguish quickly those fires that do start, thus limiting the
damage caused;

39

(c) To prevent the spread of those fires that are not extinguished, and of fire
induced explosions, thus minimizing their effects on the safety of the
facility. Internal fires and explosions shall not challenge redundant trains of
safety systems.
6.49. Firefighting systems shall be automatically initiated where necessary.
Firefighting systems shall be designed and located so as to ensure that their
use or rupture or spurious or inadvertent operation would not increase the
risk of criticality23, would not harm personnel, would not significantly impair
the capability of structures, systems and components important to safety, and
would not simultaneously affect redundant safety groups and thereby render
ineffective the measures taken to comply with the single failure criterion
(see paras6.766.79).
6.50. Non-combustible or fire retardant and heat resistant materials shall be
used wherever practicable throughout the research reactor facility (including for
tests and experiments), in particular in locations such as the reactor building and
the control room. Flammable gases and liquids and combustible materials that
could produce or contribute to explosive mixtures shall be kept to the minimum
necessary amounts and shall be stored in adequate facilities to keep reactive
substances segregated.
6.51. Fires and explosions shall not prevent achievement of the main safety
functions as well as monitoring the status of the facility. These shall be
maintained by means of the appropriate incorporation of redundant structures,
systems and components, diverse systems, physical separation and design for
fail-safe operation.
External events
6.52. The design basis for natural and human induced external events shall
be determined. The events to be considered shall include those that have been
identified in the site evaluation (see Section5).
6.53. Natural external events shall be addressed, including meteorological,
hydrological, geological and seismic events, and all credible combinations
thereof (see para. 6.69). Human induced external events arising from nearby
23

This aspect is important in particular for critical assemblies and subcritical assemblies
and dry fuel storage facilities, which shall be designed to be safely subcritical following
activation of the fire protection system and during firefighting activities.

40

industries and transport routes shall be addressed. In the short term, the safety of
the facility shall not be dependent on the availability of off-site services such as
the electricity supply and firefighting services. The design shall take due account
of site specific conditions to determine the maximum delay time by which off-site
services need to be available.
6.54. A research reactor facility located in a seismically active region shall be
equipped with a seismic detection system that actuates the automatic reactor
shutdown systems if a specified threshold value is exceeded.
6.55. Features shall be provided to minimize any interactions between
buildings containing items important to safety (including power cabling and
instrumentation and control cabling) and any other structure as a result of external
events considered in the design.
6.56. The design shall be such as to ensure that all items important to safety are
capable of withstanding the effects of external events considered in the design,
and if not, other features such as passive barriers shall be provided to protect the
reactor facility and to ensure that the main safety functions will be achieved.
6.57. The design shall provide for an adequate margin to protect items important
to safety against levels of external hazards more severe than those selected for
the design basis, derived from the site hazard evaluation.
Requirement 20: Design basis accidents
A set of accident conditions that are to be considered in the design for a
research reactor shall be derived from postulated initiating events for the
purpose of establishing the boundary conditions for the research reactor to
withstand, without acceptable limits for radiation protection purposes being
exceeded.
6.58. Design basis accidents shall be used to define the design bases, including
performance criteria, for safety systems and for other items important to safety
that are necessary to control design basis accident conditions, with the objective
of returning the reactor to a safe state and mitigating the consequences of any
accident.
6.59. The design shall be such that for design basis accident conditions, key
reactor parameters do not exceed the specified design limits. A primary objective
shall be to manage all design basis accidents so that they have no, or only minor,
41

radiological consequences, on or off the site, and do not necessitate any off-site
emergency response actions.
6.60. Where prompt, reliable action is required in response to postulated
initiating events, the design of the reactor shall include means of automatically
initiating the operation of the necessary safety systems. The design shall reduce
demands on the operator as far as reasonably practicable, in particular during and
following a design basis accident.
6.61. The design basis accidents shall be analysed in a conservative manner.
This approach involves the application of the single failure criterion
(see Requirement 25) to safety systems, specifying design criteria and using
conservative assumptions, models and input parameters in the analysis.
6.62. The design of subcritical assemblies shall include technical provisions to
prevent criticality (see para.6.66).
Requirement 21: Design limits
A set of design limits for a research reactor consistent with the key physical
parameters for each item important to safety for the research reactor shall
be specified for all operational states and for accident conditions.
6.63. The design limits shall be specified for each operational state of the reactor
and its experimental devices and shall be consistent with relevant national
and international standards and codes, as well as with relevant regulatory
requirements.
Requirement 22: Design extension conditions
A set of design extension conditions for a research reactor shall be derived for
the purpose of enhancing the safety of the research reactor by enhancing its
capabilities to withstand, without unacceptable radiological consequences,
accidents that are either more severe than design basis accidents or that
involve additional failures. The set of design extension conditions shall
be derived on the basis of engineering judgement and by using a graded
approach, deterministic assessments and complementary probabilistic
assessments, as appropriate. The design extension conditions shall be used
to identify the additional accident scenarios to be addressed in the design
and to plan practicable provisions for the prevention of such accidents or
mitigation of their consequences if they do occur.
42

6.64. An analysis of design extension conditions shall be performed24 to


determine whether the potential radiological consequences would exceed those
deemed acceptable by the relevant authority. The main technical objective of
considering the design extension conditions is to provide assurance that the design
of the facility is such as to prevent accident conditions beyond those considered
design basis accident conditions, or to mitigate their consequences, as far as is
reasonably practicable. This might require additional safety features for design
extension conditions, or extension of the capability of safety systems to maintain
the main safety functions, especially the confinement function25. These additional
safety features for design extension conditions, or this extension of the capability
of safety systems, shall be such as to ensure the capability for managing accident
conditions in which there is a significant amount of radioactive material confined
in the facility (including radioactive material resulting from degradation of the
reactor core).
6.65. The design extension conditions shall be used to define the design
specifications for safety features and for the design of all other items important to
safety that are necessary for preventing such conditions from arising, or, if they
do arise, for controlling them and mitigating their consequences. For existing
research reactors, complementary safety reassessment shall be performed to
determine whether there is a need for mitigatory measures or modifications of the
facility to be implemented.
6.66. For subcritical assemblies, the likelihood of criticality shall be sufficiently
remote to be considered a design extension condition. To ensure subcriticality,
the design shall include safety provisions such as the use of only natural uranium
24

The analysis of design extension conditions could be performed by means of a best


estimate approach (more stringent approaches may be used according to States requirements).
25
Confinement is the prevention or control of releases of radioactive material to the
environment in operation or in accidents[8]. Confinement is a basic safety function that is
required to be fulfilled in normal operational modes, for anticipated operational occurrences,
in design basis accidents and, to the extent practicable, in selected design extension conditions.
The function of confinement is usually fulfilled by means of several barriers surrounding the
main parts of a nuclear reactor that contain radioactive material. For a research reactor, the
reactor building may be the ultimate barrier for ensuring confinement. Consideration may be
given to the use of other structures (e.g. the reactor block in a fully enclosed research reactor)
for providing confinement where this is technically feasible. For most designs of large nuclear
reactor, a strong structure housing the reactor is the ultimate barrier providing confinement.
Such a structure is called the containment structure or simply the containment. The containment
also protects the reactor against external events and provides radiation shielding in operational
states and in accident conditions.

43

or limited amounts of fissile materials, or a fixed fuel/moderator ratio. If no such


provisions can be provided, measures for mitigating the consequences shall be
determined and implemented on the basis of safety analysis.
6.67. The analysis undertaken shall include identification of the safety features
that are designed for use in, or that are capable of preventing or mitigating, events
considered in the design extension conditions. These features:
(a) Shall be independent, to the extent practicable, of those used in more
frequent accidents;
(b) Shall be capable of performing, to the extent practicable, in the
environmental conditions pertaining to design extension conditions, as
appropriate;
(c) Shall be reliable commensurate with the function that they are required to
fulfil.
6.68. The design shall be such that the possibility of conditions arising that could
lead to an early radioactive release or a large radioactive release26 is practically
eliminated. The design shall be such that for design extension conditions,
protective measures that are limited in terms of times and areas of application
shall be sufficient for protection of the public, and sufficient time shall be
available to take such measures.
Combinations of events and failures
6.69. Where the results of engineering judgement and deterministic safety
assessments, complemented, as appropriate, by probabilistic safety assessments,
indicate that combinations of postulated initiating events could lead to accident
conditions, such combinations of events shall be considered to be design basis
accidents or shall be included as part of design extension conditions, depending
mainly on their likelihood of occurrence. Certain events might be consequences
of other events, such as a flood following an earthquake. Such consequential
effects shall be considered to be part of the original postulated initiating event.

26

An early radioactive release is a release for which off-site protective measures are
necessary but are unlikely to be fully effective in due time. A large radioactive release is a
release for which off-site protective measures limited in terms of times and areas of application
are insufficient to protect people and the environment.

44

Requirement 23: Engineered safety features


Engineered safety features shall be provided for a research reactor to
prevent anticipated operational occurrences and design basis accidents and
to mitigate their consequences, if they occur.
6.70. Examples of engineered safety features for a research reactor are an
emergency core cooling system and means of confinement (in particular, an
emergency ventilation system). Specific requirements on these systems and their
supplementary features are established in paras 6.1286.137 and 6.1646.166.
Other engineered safety features, such as a second shutdown system or
a containment structure, shall also be designed in accordance with these
requirements.
6.71. The necessity and capabilities for engineered safety features shall be
determined from the safety analysis. The accidents where these systems are
required to be able to cope shall be specified and analyses shall be provided
to demonstrate that the systems fulfil the requirements. Those systems and
subsystems that are essential for the proper operation of the engineered safety
features shall be provided.
6.72. The various modes of operation of an engineered safety feature shall be
determined in detail, including the extent to which the engineered safety feature
is automated and the conditions for which its manual overriding is warranted.
The following shall be considered in the design of engineered safety features:
(a) Component reliability (including reliability of supporting and auxiliary
systems necessary for operating the engineered safety features, see
Requirement 60), independence, redundancy, fail-safe characteristics,
diversity and physical separation of redundant systems, preference of
passive systems over active systems, and functional separation of redundant
safety systems;
(b) The use of materials to withstand the postulated accident conditions
(e.g. in relation to radiation levels or radiolytic decomposition);
(c) Provisions for maintenance, periodic testing and inspection (including
under simulated design basis accident conditions where possible) to verify
that the engineered safety features continue to function or are in a state of
readiness to perform their functions reliably and effectively upon demand.

45

Requirement 24: Reliability of items important to safety


The reliability of items important to safety for a research reactor facility
shall be commensurate with their safety significance.
6.73. The design of items important to safety shall be such as to ensure that
the equipment can be qualified, procured, installed, commissioned, operated
and maintained to be capable of withstanding, with sufficient reliability and
effectiveness, all conditions specified in the design basis for the items.
6.74. In the selection of equipment, consideration shall be given to both spurious
operation and unsafe failure modes. Preference shall be given in the selection
process to equipment that exhibits a predictable and revealed mode of failure and
for which the design facilitates repair or replacement.
6.75. Maximum authorized unavailability limits for operation of the research
reactor shall be established for items important to safety to ensure the reliable
performance of safety functions. The unavailability limits shall be documented in
the operational limits and conditions.
Requirement 25: Single failure criterion
The single failure criterion shall be applied to each safety group incorporated
in the design of the research reactor.
6.76. Spurious action shall be considered to be one mode of failure when applying
the single failure criterion to a safety group or safety system.
6.77. The design shall take due account of the failure of a passive component,
unless it has been justified in the single failure analysis with a high level of
confidence that a failure of that component is very unlikely and that its function
would remain unaffected by the postulated initiating event.
6.78. Multiple sets of equipment that cannot be tested individually shall not be
considered redundant.
6.79. The degree of redundancy adopted shall reflect the potential for undetected
failures that could degrade reliability. Possible failures shall be considered
undetectable if there is no test or method of inspection by which they could be
found. For undetected failures, either the failure shall be considered to occur at
any time or other methods shall be applied, such as the surveillance of reference
46

items, validated methods of calculation and the use of conservative safety


margins27.
Requirement 26: Common cause failures
The design of equipment for a research reactor facility shall take due
account of the potential for common cause failures of items important to
safety, to determine how the concepts of diversity, redundancy, physical
separation and functional independence have to be applied to achieve the
necessary reliability.
6.80. The principle of diversity shall be adopted wherever practicable, after
consideration of its possible disadvantages from complications in operating,
maintaining and testing the diverse equipment.
Requirement 27: Physical separation and independence of safety systems
Interference between safety systems or between redundant elements of
a system for a research reactor facility shall be prevented by means such
as physical separation, electrical isolation, functional independence and
independence of communication (data transfer), as appropriate.
Requirement 28: Fail-safe design
The concept of fail-safe design shall be incorporated, as appropriate, into the
design of systems and components important to safety for a research reactor.
6.81. Systems and components important to safety shall be designed for fail-safe
behaviour, as appropriate, so that their failure or the failure of a support feature
does not prevent the performance of the intended safety function.
Requirement 29: Qualification of items important to safety
A qualification programme shall be implemented for a research reactor
facility to verify that items important to safety are capable of performing
their intended functions when necessary, and in the prevailing environmental

27

The safety margin is the difference between the safety limit and the operational limit.
It is sometimes expressed as the ratio of these two values.

47

conditions, throughout their design life, with due account taken of reactor
conditions during maintenance and testing.
6.82. Any environmental and service conditions that could reasonably be
anticipated and that could arise in specific operational states shall be included in
the qualification programme.
6.83. The environmental conditions considered in the qualification programme
for items important to safety at a research reactor shall include the variations
in ambient environmental conditions that are anticipated in the anticipated
operational occurrences and the design basis accidents for the facility.
6.84. The qualification programme for items important to safety shall include
the consideration of ageing effects caused by environmental factors (such as
conditions of vibration, irradiation, humidity or temperature) over the expected
service life of the items important to safety. When the items important to safety
are subject to natural external events and are required to perform a safety function
during or following such an event, the qualification programme shall replicate as
far as is practicable the conditions imposed on the items important to safety by
the natural event, either by test or by analysis or by a combination of both.
Requirement 30: Design for commissioning
The design for a research reactor facility shall include features as necessary
to facilitate the commissioning process for the reactor facility, including
experimental facilities. These design features may include provisions to
operate with transition cores of different characteristics.
6.85. The provision for the installation and removal of additional equipment
needed only for commissioning, such as filters, filling and draining provisions,
and instrumentation, shall be considered in the design.
Requirement 31: Calibration, testing, maintenance, repair, replacement,
inspection and monitoring of items important to safety
Items important to safety for a research reactor facility shall be designed
to be calibrated, tested, maintained, repaired or replaced, inspected and
monitored as required to ensure their capability of performing their
functions and to maintain their integrity in all conditions specified in their
design basis.

48

6.86. Items important to safety shall be designed to allow for appropriate


functional testing to ensure that these items will perform their safety functions
with the required reliability and shall be arranged so that they can be adequately
tested and maintained as appropriate, before commissioning and at regular
intervals thereafter, in accordance with their importance to safety.
6.87. Important factors that shall be considered are the ease of performing the
tests and inspections, the degree to which the tests and inspections represent real
conditions, and the need to maintain the performance of the safety function during
tests. Where possible and appropriate, self-testing circuits shall be installed in
electrical and electronic systems.
6.88. Items important to safety shall be designed and arranged so they can be
adequately inspected, tested, maintained and replaced as appropriate. The layout
of the reactor shall be such that activities for calibration, testing, maintenance,
repair or replacement, inspection and monitoring are facilitated and can be
performed in accordance with relevant national and international codes and
standards without undue exposure to radiation of the operating personnel. If it is
not practicable to provide adequate accessibility of a component for testing, the
possibility of its undetected failure shall be taken into account in the safety
analysis.
6.89. Provision shall be made in the design of the reactor to facilitate
maintainability and the replacement of items important to safety as well as to
facilitate routine in-service inspection.
Requirement 32: Design for emergency preparedness and response
For emergency preparedness and response purposes, the design for a
research reactor facility shall provide:
(a) A sufficient number of escape routes, clearly and durably marked, with
reliable emergency lighting, ventilation and other services essential to
the safe use of these escape routes;
(b) Effective means of communication throughout the facility for use
following all postulated initiating events and in accident conditions.
6.90. The research reactor facility shall be provided with a sufficient number of
safe escape routes, clearly and durably marked, with reliable emergency lighting,
ventilation and other building services essential to their safe use. The escape
routes shall meet the relevant national requirements for radiation zoning, fire
49

protection, industrial safety and nuclear security (see also Section9), and shall
take into account the relevant international requirements, as applicable.
6.91. Suitable alarm systems and means of communication shall be provided so
that all persons present at the reactor facility and on the site can be given warnings
and instructions in an emergency. The availability of reliable and diverse means
of communication necessary for safety within the reactor facility28 shall be
ensured at all times, with due account taken of postulated initiating events that
may compromise their availability.
Requirement 33: Design for decommissioning
Decommissioning of a research reactor facility shall be considered in the
design for the research reactor and its experimental facilities.
6.92. In the design of the research reactor and its experimental facilities and
in any modifications of them, consideration shall be given to facilitation of
decommissioning[11]. In accomplishing this, the following shall be considered:
(a) The selection of materials so as to minimize activation of the materials
with regard to decommissioning and radioactive waste management and to
provide for easy decontamination;
(b) Optimizing of the facilitys layout and access routes to facilitate the
removal of large components and the detachment and handling (remotely
where necessary) of activated components;
(c) The predisposal management of radioactive waste (i.e. pretreatment,
treatment, conditioning and storage of waste arising from operation and
decommissioning of the reactor).
6.93. Full details shall be retained of the design requirements and of information
relating to the site and its final design, construction and modification, such as
the baseline radiological characterization, as built drawings relating to the
facilitys layout, piping and cable penetrations, as information necessary for
decommissioning.

28

exists.

50

Including means of communication within the supplementary control room, if one

Requirement 34: Design for radiation protection


Provision shall be made at a research reactor facility for ensuring that doses
to operating personnel, reactor users (experimenters) and the public will
be maintained below the prescribed dose limits and will be kept as low as
reasonably achievable, and that the relevant dose constraints will be taken
into consideration.
6.94. In accordance with the fundamental safety objective of protecting people
and the environment (see para. 2.1. of SF-1 [1]) for all operational states and
accident conditions, adequate provision shall be made in the design, on the basis
of the radiation protection programme, for shielding, ventilation, filtration and
decay systems for radioactive material (such as delay tanks), and for monitoring
instrumentation for radiation and airborne radioactive material inside and outside
the controlled area.
6.95. The dose values used for design purposes shall be set with a sufficient
margin to ensure that the authorized limits will not be exceeded. The shielding,
ventilation, filtration and decay systems of the reactor and its associated facilities
shall be designed to allow for uncertainties in operating practices and in all
operational states and design basis accidents.
6.96. Structural materials, in particular those used near the core (such as
core supports, grids and guide tubes), shall be carefully selected to limit the
doses to personnel during operation, maintenance, testing and inspection,
and decommissioning, as well as to fulfil their other functions. The effects
of radionuclides produced by neutron activation in reactor process systems
(e.g. 16N, 3H, 41Ar, 24Na and 60Co) shall be given due consideration in the
provision of radiation protection for people on and off the site.
6.97. The design shall include any necessary provisions to segregate materials
in accordance with their radiological, physical and chemical characteristics,
to facilitate their handling and to protect workers and other personnel at the
facility and the public by means of access control. This shall be accomplished by
establishing zones within the facility (in supervised areas and controlled areas,
see Requirement24 of GSRPart3[7]) that are classified in accordance with their
hazard potential. Such zones shall be clearly delineated and designated. Surfaces
shall be appropriately designed to facilitate their decontamination.
6.98. The design shall include the shielding required not only for the reactor but
also for experimental devices and associated facilities (e.g. beam tubes, particle
51

guides or facilities for neutron radiography or boron neutron capture therapy) and
provision shall be made for installing the necessary shielding associated with the
future utilization of the reactor and other radiation sources. Hazard assessments
and shielding arrangements shall be given due consideration in relation to the use
of beam tubes and other experimental devices.
6.99. Provision shall be made for controlling the release and preventing the
dispersion of radioactive substances and contamination at the facility. Ventilation
systems with appropriate filtration shall be provided for use in operational states
and accident conditions.
6.100. Protection and safety shall be optimized by means of suitable provision
in the design and layout of the reactor and its experimental devices and facilities
to limit exposure and contamination from all sources. Such provision shall
include the adequate design of structures, systems and components to limit
exposure during maintenance, testing and inspection by providing shielding from
direct and scattered radiation, and the provision of means of monitoring and
controlling access to the reactor and its experimental devices and facilities.
6.101. Provision shall be made in the design for safe handling of the radioactive
waste generated at the research reactor facility. Provision shall be made for
appropriate decontamination facilities for both personnel and equipment and for
handling the radioactive waste arising from decontamination activities.
6.102. Equipment subject to frequent maintenance or manual operation shall
be located in areas of low dose rate to reduce the exposure of workers and other
personnel at the facility.
Requirement 35: Design for optimal operator performance
Systematic consideration of human factors, including the humanmachine
interface, shall be applied at an early stage in the design process for a
research reactor facility, including its experimental facilities, and shall be
continued throughout the entire design process.
6.103. Consideration shall be given in design to ensuring that, if reliance on
administrative controls and procedures is necessary, such controls are feasible
and the associated procedures are applicable.
6.104. Consideration shall be given to human factors and the application of
ergonomic principles in the design of the control room and reactor systems.
52

6.105. The humanmachine interface shall be designed to provide the operators


with comprehensive but easily manageable information, in accordance with the
necessary decision times and action times. The information necessary for the
operator to make a decision to act shall be simply and unambiguously presented
and shall enable:
(a) Assessment of the general state of the facility in any condition;
(b) Operation of the facility within the specified limits on parameters associated
with facility systems and equipment (operational limits and conditions);
(c) Confirmation that safety actions for the actuation of safety systems are
automatically initiated when needed and that the relevant systems perform
as intended;
(d) Determination of both the need for and the time for manual initiation of the
specified safety actions.
6.106. With regard to the presentation of information visually and on instruments
and alarms, the design shall be such as to promote the success of operator actions
under the constraints of the time available, the physical environmental conditions
expected and the possible psychological pressure on the operator.
6.107. The design shall support operating personnel in the performance of their
tasks and shall limit the effects of operating errors on safety. Due consideration
shall be given in the design process to the layout of the facility and equipment,
and to procedures, including procedures for maintenance and inspection, for
facilitating intervention of the operating personnel on the reactor structures,
systems and components in all states of the research reactor.
Requirement 36: Provision for safe utilization and modification
The design for a research reactor facility shall include provisions for the safe
utilization and modification of the research reactor.
6.108. Research reactors are operationally flexible in nature and they may be
in various different states. Precautions shall be taken in the design regarding the
utilization and modification of the research reactor to ensure that the configuration
of the reactor is known at all times. In particular, consideration shall be given to
experimental equipment since:
(a) It can cause hazards directly if it fails.
(b) It can cause hazards indirectly by affecting the safe operation of the reactor.

53

(c) It can increase the hazard due to an initiating event by its consequent failure
and the effects of this on the event sequence.
6.109. Every proposed modification to the reactor or to an experiment that may
have a major significance for safety shall be designed in accordance with the same
principles as apply for the reactor itself (see paras7.1007.101). In particular, all
experimental devices shall be fully compatible in terms of the materials used,
the structural integrity and the provision for radiation protection. The radioactive
inventory and the generation and release of energy shall be considered in the
design of all experimental devices.
6.110. Modifications of research reactors and experimental devices shall
be designed such that the means of confinement and shielding of the reactor
is preserved. Protection systems for experimental devices shall be designed to
protect both the device and the reactor. A formal commissioning programme shall
be established for experiments and modifications with major safety significance.
6.111. The requirements relating to the anticipated utilization of the reactor,
including the requirements for power stability, shall be taken into account in the
design. The design shall be such that the response of the reactor and its associated
systems to a wide range of events, including anticipated operational occurrences,
will allow its safe operation.
Requirement 37: Design for ageing management
The design life of items important to safety at a research reactor facility shall
be determined. Appropriate margins shall be provided in the design to take
due account of relevant mechanisms of ageing, such as neutron embrittlement
and wear-out, and of the potential for age related degradation, to ensure the
capability of items important to safety to perform their necessary safety
functions in operational states and accident conditions in case of demand
throughout their design life. The life cycles of the technology utilized and the
possible obsolescence of the technology shall be considered.
6.112. The design for a research reactor shall take due account of physical
ageing, the effects of wear and tear and obsolescence in all operational states for
which a component is credited, including testing, maintenance, and operational
states during and following a postulated initiating event.
6.113. An ageing management programme that includes inspection and periodic
testing of materials shall be put in place, and the results that are obtained in this
54

programme shall be used in reviewing the adequacy of the design at appropriate


intervals.
6.114. The design shall include provisions for the necessary monitoring, testing,
sampling and inspection for the detection, assessment, prevention and mitigation
of ageing effects. The ageing management of the research reactor facility shall
include the management of obsolete structures, systems and components and the
management of spare parts.
Requirement 38: Provision for long shutdown periods
In the design of the research reactor facility, consideration shall be given to
ensuring the safety of the facility in long shutdown periods.
6.115. Provision shall be made in the design to meet the needs arising in
long shutdown periods, such as the need for maintaining the conditions of the
nuclear fuel, the coolant or the moderator and cover gas, the need for appropriate
preservation of structures, systems and components, and the need for the
maintenance, periodic testing and inspection of the relevant structures, systems
and components. Consideration shall be given to long lived neutron poisoning of
the reflector material, which may affect the restarting of the reactor.
Requirement 39: Prevention of unauthorized access to, or interference with,
items important to safety
Unauthorized access to, or interference with, items important to safety at a
research reactor facility, including computer hardware and software, shall
be prevented.
6.116. Provision shall be made in the design for the control of access to the
reactor facility and/or to equipment by operating personnel and reactor users,
including emergency workers and vehicles, with particular consideration given
to the prevention of any unauthorized entry of persons and goods to the site or to
buildings on the site, for the main purposes of preventing theft or the unauthorized
removal of nuclear material and preventing sabotage (see also Section9).
Requirement 40: Prevention of disruptive or adverse interactions between
systems important to safety
The potential for disruptive or adverse interactions between systems
important to safety at a research reactor facility that might be required to
55

operate simultaneously shall be evaluated, and any disruptive or adverse


interactions shall be prevented.
6.117. In the analysis of the potential for disruptive or adverse interactions
of systems important to safety, due account shall be taken of physical
interconnections and of the possible effects of one systems operation, spurious
operation or malfunction on local environmental conditions of other systems, to
ensure that changes in environmental conditions do not affect the reliability of
systems or components in functioning as intended.
6.118. If two systems important to safety and containing fluid are interconnected
and are operating at different pressures, either the systems shall both be designed
to withstand the higher pressure, or provision shall be made to prevent the design
pressure of the system operating at the lower pressure from being exceeded.
Requirement 41: Safety analysis of the design
A safety analysis of the design for a research reactor facility shall be
conducted in which methods of deterministic analysis and complementary
probabilistic analysis as appropriate shall be applied to enable the challenges
to safety in all facility states to be evaluated and assessed.
6.119. A safety analysis shall be conducted of the design of the research
reactor. The safety analysis shall include the response of the facility to a range
of postulated initiating events (such as malfunctions or failures of equipment
and experimental devices, operator errors or external and internal events) that
could lead either to anticipated operational occurrences or to accident conditions
(see also GSRPart4 (Rev.1)[12]). These analyses shall be used:
(a) As the design basis for items important to safety;
(b) For the selection of the operational limits and conditions for the reactor;
(c) For the development of operating procedures, inspection and periodic
testing programmes, record keeping practices, maintenance schedules,
proposals for modifications and emergency planning.
6.120. The safety analysis shall provide assurance that defence in depth has
been implemented and uncertainties have been given adequate consideration in
the design.

56

6.121. The scope of the safety analysis shall include:


(a) Characterization of the postulated initiating events that are appropriate;
(b) Analysis of event sequences and evaluation of the consequences of the
postulated initiating events;
(c) Comparison of the results of the analysis with radiological acceptance
criteria and design limits;
(d) Demonstration that the management of anticipated operational occurrences
and design basis accidents is possible by means of an automatic response of
safety systems in combination with prescribed operator actions;
(e) Specification of the design extension conditions and of how they are
addressed;
(f) Determination of the operational limits and conditions for normal operation;
(g) The analysis of safety systems and the engineered safety features and the
safety features for design extension conditions;
(h) The analysis of the means of confinement.
6.122. For each postulated initiating event, qualitative and quantitative
information about the following aspects shall be considered in the safety analysis:
(a) The input parameters, initial conditions, boundary conditions, assumptions,
models, uncertainties and codes used;
(b) The sequence of events and the performance of reactor systems;
(c) The sensitivity to single failure modes and common cause failures;
(d) The sensitivity to human factors;
(e) Analysis of transients;
(f) The identification of damage states;
(g) The derivation of source terms;
(h) The evaluation of radiological consequences.
6.123. For each accident sequence considered, the extent to which the safety
systems and any operable process systems are required to function under accident
conditions shall be indicated. These events are usually evaluated by deterministic
methods. Probabilistic techniques can be used to complement the evaluation. The
results of these complementary analyses shall provide input to the design of the
safety systems and the definition of their functions.
6.124. Where applicable, the safety analysis shall include consideration of
the experimental devices with regard to both their own safety aspects and their
effects on the research reactor.

57

6.125. The applicability of the methods of analysis, the analytical assumptions


and the degree of conservatism used in the design of the research reactor shall be
updated and verified for the as built facility.
SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS FOR DESIGN
Buildings and structures
Requirement 42: Buildings and structures
The buildings and structures important to safety for a research reactor
facility shall be designed to keep radiation levels and radioactive releases on
and off the site as low as reasonably achievable and below authorized limits
for all operational states, for design basis accidents and, as far as practicable,
for design extension conditions.
6.126. The buildings and structures important to safety shall be designed for all
operational states, for design basis accidents and, as far as practicable, for design
extension conditions.
6.127. The required leaktightness of the reactor building or of other buildings
and structures containing radioactive material and the requirements for the
ventilation system shall be determined in accordance with the safety analysis of
the reactor and its utilization.
Requirement 43: Means of confinement
Means of confinement shall be provided for a research reactor to ensure, or to
contribute to, the fulfilment of the following safety functions: (i)confinement
of radioactive substances in operational states and in accident conditions;
(ii) protection of the reactor against natural external events and human
induced events; and (iii) radiation shielding in operational states and in
accident conditions.
6.128. Means of confinement (see footnote 25) shall be designed to ensure
that a release of radioactive material (fission products and activation products)
following an accident involving disruption or damage of the nuclear fuel, core
components or experimental devices does not exceed acceptable limits. The
means of confinement may include physical barriers surrounding the main parts
of the research reactor that contain radioactive material. Such barriers shall be
58

designed to prevent an unplanned release of radioactive material in operational


states or to mitigate its consequences if one does occur, in design basis accidents
and, to the extent practicable, in design extension conditions. The barriers for
confinement usually comprise the reactor building together with other items.
The other items may be sumps and tanks for collecting and containing spills;
an emergency ventilation system, usually with filtration; isolation devices on
barrier penetrations; and a point of release, which is usually elevated.
6.129. For the proper functioning of the means of confinement, the pressure
within a barrier shall be set at such a level as to prevent the uncontrolled release
of radioactive material to the environment through the barrier. In setting this
pressure, variations in atmospheric conditions (e.g. wind speed and atmospheric
pressure) shall be taken into account.
6.130. In the design of the means of confinement, the effects of extreme
conditions (e.g. pressure waves or explosions within the barrier) and
environmental conditions due to accidents, including conditions arising from the
external and internal events listed in Appendix I, as relevant, (e.g. fire conditions
and the associated increases in local pressures) shall be taken into account.
6.131. Barriers shall be designed to withstand, with suitable margins, the
highest calculated pressure and temperature loads expected in design basis
accident conditions.
6.132. The release rate under accident conditions and associated consequences
shall be determined, with account taken of the source term and other parameters
such as extent of filtration, the point of release, environmental conditions, and the
pressure and temperature under design basis accident conditions.
6.133. In the event of an accident (including an accident that may produce an
increase in pressure), the leakage from the barrier shall be controlled by means of
appropriate engineering features to prevent the release of radioactive material to
the environment in excess of acceptable limits.
6.134. Provisions to enable initial and periodic performance tests to check air
leakage rates and to enable monitoring of the operational performance of the
ventilation system shall be included in the design.
6.135. Where confinement is dependent on the efficiency of filters, the design
shall include provisions as appropriate for insitu periodic testing of the efficiency
of the filters.
59

6.136. For structures and components performing the function of confinement,


coverings and coatings shall be such as to ensure their safety functions and
to minimize interference with other safety functions in the event of their
deterioration.
6.137. For research reactors that have greater potential hazards associated
with them, a containment structure shall ensure that, in design basis accident
conditions, any release of radioactive material would be kept below authorized
limits and that, in design extension conditions, any release of radioactive material
would be kept below acceptable limits.
Reactor core and associated features
Requirement 44: Reactor core and fuel design
Research reactor core components and fuel elements and assemblies for a
research reactor shall be designed to maintain their structural integrity and
to withstand satisfactorily the conditions in the reactor core in all operational
states and in design basis accident conditions.
6.138. Appropriate neutronic, thermohydraulic, mechanical, material, chemical
and irradiation related considerations associated with the reactor as a whole
shall be taken into account in the design and qualification of fuel elements and
assemblies, the reflectors and other core components.
6.139. Analyses shall be performed to show that the intended irradiation
conditions and limits (such as fission density, total fissions at the end of lifetime
and neutron fluence) are acceptable and will not lead to undue deformation or
swelling of the fuel elements. The anticipated upper limit of possible deformation
shall be evaluated. These analyses shall be supported by data from experiments
and from experience with irradiation. Consideration shall be given in the design
of the fuel elements to the requirements relating to the long term management of
irradiated elements, which may include reprocessing or conditioning for disposal.
6.140. All foreseeable reactor core configurations, including the initial core
configuration through to the equilibrium core configuration, as appropriate,
shall be considered in the core design. The effect of the inserted experimental
devices or materials under irradiation shall also be considered. For subcritical
assemblies, this includes assurance that all of these configurations are subcritical
with justified margins.

60

6.141. The reactor core (i.e. the fuel elements, reflectors, geometry of
cooling channels, irradiation devices and structural parts) shall be designed to
maintain the relevant parameters below predetermined limits in all operational
states. Provisions shall be considered in the design for monitoring the physical
conditions and integrity of the fuel. The design shall ensure that inadvertent
movement of fuel elements or core components is not possible (e.g. by upward
thrust due to flow).
6.142. The reactor core, including fuel elements, reactivity control
mechanisms29 and experimental devices shall be designed and constructed so that
the maximum permissible design limits that are determined for all operational
states are not exceeded. A suitable margin, including margins for uncertainties
and engineering tolerances, shall be incorporated in setting these limits.
6.143. The reactor core shall be designed so that the reactor can be shut down,
cooled30 and maintained subcritical with an adequate margin for all operational
states and accident conditions. The end state of the reactor core shall be assessed
for selected design extension conditions.
6.144. Wherever possible, the design of the reactor core shall make use
of inherent safety characteristics to minimize the consequences of accident
conditions due to transients and instabilities.
6.145. The design and construction of the core of a subcritical assembly
shall ensure that criticality cannot be reached for any core configuration
(fuel, reflector and neutron source, if any), temperatures, moderation and
reflection circumstances.
Requirement 45: Provision of reactivity control
The design of a research reactor shall provide adequate means to control the
reactivity.

29

Reactivity control mechanisms are devices of all kinds for controlling the reactivity,
including regulating rods, control rods, shutdown rods or blades, and devices for controlling the
moderator level or the reflection.
30
The cooling requirement might not apply to some types of critical assembly and
subcritical assembly.

61

6.146. It shall be demonstrated in the design that the reactivity control system
will function properly under all operational states of the reactor and will also
maintain its reactor shutdown capability under all design basis accidents,
including failures of the control system itself.
6.147. Sufficient negative reactivity shall be available in the reactivity
control devices(s) so that the reactor can be brought to a subcritical condition
and maintained subcritical in all operational states and in accident conditions,
with account taken of the experimental arrangements with the highest positive
reactivity contribution. In the design of reactivity control devices, account
shall be taken of wear and tear and the effects of irradiation, such as burnup,
poison buildup and decay, changes in physical properties and the production of
gas. This requirement might not apply to some subcritical assemblies; however,
subcriticality shall be justified for any configuration (see para.6.145).
6.148. The maximum rate of addition of positive reactivity allowed by the
reactivity control system or an experiment shall be specified and shall be limited
to values justified in the safety analysis report and documented in the operational
limits and conditions.
6.149. If a subcritical assembly will remain subcritical in any condition (even in
the most reactive case), reactivity control devices might not be required.
Requirement 46: Reactor shutdown systems
Means shall be provided for a research reactor to ensure that there is a
capability to shut down the reactor in operational states and in accident
conditions, and that the shutdown condition can be maintained for a long
period of time, with margins, even for the most reactive conditions of the
reactor core.
6.150. At least one automatic shutdown system shall be incorporated into
the design.31 The provision of a second independent shutdown system may be
necessary, depending on the characteristics of the reactor, and this shall be given
due consideration in the design.

31

62

A subcritical assembly can be shut down by the withdrawal of the neutron source.

6.151. The effectiveness, speed of action and shutdown margin32 of the reactor
shutdown system shall be such that the conditions and the design limits for the
fuel specified in the safety analysis report are met.
6.152. No single failure in the shutdown system shall be capable of preventing
the system from fulfilling its safety function when required.
6.153. A capability to initiate manual reactor emergency shutdown shall be
provided. This manual reactor trip signal shall also be provided as an input to the
reactor protection system. The manual reactor trip shall be able to shut down the
reactor directly. Consideration shall be given to the provision of the capability
to initiate manual emergency shutdown of the reactor from locations other than
the main control room (e.g. from the reactor operational area(s) or from the
supplementary control room).
6.154. Instrumentation shall be provided and tests shall be performed to ensure
that the means of shutdown are in the state stipulated for the given condition of
the reactor.
6.155. It shall be demonstrated in the design that the reactor shutdown system
will function properly under all operational states of the reactor and will maintain
its reactor shutdown capability under accident conditions, including failures of
the control system itself.
Requirement 47: Design of reactor coolant systems and related systems
The coolant systems for a research reactor shall be designed and constructed
to provide adequate cooling to the reactor core.
6.156. Systems containing reactor coolant shall be designed to allow pre-service
and in-service tests and inspections to detect the possible occurrence of leaks,
cracks and brittle fractures.33 Consideration shall be given in the design to
ensuring material characteristics that ensure the slow propagation of failures.

32

The shutdown margin is the negative reactivity provided in addition to the negative
reactivity necessary to maintain the reactor in a subcritical condition without time limit, with
the most reactive control device removed from the core and with all experiments that can be
moved or changed during operation in their most reactive condition.
33
Some subcritical assemblies and critical assemblies do not require cooling systems.

63

6.157. In the design of water cooled reactors, particular attention shall be paid
to preventing the uncovering of the core.
6.158. Where the primary cooling system is not designed for cooling the core
after shutdown, a reliable separate system shall be provided for the removal of
residual heat.
6.159. For reactor systems that use flappers34 or equivalent systems for
the transition from forced to natural circulation cooling, or for operation with
natural circulation cooling, and for which this mode is part of the safety system
(or is considered an engineered safety feature), the single failure criterion shall be
applied. Instrumentation to verify their functioning and to provide signals to the
reactor protection system shall be provided.
6.160. If two coolant systems that are operating at different pressures are
interconnected, the requirement of para.6.118 applies.
6.161. Provision shall be made in the design for controlling the volume,
temperature and pressure of the reactor coolant in any operational state of the
facility, with due account taken of volumetric changes and leakage.
6.162. Provisions shall be made in the design to monitor and control the
properties of the reactor coolant (e.g. the pH and conductivity of the water)
and/or the moderator, and to remove radioactive substances, including activated
corrosion products and fission products, from the coolant. Despite the fact that
subcritical assemblies might not require cooling systems for heat removal, such
provisions shall be applied to the fluids contained within such assemblies, to
preserve fuel elements and structures, systems and components and to avoid
radioactive releases.
6.163. Design features (such as leak detection systems, appropriate
interconnections and capabilities for isolation) and suitable redundancy and
diversity shall be provided to fulfil the requirements of paras 6.736.81 with
adequate reliability for each postulated initiating event. Such measures also apply
to subcritical assemblies.

34

A flapper is a passive valve that opens when the flow (pressure) is below a set value to
allow for the creation of natural circulation in the event of a loss of forced flow.

64

Requirement 48: Emergency cooling of the reactor core


An emergency core cooling system shall be provided for a research reactor,
as required, to prevent damage to the fuel in the event of a loss of coolant
accident.
6.164. The emergency core cooling system shall be capable of preventing
significant failure of fuel for the range of accidents specified in the design basis
(i.e. under design basis accidents, damage to the fuel and releases of radioactive
material shall be kept within authorized limits).35 Special procedures for cooling
the core shall be considered in the case of selected design extension conditions.
6.165. For design basis accidents, the emergency core cooling shall be designed
to perform its intended function in the event of any single failure in the system.
6.166. The emergency core cooling system shall be designed to permit the
periodic inspection of components and shall be designed for appropriate periodic
functional testing for the verification of performance.
Instrumentation and control systems
Requirement 49: Provision of instrumentation and control systems
Instrumentation shall be provided for a research reactor facility for
monitoring the values of all the main variables that can affect the
performance of the main safety functions and the main process variables
that are necessary for its safe and reliable operation, for determining the
status of the facility under accident conditions and for making decisions for
accident management. Appropriate and reliable control systems shall be
provided at the facility to maintain and limit the relevant process variables
within the specified operating ranges.
6.167. The reactor shall be provided with sufficient instrumentation and
recording means to monitor important reactor parameters and the status of
essential equipment of the reactor (including the position of neutron source) and
associated experimental devices in all facility states. The expected response of

35

Critical assemblies and subcritical assemblies might not require emergency core
cooling systems.

65

such instrumentation and control systems in an emergency shall be assessed and


taken into account in the emergency arrangements (see GSRPart7[6]).
6.168. The reactor shall be provided with appropriate controls, both manual
and automatic as appropriate, to maintain parameters within specified operating
ranges.
6.169. In the design of the instrumentation and control systems, provision
shall be made as appropriate for startup neutron sources and dedicated startup
instrumentation for conditions in which they are needed. This requirement shall
be fulfilled for commissioning and startup after long shutdown periods.
6.170. Audio and visual alarm systems, as appropriate, shall be provided for the
early indication of changes in the operating conditions of the reactor that could
affect its safety.
6.171. Interconnections between reactor instrumentation and control systems
and systems for controlling experimental devices shall in general be prohibited.
Exceptions shall be permitted only if interconnections for controlling specific
parameters of experimental devices are mandatory for the safe operation of the
reactor.
Requirement 50: Reactor protection system
A protection system shall be provided for a research reactor to initiate
automatic actions to actuate the safety systems necessary for achieving and
maintaining a safe state.
6.172. The reactor protection system shall be independent of other systems and
shall be capable of overriding unsafe actions of the control system.
6.173. The reactor protection system shall be capable of automatically initiating
the required safety actions, for the full range of postulated initiating events, to
actuate the safety systems necessary for achieving a safe state.
6.174. The reactor protection system shall be designed in such a way that,
once the sequence of protective actions has been initiated automatically by the
reactor protection system, it will proceed to completion and no manual actions
will be necessary within a short period of time following activation of the reactor
protection system. Such automatic actions by the reactor protection system shall

66

not be self-resetting, and deliberate operator action shall be required to return to


normal operation.
6.175. The possibility of bypassing interlocks and trips of the reactor protection
system that might result in the bypassing of a safety function shall be carefully
evaluated and justified. Appropriate means of preventing interlocks and trips that
are important to safety from being inadvertently bypassed shall be incorporated
into the reactor protection system.
6.176. The design of the reactor protection system shall be such that no single
failure could result in the loss of automatic protective actions.
6.177. The reactor protection function shall be designed to bring the reactor to a
safe condition and to maintain it in a safe condition even if the reactor protection
systems are subjected to a credible common cause failure.
6.178. The reactor protection system shall be designed to permit periodic
testing of its functionality.
6.179. It shall be ensured in the design that the set points can be established
with a margin between the initiation point and the safety limits such that the
action initiated by the reactor protection system will be able to control the
process before the safety limit is reached. Some of the factors to be considered in
establishing this margin are:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)

The accuracy of the instrumentation;


Uncertainties in calibration;
Instrument drift;
Instrument and system response times.

6.180. Where a computer based system is intended to be used in a reactor


protection system, the following requirements apply in addition to that of
para.6.176:
(a) Hardware and software of high quality and proven design shall be used.
(b) The whole development process, including control, testing and
commissioning of the design, shall be systematically documented and
reviewable.
(c) In order to confirm the reliability of the computer based systems, a
systematic, fully documented and reviewed assessment shall be undertaken
by expert personnel who are independent of the designers and the suppliers.
67

(d) Protection shall be provided against accidental disruption of, or deliberate


interference with, system operations.
6.181. Where the necessary high reliability of a computer based system that is
intended for use in a reactor protection system cannot be demonstrated with a
high level of confidence, diverse means of ensuring fulfilment of the protection
functions shall be provided.
Requirement 51: Reliability and testability of instrumentation and control
systems
Instrumentation and control systems for items important to safety at a
research reactor shall be designed for high functional reliability and periodic
testability commensurate with the safety function(s) to be performed.
6.182. The required level of reliability shall be achieved by means of a
comprehensive strategy that uses various complementary means (including an
effective regime of analysis and testing) at each phase of development of the
system and a validation strategy to confirm that the design requirements for the
system have been fulfilled. The conditions in which equipment is to be used and
stored and the effects of possible environmental factors (e.g. humidity, extreme
temperature, and electromagnetic fields) shall be taken into account in the
reliability analysis.
6.183. Design techniques such as testability, including a self-checking
capability where necessary, fail-safe characteristics, functional diversity and
diversity in component design and in concepts of operation shall be used to the
extent practicable to prevent loss of a safety function.
Requirement 52: Use of computer based equipment in systems important to
safety
If a system important to safety at a research reactor is dependent upon
computer based equipment, appropriate standards and practices for
the development and testing of computer hardware and software shall
be established and implemented throughout the lifetime of the system,
and in particular throughout the software development cycle. The entire
development shall be subject to an integrated management system.

68

6.184. For computer based equipment in safety systems and systems important
to safety:
(a) A high quality of, and best practices for, hardware and software shall be
used, in accordance with the importance of the system to safety.
(b) The entire development process, including the control, testing and
commissioning of design changes, shall take into account all phases of the
life cycle of the computer based system, shall be systematically documented
and shall be reviewable.
(c) An assessment of the equipment shall be undertaken by experts who are
independent of the design team and the supplier team to provide assurance
of its high reliability.
(d) When the necessary high reliability of the equipment cannot be
demonstrated with a high level of confidence, diverse means of ensuring
fulfilment of the safety functions shall be provided (see also para.6.181).
(e) Common cause failures deriving from software shall be taken into
consideration.
(f) Protection shall be provided against accidental disruption of, or deliberate
interference with, system operation (computer based systems and
communication and network systems important to safety, including
the reactor protection system, are to be adequately protected against
cyber-attacks, up to and including the design basis threat[13]).
(g) Appropriate verification and validation and testing of the software systems
shall be performed.
Requirement 53: Control room
A control room shall be provided at a research reactor facility from which the
facility can be safely operated in all operational states, either automatically
or manually, and from which measures can be taken to maintain the research
reactor in a safe state or to bring it back into a safe state after anticipated
operational occurrences and accident conditions.
6.185. Appropriate measures shall be taken and adequate information shall be
provided for the protection of occupants of the control room, for an extended
period of time, against hazards such as high radiation levels resulting from
accident conditions, releases of radioactive material, fire, or explosive or toxic
gases. See also para. 6.91 for requirements on the means of communication
between the control room and the supplementary control room and the emergency
centre.

69

6.186. Special attention shall be paid to identifying those events, both internal
and external to the control room, that could challenge its continued operation, and
the design shall provide for practicable measures to minimize the consequences
of such events. The design shall provide for escape routes for the occupants in
case of events necessitating the evacuation of the control room.
6.187. The design of the control room shall provide an adequate margin against
natural hazards more severe than those selected for the design basis.
Requirement 54: Supplementary control room
Provision of a supplementary control room for a research reactor facility,
separate and functionally independent from the main control room, shall be
considered in the design.
6.188. The means provided in the supplementary control room (sometimes
known as a remote shutdown panel) shall be sufficient for fulfilment of the main
safety functions (shutdown, cooling, confinement and monitoring of the facility
status) in the event of an emergency. Information on important parameters and
the radiological conditions in the facility and its surroundings shall be made
available in the supplementary control room. Systems designed for this purpose
shall be considered items important to safety. A supplementary control room
might not be necessary for critical assemblies and subcritical assemblies. In this
case, the decision shall be justified on the basis of a comprehensive analysis.
Requirement 55: Emergency response facilities on the site
A research reactor facility shall include the necessary emergency response
facilities on the site. Their design shall be such that personnel will be able
to perform expected tasks for managing an emergency under conditions
generated by accidents as well as initiating events.
6.189. Information about important reactor parameters and radiological
conditions at the reactor facility and the site, and information from monitoring
systems and laboratory facilities that is to be used to determine the need to initiate
emergency measures, as well as information to be used for continuing assessment,

70

shall be provided to the relevant emergency response facilities36. Each emergency


response facility shall be provided with means of communication with the
control room, the supplementary control room and other important locations at
the facility, and with on-site and off-site emergency response organizations.
POWER SUPPLIES
Requirement 56: Electrical power supply systems
The design for a research reactor facility shall include reliable normal
electrical power supply systems and shall consider reliable emergency
electrical power supply systems.
6.190. Reliable electrical power supplies for essential safety functions shall be
available in normal operational states and in accident conditions.
6.191. The design shall consider the provision of uninterruptible power supplies
for those safety systems that require a continuous energy supply, such as the
reactor protection system and the radiation monitoring system.
6.192. In the design basis for the emergency power supply, due account shall be
taken of the postulated initiating events and the associated safety functions to be
performed to determine the requirements for capability, availability, duration of
the required power supply, capacity and continuity.
Requirement 57: Radiation protection systems
Equipment shall be provided at a research reactor facility to ensure that
there is adequate radiation monitoring in operational states and accident
conditions.

36

Emergency response facilities and locations are addressed in GSRPart7[6]. For


research reactors, emergency response facilities (which are separate from the control room and
the supplementary control room) include the emergency centre, and the technical support centre
and the operational support centre, as appropriate.

71

6.193. The design of radiation protection systems shall include:


(a) Stationary dose rate meters for monitoring the local radiation dose rate
at places routinely accessible by operating personnel and at other places
where the changes in radiation levels in operational states could be such
that access is allowed only for certain specified periods of time (e.g. beam
tube areas, and areas where neutron sources are located in the subcritical
facilities).
(b) Stationary dose rate meters to indicate the general radiation levels at
suitable locations of the facility in anticipated operation occurrences and
accident conditions. The stationary dose rate meters shall provide sufficient
information in the control room or in the appropriate control position that
operating personnel can initiate protective actions and corrective actions if
necessary.
(c) Monitors for measuring the activity of radioactive substances in the
atmosphere in those areas routinely occupied by personnel, including
experimental areas, and where the levels of airborne activity may be
expected to be such as to require protective measures.
(d) Stationary equipment and laboratories for determining, in a timely manner,
the concentrations of selected radionuclides in fluid process systems, and
in gas and liquid samples taken from the research reactor facility or the
environment, in operational states and accident conditions.
(e) Stationary equipment for monitoring and controlling effluents prior to or
during their discharge to the environment.
(f) Devices for measuring radioactive surface contamination.
(g) Installations and equipment for measuring doses to and contamination of
personnel.
(h) Radiation monitoring at gates and other entrances of the facility to detect
radioactive material being moved without permission or unintentional
contamination.
6.194. In addition to monitoring within the facility, arrangements shall also be
made to assess exposures and other radiological impacts in the vicinity of the
facility, where necessary.
Requirement 58: Handling and storage systems for fuel and core components
The design for a research reactor facility shall include provisions for the safe
handling and storage of fresh and irradiated fuel and core components.

72

6.195. The design shall include provisions for safely storing a sufficient number
of spent fuel elements and irradiated core components. These provisions shall be
in accordance with the programmes for core management and for removing or
replacing fuel elements and core components.
6.196. The design shall include provisions to unload all fuel from the core
safely at any time.
6.197. The implications of the storage of irradiated fuel and core components
over an extended time period shall be considered in the design, where applicable.
6.198. The handling and storage systems shall be designed:
(a) To prevent criticality by an adequate margin, by physical means such as the
use of an appropriate geometry and fixed absorbers;
(b) To permit periodic inspection and testing;
(c) To minimize the probability of loss of, or damage to, the fuel;
(d) To prevent the inadvertent dropping of heavy objects on the fuel;
(e) To permit the appropriate storage of suspect or damaged fuel elements;
(f) To provide for radiation protection;
(g) To provide a means for controlling the chemistry and activity of the storage
medium;
(h) To prevent unacceptable levels of stress in the fuel elements;
(i) To identify and track individual fuel elements and assemblies.
6.199. Handling and storage systems for irradiated fuel shall be designed to
permit adequate heat removal and shielding in operational states and accident
conditions.
6.200. Critical assemblies and subcritical assemblies are unlikely to include
spent fuel or significantly irradiated fuel and therefore the requirements relating
to handling and storage of spent fuel or significantly irradiated fuel might not
apply. The other requirements established in paras6.1956.198 apply.
Requirement 59: Radioactive waste systems
The design of a research reactor facility and its associated experimental
facilities shall include provisions to enhance safety in waste management and
to minimize the generation of radioactive waste. Systems shall be provided
for treating solid, liquid and gaseous radioactive waste to keep the amounts

73

and concentrations of radioactive releases as low as reasonably achievable


and below authorized limits on discharges.
6.201. Appropriate means, such as shielding and decay systems, to reduce
the exposure of personnel and radioactive releases to the environment shall be
considered in the design and provided as necessary.
6.202. Means shall be provided in the design for the handling, processing,
storage, removal from the site and disposal of radioactive waste. Where liquid
radioactive waste is to be handled, provision shall be made for the detection of
leakage and the recovery of waste, if appropriate. Where gaseous radioactive
material is to be handled, provision shall be made for the detection of leakage and
the prevention and control of releases to below authorized limits for a radioactive
release.
6.203. Systems shall be provided for the handling of solid or concentrated
radioactive waste and for its storage at the site for a reasonable period of time.
Supporting systems and auxiliary systems
Requirement 60: Performance of supporting systems and auxiliary systems
The design of supporting systems and auxiliary systems for a research
reactor shall be such as to ensure that the performance of these systems is
consistent with the safety significance of the system or component that they
serve at the research reactor.
6.204. The failure of any auxiliary system, irrespective of its importance to
safety, shall not be able to jeopardize the safety of the reactor. Adequate measures
shall be taken to prevent the release of radioactive material to the environment
in the event of the failure of an auxiliary system containing radioactive material.
Requirement 61: Fire protection systems
Fire protection systems for a research reactor facility, including fire detection
systems and fire extinguishing systems, fire containment barriers and smoke
control systems, shall be provided throughout the research reactor facility,
with due account taken of the results of the fire hazard analysis.

74

6.205. The fire protection systems installed at the research reactor shall be
capable of dealing safely with postulated fire events. The design of the fire
protection system shall consider the potential for accidental criticality in a critical
assembly or subcritical assembly. Fire hazards due to experiments shall be
considered.
6.206. Fire extinguishing systems shall be capable of automatic actuation
where appropriate. Fire extinguishing systems shall be designed and located to
ensure that their rupture or spurious or inadvertent operation would not impair
the capability of items important to safety.
6.207. Fire detection systems shall be designed to provide alarms and prompt
information on the location and spread of fires that start in the reactor facility at
any time.
6.208. Fire detection systems and fire extinguishing systems that are necessary
to protect against a possible fire following a postulated initiating event shall be
appropriately qualified to resist the effects of the postulated initiating event.
6.209. Non-combustible or fire retardant and heat resistant materials shall be
used wherever practicable throughout the facility, in particular in locations such
as the means of confinement and the control rooms.
Requirement 62: Lighting systems
Adequate lighting shall be provided in all operational areas of a research
reactor facility for operational states and in accident conditions.
Requirement 63: Lifting equipment
Equipment shall be provided for lifting and lowering items important to
safety at a research reactor facility, and for lifting and lowering other items
in the proximity of items important to safety.
6.210. The lifting equipment shall be designed so that:
(a) Measures are taken to prevent the lifting of excessive loads, including those
for experimental programmes;
(b) Conservative design measures are applied to prevent any unintentional
dropping of loads that could affect items important to safety or could cause
a radiological hazard (e.g. a spent fuel cask);
75

(c) The facility layout permits safe movement of the lifting equipment and of
items being transported, in accordance with analysed safe load pathways;
(d) Such equipment for use in areas where items important to safety are located
is seismically qualified;
(e) Such equipment can be inspected on a periodic basis.
Requirement 64: Air conditioning systems and ventilation systems
Systems for air conditioning, air heating, air cooling and ventilation for a
research reactor facility shall be provided as appropriate in areas at the
facility to maintain the required environmental conditions.
6.211. Systems shall be provided for the ventilation of buildings at the reactor
facility with appropriate capability for the conditioning and cleaning of air:
(a) To prevent unacceptable dispersion of airborne radioactive substances
within the facility;
(b) To reduce the concentration of airborne radioactive substances to levels
compatible with the need for access by personnel to the area;
(c) To keep the levels of airborne radioactive substances in the reactor facility
below authorized limits and as low as reasonably achievable;
(d) To ventilate rooms containing inert gases or noxious gases without
impairing the capability to control radioactive effluents;
(e) To maintain the required efficiency of the filtration system and to control
releases of gaseous radioactive material to the environment and maintain
them below the authorized limits on discharges and to keep them as low as
reasonably achievable.
Requirement 65: Compressed air systems
The design basis for any compressed air system that serves an item important
to safety at a research reactor facility shall specify the quality, flow rate and
cleanness of the air to be provided.
Requirement 66: Experimental devices
Experimental devices for a research reactor shall be designed so that they
will not adversely affect the safety of the reactor in any operational states
or accident conditions. In particular, experimental devices shall be designed
so that neither the operation nor the failure of an experimental device will
result in an unacceptable change in reactivity for the reactor, affect operation
76

of the reactor protection system, reduce the cooling capacity, compromise


confinement or lead to unacceptable radiological consequences.
6.212. A design basis shall be established for each experimental device
associated directly or indirectly with the reactor. Experimental devices shall be
classified on the basis of their importance to safety. The radioactive inventory
of the experimental device as well as the potential for the generation or release
of energy shall be taken into consideration. A safety analysis shall also be
performed, including an analysis of the damage that would be caused to the
experimental devices by the postulated initiating events of the reactor. The safety
analysis shall also cover the interaction between the experimental devices and the
reactor (see also para.6.124).
6.213. Where necessary for the safety of the reactor and the safety of the
experiment, the design shall provide appropriate monitoring of the parameters for
experiments in the reactor control room.
6.214. The design of experiments and experimental devices shall facilitate their
dismantling operations, interim storage and final disposition.

7. OPERATION OF RESEARCH REACTOR FACILITIES


ORGANIZATIONAL PROVISIONS
Requirement 67: Responsibilities of the operating organization
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall have the
prime responsibility for safety in the operation of the facility.
7.1. The prime responsibility for safety shall be assigned to the operating
organization for the research reactor facility. This prime responsibility shall
cover all the activities relating to the operation directly and indirectly, including

77

activities for experiments.37 It includes the responsibility for supervising the


activities of all other related groups, such as designers, suppliers, manufacturers
and constructors, employers, contractors and experimenters, as well as the
responsibility for operation of the reactor facility by the operating organization
itself. The operating organization shall discharge this responsibility in accordance
with its management system[4].
7.2. The operating organization shall establish an appropriate management
structure for the research reactor and shall provide for all necessary infrastructure
for the conduct of reactor operations. The organization for reactor operation
(the reactor management, see footnote21) shall include the reactor manager38 and
the operating personnel. The operating organization shall ensure that adequate
provision is made for all functions relating to the safe operation and utilization of
the research reactor facility, such as maintenance, periodic testing and inspection,
radiation protection, quality assurance and relevant support services.
7.3. The responsibility of the operating organization for the safety of the
research reactor shall not be delegated. The reactor manager shall have the direct
responsibility and the necessary authority for the safe operation of the research
reactor.
7.4. The operating organization shall establish, in accordance with the
management system, the functions and responsibilities for the key positions in the
organization for reactor operation. In particular, the operating organization shall
establish clear lines of authority and communication with the reactor manager,
the safety committee(s), the radiation protection group, maintenance groups, the
management system personnel and the experimenters.
7.5. The staff positions that require a licence or certificate shall be determined
in accordance with the legal framework of the State. These positions shall receive

37

Operation includes all activities performed to achieve the purpose for which the nuclear
research reactor was designed and constructed or modified. Besides operating the reactor,
this includes: maintenance, testing and inspection; fuel handling and handling of radioactive
material, including the production of radioisotopes; installation, testing and operation of
experimental devices; the use of neutron beams; the use of the research reactor systems for
the purposes of research and development and education and training; and other associated
activities.
38
The reactor manager is the member of the reactor management to whom the direct
responsibility and authority for the safe operation of the research reactor is assigned by the
operating organization and whose primary duties comprise the fulfilment of this responsibility.

78

adequate training as required by the regulatory body (see also paras7.137.22).


In particular, in accordance with regulatory requirements, the reactor manager39,
the shift supervisors and the reactor operators shall hold an authorization
(a licence or certificate) issued by the regulatory body, operating organization or
other competent authority.
7.6. In collaboration with the supplier or the designer, the operating organization
shall have overall responsibility for the preparation and satisfactory completion
of the commissioning programme (see para.7.51).
7.7. The operating organization shall prepare and issue specifications and
procedures in accordance with the classification of structures, systems and
components and the management system, in particular for the procurement,
manufacturing, loading, utilization, unloading, storage, movement and testing of
items important to safety, including fuel and core components and other fresh or
irradiated fissile material.
7.8. The operating organization shall prepare periodic summary reports on
matters relating to safety as required by the regulatory body and shall submit
these reports to the safety committee and to the regulatory body if so required.
7.9. It shall be the responsibility of the operating organization to ensure the
following:
(a) Safety policies are issued and clearly understood by everyone.
(b) The establishment of its advisory safety committee.
(c) The design enables the reactor to be operated safely, and the reactor is
constructed in accordance with the approved design.
(d) An adequate safety analysis report is prepared and kept up to date, in
accordance with Requirement1.
(e) The commissioning process demonstrates that the design requirements
have been met and that the reactor can be operated in accordance with the
design assumptions.
(f) A system for reporting and reviewing abnormal events is established and
operated.

39

The reactor manager does not necessarily need to hold a licence to operate the reactor,
but needs to have completed a training programme (see para.7.30).

79

(g) On-site emergency arrangements, including the emergency plan


and procedures, are established and maintained in accordance with
GSRPart7[6].
(h) The research reactor is operated and maintained in accordance with the
safety requirements by suitably qualified and experienced personnel
certified by the relevant authorities.
(i) Personnel with responsibilities relating to safe operation are adequately
trained, and a training and retraining programme is established,
implemented and kept up to date and periodically reviewed to verify its
effectiveness (see also paras7.287.31).
(j) Adequate resources, facilities and services are made available during
operation.
(k) Information on events with safety significance that are required to be
reported to the regulatory body, including any assessments of such events
and the corrective actions intended, is submitted to the regulatory body.
(l) Safety culture is fostered in the organization to ensure that the attitudes
of personnel and the actions and interactions of all individuals and
organizations are conducive to safe conduct of activities during operation
of the facility (see paras4.1 and 4.4).
(m) An integrated management system (see footnote 15) is established and
implemented, in accordance with a graded approach (see paras4.74.13).
(n) The reactor management is provided with sufficient authority and resources
to enable it to fulfil its duties effectively.
(o) The research reactor is operated and maintained in accordance with
the operational limits and conditions and operating procedures
(see paras7.327.34 and 7.577.62).
(p) The fissile material and radioactive material that are utilized or generated
are controlled.
(q) Operating experience, including information on operating experience at
similar research reactors, is carefully examined for any precursor signs of
tendencies adverse to safety so that corrective actions can be taken before
serious adverse conditions arise and recurrences can be prevented.
(r) An exclusion programme for foreign objects is implemented and monitored,
in accordance with regulatory requirements.
Requirement 68: Structure and functions of the operating organization
The structure of the operating organization for a research reactor facility
and the functions, roles and responsibilities of its personnel shall be
established and documented.

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7.10. Functional responsibilities, lines of authority, and lines of internal and


external communication for the safe operation of the research reactor in all
operational states and in accident conditions shall be clearly specified in writing.
7.11. The organizational structure and the arrangements for discharging
responsibilities shall be documented in the safety analysis report and made
available to the staff and, if required, to the regulatory body. The structure of the
operating organization shall be specified so that all roles that are critical for safe
operation are specified and described. Proposed organizational changes to the
structure and associated arrangements, which might be of importance to safety,
shall be analysed in advance by the operating organization and submitted to the
regulatory body for approval.
7.12. The operating organization shall be responsible for ensuring that the
necessary knowledge, skills, attitudes and safety expertise are sustained at the
research reactor, and that long term objectives for human resources are met and
knowledge preservation policies are developed.
Requirement 69: Operating personnel
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall assign direct
responsibility and authority for the safe operation of the reactor to the
reactor manager. The reactor manager shall have overall responsibility for
all aspects of operation, training, maintenance, periodic testing, inspection,
utilization and modification of the reactor. Discharge of this responsibility
shall be the primary duty of the reactor manager.
Reactor manager
7.13. The reactor manager shall clearly document the duties, the responsibilities,
the necessary experience and the training requirements of operating personnel,
and their lines of communication. The duties, responsibilities and lines of
communication of other personnel involved in the operation or use of the
reactor (e.g. technical support personnel and experimenters) shall also be clearly
documented.
7.14. The reactor manager shall specify the minimum staffing requirements for
the various disciplines required to ensure safe operation for all operational states
of the research reactor in accordance with the operational limits and conditions.
These requirements include both the number of personnel and the duties for
which they are required to be authorized. The person with qualification and
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responsibility for the direct supervision of the operation of the reactor shall be
clearly identified at all times. The availability of the staff that would be required
to deal with accident conditions shall also be specified (see also Requirement21
of GSRPart7[6]).
7.15. The reactor manager shall be responsible for ensuring that the staff
selected for reactor operation are given the training and retraining necessary
for the safe and efficient operation of the reactor and that this training and
retraining is appropriately evaluated. Adequate training in the procedures to be
followed in both operational states and accident conditions shall be conducted
(see paras7.577.62 of this publication and Requirement25 of GSRPart7[6]).
7.16. Notwithstanding the presence of independent radiation protection personnel
(see para.7.23), the operating personnel, including technical support personnel
and experimenters, shall be given suitable training in radiation protection before
the start of their duties. Periodic refresher training in operational radiation
protection shall be carried out.
7.17. The detailed programme for the operation and experimental use of the
research reactor shall be prepared in advance and shall be subject to the approval
of the reactor manager.
7.18. The reactor manager shall be responsible for, and shall make arrangements
for, all the activities associated with core management and fuel handling and the
handling of any other fissile material.
7.19. The reactor manager shall periodically review the operation of the research
reactor, including experiments, and shall take appropriate corrective actions in
respect of any problems identified. The reactor manager shall seek the advice
of the safety committee(s) or shall call upon advisors to review important safety
issues arising in the commissioning, operation, maintenance, periodic testing and
inspection, and modification of the reactor and experiments (see para.7.26).
Operating personnel
7.20. The operating personnel shall operate the facility in accordance with
the approved operational limits and conditions and operating procedures
(see paras 7.327.34 and 7.577.62). The number and the type of operating
personnel required will depend on design aspects of the reactor, such as the
power level, the duty cycle and the utilization.

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7.21. Every licensed or authorized member of the operating personnel shall have
the authority to shut down the reactor in the interest of safety.
7.22. A maintenance group shall be established by the operating organization to
implement the programmes for maintenance, periodic testing and inspection, as
set out in paras7.387.39.
Radiation protection personnel
7.23. A radiation protection group shall be established to prepare and implement
a radiation protection programme and to advise the reactor management and
the operating organization on matters relating to radiation protection. This is
described in Requirement 84, paras7.1077.114.
Additional support personnel
7.24. The operating organization shall make provision as needed for additional
technical personnel40 such as training officers, safety officers and reactor
chemists.
7.25. The operating organization shall arrange for the provision of assistance by
contractor personnel as required.
Reactor safety committee
7.26. The reactor safety committee (or advisory group) shall advise the reactor
manager on the safety aspects of the day to day operation and utilization of the
reactor. In particular, the safety committee shall review the adequacy and safety
of proposed experiments and modifications and shall provide the reactor manager
with recommendations for action.
7.27. Notwithstanding any advice of the operating organizations safety committee
(see Requirement6), the reactor manager (see para.7.3) shall have the authority
to refuse or delay the performance of an experiment or a modification that he or
she considers is not safe and shall have the authority to refer such a proposal to
higher authority for additional review.

40

Facilities of low potential hazard might not need to have these positions. However,
the functions need to be covered within such facilities.

83

Requirement 70: Training, retraining and qualification of personnel


The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall ensure that
safety related functions are performed by suitably qualified, competent and
fit-for-duty personnel.
7.28. The operating organization shall clearly define the requirements for
qualification and competence to ensure that personnel performing safety related
functions are capable of safely performing their duties. Certain operating
positions may require formal authorization or a licence.
7.29. Suitably qualified personnel shall be selected and shall be given the
necessary training and instruction to enable them to perform their duties correctly
for different operational states and in accident conditions, in accordance with the
appropriate procedures. Safety related functions shall be performed by suitably
qualified, competent and fit-for-duty personnel.
7.30. Suitable training and retraining programmes shall be established and
maintained for the operating personnel, including the reactor manager, the shift
supervisors, the reactor operators, the radiation protection staff, the maintenance
personnel and others working at the research reactor facility. The training
programme shall include provision for periodic confirmation of the competence
of personnel, which shall be documented, and for refresher training on a regular
basis. The refresher training shall also include retraining provision for personnel
who have had extended absences from their authorized duties. The training shall
emphasize the importance of safety in all aspects of reactor operation and shall
promote safety culture.
7.31. Procedures shall be put in place for the validation of the training to verify
its effectiveness and the qualification of the staff.
Requirement 71: Operational limits and conditions
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall ensure that
the research reactor is operated in accordance with the operational limits
and conditions.
7.32. The operational limits and conditions shall form an important part of the
basis for the authorization of the operating organization to operate the research
reactor facility. The facility shall be operated within the operational limits and
conditions to prevent situations arising that could lead to anticipated operational
84

occurrences or accident conditions, and to mitigate the consequences of such


events if they do occur. The operational limits and conditions shall be developed
to ensure that the reactor is being operated in accordance with the design
assumptions and intent, as well as in accordance with its licence conditions.
7.33. The operational limits and conditions shall reflect the provisions made in
the final design as described in the safety analysis report. The set of operational
limits and conditions important to reactor safety, including safety limits,
safety system settings, limiting conditions for safe operation, requirements for
surveillance, testing and maintenance, and administrative requirements, shall
be established and submitted to the regulatory body for review and assessment
and approval before the commencement of operation. All operational limits and
conditions shall be substantiated by a written statement or by analysis of the
reason for their adoption.
7.34. The operational limits and conditions shall be adequately defined, clearly
established and appropriately substantiated (e.g. by clearly stating for each
operational limit or condition its objective, its applicability and its specification;
i.e. its specified limit and its basis). The selection of, and the values for, the
operational limits and conditions shall be based on the safety analysis, on the
reactor design or on aspects relating to the conduct of operations, and shall be
demonstrably consistent with the updated safety analysis report, shall reflect
the present status of the reactor and shall correspond to the licence conditions
imposed by the regulatory body.
Safety limits
7.35. Safety limits shall be set to protect the integrity of the physical barriers that
protect against the uncontrolled release of radioactive material or exposure over
regulatory limits.
Safety system settings
7.36. Safety system settings shall be defined so that the safety limits are not
exceeded.
Limiting conditions for safe operation
7.37. Limiting conditions for safe operation shall be established to ensure that
there are acceptable margins between normal operating values and the safety
system settings. Limiting conditions for safe operation shall include limits on
85

operating parameters, requirements relating to the minimum availability of


operable equipment and minimum staffing levels, and prescribed actions to be
taken by operating personnel to preserve the settings of the safety system.
Requirements for maintenance, periodic testing and inspection
7.38. Requirements shall be established for the frequency and scope of
inspections, periodic testing and maintenance, operability checks and calibrations
of all items important to safety to ensure compliance with the safety analysis
report.
7.39. The requirements for maintenance, surveillance, periodic testing and
inspection shall include a specification that clearly defines the objectives and
the applicability, prescribes the frequency for the performance of activities and
establishes criteria for acceptable deviations. In order to provide operational
flexibility, the specification shall prescribe the frequency of activities in terms of
average intervals with a maximum interval that is not to be exceeded. Deferrals
that exceed the maximum interval shall be justified and made subject to approval,
and safety measures shall be put in place where necessary.
Administrative requirements
7.40. The operational limits and conditions shall include administrative
requirements or controls concerning organizational structure and the
responsibilities for key positions for the safe operation of the reactor, staffing,
the training and retraining of facility personnel, review and audit procedures,
modifications, experiments, records and reports, and required actions following a
violation of the operational limits and conditions.
Violations of operational limits and conditions
7.41. In the event that the operation of the reactor deviates from one or more
operational limits and conditions, corrective actions shall be taken.
7.42. Actions shall be prescribed to be taken by the operating staff within an
allowed time if a limiting condition for safe operation is violated. The reactor
management shall conduct an investigation of the cause and the consequences
and shall take appropriate actions to prevent a recurrence. The regulatory body
shall be notified in due time.

86

7.43. If a safety limit is exceeded, the reactor shall be shut down and maintained
in a safe state and inspections on challenged items important to safety shall be
performed. Under such circumstances, the regulatory body shall be promptly
notified, an investigation of the cause shall be carried out by the operating
organization and a report shall be submitted to the regulatory body for assessment
before the reactor is returned to operation.
Requirement 72: Performance of safety related activities
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall ensure that
safety related activities are adequately analysed and controlled to ensure
that the risks associated with harmful effects of ionizing radiation are kept
as low as reasonably achievable.
7.44. All routine and non-routine operational activities shall be assessed for
potential risks associated with harmful effects of ionizing radiation. The level of
assessment and control shall depend on the safety significance of the task.
7.45. All activities important to safety shall be carried out in accordance with
approved written procedures to ensure that the research reactor is operated within
the established operational limits and conditions. Acceptable margins shall be
ensured between normal operating values and the established safety system
settings to avoid undesirably frequent actuation of safety systems (see para.7.37).
7.46. No experiments shall be conducted without adequate review and
justification. If there is a need to conduct a non-routine operation or test that
is not covered by existing operating procedures, a specific safety review shall
be performed and a special procedure shall be developed and made subject to
approval in accordance with national or other relevant regulations.
COMMISSIONING
Requirement 73: Commissioning programme
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall ensure that
a commissioning programme for the research reactor is established and
implemented.

87

7.47. An adequate commissioning programme shall be prepared for the testing


of reactor components and systems after their construction or modification to
demonstrate that they are in accordance with the design objective and meet the
performance criteria. The commissioning programme shall cover the full range
of facility conditions required in the design. The commissioning programme
shall establish the organization and responsibilities for commissioning, the
commissioning stages, the suitable testing of structures, systems and components
on the basis of their importance to safety, the test schedule, the commissioning
procedures and reports, the methods of review and verification, the treatment of
deficiencies and deviations, and the requirements for documentation.
7.48. During construction and commissioning, a comparison shall be carried out
between the as built reactor facility and its design parameters. A comprehensive
process shall be established under the management system of the operating
organization to address non-conformances in design, manufacturing, construction
and operation. Resolutions to correct differences from the initial design and
non-conformances shall be documented and reviewed before starting the
commissioning.
7.49. The detailed commissioning programme shall be submitted to the safety
committee and the regulatory body and shall be subjected to an appropriate
review and assessment before being implemented.
7.50. Experimental devices and their potential impact on reactor operations
shall be given adequate consideration during the commissioning of the reactor.
Experimental devices shall be subject to an adequate commissioning programme
prior to being placed in service.
Organization and responsibilities for commissioning
7.51. The operating organization, designers and manufacturers shall be
involved in the preparation and execution of the commissioning programme.
The commissioning process shall involve cooperation between the operating
organization and the supplier to ensure an effective means of familiarizing the
operating organization with the characteristics of the particular reactor. Close
liaison shall be maintained between the regulatory body and the operating
organization throughout the commissioning process. In particular, the results and
analyses of tests directly affecting safety shall be made available to the safety
committee and the regulatory body for review and approval, as appropriate.

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Commissioning tests and stages


7.52. Commissioning tests shall be arranged in functional groups and in a logical
sequence. This sequence includes pre-operational tests, initial criticality tests,
low power tests, and power ascension and power tests. No test sequence shall
proceed unless the required previous steps have been successfully completed.
The commissioning programme shall therefore be divided into stages, which are
usually arranged in the following sequence:
(a) Stage A: Tests prior to fuel loading;
(b) Stage B: Fuel loading tests, initial criticality tests and low power tests41;
(c) Stage C: Power ascension tests and power tests.
Commissioning procedures and reports
7.53. Procedures shall be prepared, reviewed and made subject to approval for
each commissioning test prior to the commencement of the tests. Commissioning
activities shall be performed in accordance with approved written procedures.
If necessary, the procedures shall include hold points for the notification and
involvement of the safety committee, external agencies, manufacturers and the
regulatory body.
7.54. The commissioning programme shall include provisions and procedures for
audits, reviews and verifications intended to ensure that the programme has been
conducted as planned and that its objectives have been fully achieved. Provisions
shall also be included for resolving any deviation or deficiency that is discovered
during the commissioning tests.
7.55. Commissioning procedures covering the scope, sequence and expected
results of these tests shall be prepared in appropriate detail and in accordance
with the quality assurance requirements. The commissioning reports shall be kept
for the entire lifetime of the facility including the decommissioning stage. The
reports shall cover the following:
(a) The purpose of the tests and the expected results;
(b) The safety provisions required to be in force during the tests;
41

Initial criticality tests and low power tests and Stage C of the commissioning
programme might not apply to subcritical assemblies, providing adequate subcriticality has
been verified (e.g. through 1/M calculations, where M is the subcritical neutron multiplication
factor).

89

(c) Precautions and prerequisites;


(d) The test procedures;
(e) The test reports, including a summary of the data collected and their
analysis, an evaluation of the results, the identification of deficiencies, if
any, and any necessary corrective actions.
7.56. The results of all commissioning tests, whether conducted by a member of
the operating organization or a supplier, shall be made available to the operating
organization and shall be maintained for the lifetime of the facility.
Requirement 74: Operating procedures
Operating procedures for the research reactor shall be developed that apply
comprehensively (for the reactor and its associated facilities) for normal
operation, anticipated operational occurrences and accident conditions,
in accordance with the policy of the operating organization and the
requirements of the regulatory body.
7.57. Procedures shall be developed for normal operation to ensure that the
reactor is operated within the operational limits and conditions.
7.58. Operating procedures shall be developed for all safety related operations
that may be conducted over the entire lifetime of the facility, including for:
(a) Commissioning;
(b) Operation in normal operational states42;
(c) The maintenance of major components or systems that could affect reactor
safety;
(d) Periodic inspections, calibrations and tests of structures, systems and
components that are essential for the safe operation of the reactor;
(e) Radiation protection activities;
(f) The review and approval process for operation and maintenance and the
conduct of irradiation and experiments that could affect reactor safety or
the reactivity of the core;
(g) The reactor operators response to anticipated operational occurrences
and design basis accidents, and, to the extent feasible, to design extension
conditions;
42

Normal operation is operation within specified operational limits and conditions. For
a research reactor, this includes startup, low and nominal power operation, shutting down,
shutdown, maintenance, testing and refuelling.

90

(h) Emergencies43;
(i) Handling of radioactive waste and monitoring and control of radioactive
releases;
(j) Utilization;
(k) Modifications;
(l) The management system.
7.59. Operating procedures shall be developed by the reactor operating personnel,
in cooperation whenever possible with the designer and manufacturer and with
other staff of the operating organization, including radiation protection staff.
Operating procedures shall be consistent with and contribute to the observance of
the operational limits and conditions.
7.60. The operating procedures shall be reviewed and updated periodically on
the basis of lessons learned from operating experience, or in accordance with
predetermined internal procedures. They shall be made available as relevant for
the particular mode of operation of the reactor.
7.61. All personnel involved in the operation and use of the reactor shall be
adequately trained in the use of these procedures, as relevant.
7.62. When activities that are not covered by existing procedures are planned,
an appropriate procedure shall be prepared and reviewed and shall be subject to
appropriate approval before the activity is started. Additional training of relevant
staff in these procedures shall be provided.
Requirement 75: Main control room, supplementary control room and
control equipment
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall ensure that
the operation control rooms and control equipment are maintained in a
suitable condition.
7.63. The habitability and good condition of control rooms shall be maintained.
Where the design of the research reactor foresees additional or local control
rooms that are dedicated to the control of experiments that could affect the

43

Emergency procedures are developed as an element of separate emergency


arrangements (see paras7.897.93) and in accordance with GSRPart7[6].

91

reactor conditions, clear communication lines shall be developed for ensuring an


adequate transfer of information to the operators in the main control room.
7.64. The supplementary control room or a shutdown panel and all other safety
related local control rooms or operational panels outside the control room shall be
kept operable and free from obstructions, as well as from non-essential material
that would prevent their operation. The operating organization shall periodically
confirm that the supplementary control room or shutdown panel and all other
safety related operational panels are in the proper state of operational readiness,
including proper documentation, communications and alarm systems as well as
sufficient power supply.
7.65. A hierarchy of precedence shall be established between the supplementary
and the main control rooms to prevent conflicting inputs (e.g. by interlocks)
being given from different control rooms or panels.
Requirement 76: Material conditions and housekeeping
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall develop and
implement programmes to maintain a high standard of material conditions,
housekeeping and cleanliness in all working areas.
7.66. Administrative controls shall be established to ensure that operational
premises and equipment are maintained, well lit and accessible, and that
temporary storage is controlled and limited. Equipment that is degraded
(e.g. owing to leaks, corrosion, loose parts or damaged thermal insulation) shall
be identified, reported and corrected in a timely manner.
7.67. The operating organization shall be responsible for ensuring that the
identification and labelling of safety equipment and safety related equipment,
rooms, piping and instruments are accurate, legible and well maintained, and that
they do not introduce any degradation.
Requirement 77: Maintenance, periodic testing and inspection
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall ensure that
effective programmes for maintenance, periodic testing and inspection are
established and implemented.

92

7.68. Maintenance (both preventive maintenance and corrective maintenance),


periodic testing and inspection shall be conducted to ensure that structures,
systems and components are able to function in accordance with the design
intent, in compliance with the operational limits and conditions.
7.69. The maintenance, periodic testing and inspection programmes shall be
reviewed at regular intervals to incorporate lessons learned from experience.
All maintenance, periodic testing and inspection of systems or items important
to safety shall be performed by following approved written procedures. The
procedures shall specify the measures to be taken for any changes from the
normal reactor configuration and shall include provisions for the restoration of
the normal configuration on the completion of the activity. In accordance with
the requirements of the management system, a system of work permits shall
be used for maintenance, periodic testing and inspection, including appropriate
procedures and checklists before and after the conduct of the work. These
procedures shall include acceptance criteria. There shall be a clearly defined
structure of review and approval for the performance of the work.
7.70. Non-routine inspections or corrective maintenance of systems or items
important to safety shall be performed to a specially prepared plan and procedures.
In-service inspections conducted for safety purposes and on a programmatic basis
shall be performed in a similar manner.
7.71. The decision to carry out maintenance work on installed equipment, to
remove equipment from operation for maintenance purposes or to reinstall
equipment after maintenance:
(a) Shall be the responsibility of the reactor manager;
(b) Shall be in accordance with the objective of maintaining the level of safety
of the reactor as specified in the operational limits and conditions.
7.72. The frequency of maintenance, periodic testing and inspection of individual
structures, systems and components shall be adjusted on the basis of experience
and shall be such as to ensure adequate reliability, in accordance with the
requirements established in paras6.736.75.
7.73. Equipment and items used for maintenance, periodic testing and inspection
shall be identified and controlled to ensure their proper use.

93

7.74. Maintenance shall not be performed in such a way as to result, either


deliberately or unintentionally, in changes to the design of the system under
maintenance. If a maintenance activity requires a design change, procedures for
the implementation of a modification shall be followed.
7.75. Properly qualified personnel, who shall verify that the activities have
been accomplished as specified in the appropriate procedure and shall verify
compliance with the operational limits and conditions, shall assess the results of
maintenance, periodic testing and inspection.
7.76. The safety committee and the regulatory body shall be informed of any
non-conformance that is significant to safety. An assessment shall be made of the
impact of the non-conformance on the maintenance programme.
Requirement 78: Core management and fuel handling
Core management and fuel handling procedures for a research reactor
facility shall be established to ensure compliance with operational limits and
conditions and consistency with the utilization programme.
7.77. Core management and fuel handling comprise the movement, storage,
transfer, packaging and transport of fresh and irradiated fuel and other core
components. Applicable safety requirements shall be documented in the
operational limits and conditions and the relevant procedures shall be applied.
7.78. Core components and fuel loaded into the core shall comply with the
quality requirements established in the management system.
7.79. To ensure safe operational cores, in addition to the demonstration of
conformance with the safety analysis report and operational limits and conditions,
the operating organization:
(a) Shall determine, using validated methods and codes, the locations for
fuel and reflectors, the appropriate positions of experimental devices and
moderators in the core and the effectiveness of the safety devices (such as
neutron absorbing rods, valves for dumping the moderator and burnable
poisons), as well as the relevant thermohydraulic and neutronic parameters.
(b) Shall analyse the possible interactions (both chemical and physical)
between core components and with experimental devices.

94

(c) Shall keep and update information on the parameters for the fuel and core
configurations. This includes maintaining up to date data at all times in
support of accounting for and control of the nuclear material inventory in
the facility.
(d) Shall load the fuel in accordance with the procedures for fuel handling and
core management.
(e) Shall utilize (burnup) the reactor core while ensuring the integrity of the
fuel by maintaining the relevant parameters for the core configuration
in accordance with the design intent and the assumptions as specified in
the operational limits and conditions for the reactor, and by detecting,
identifying and unloading failed fuel.
(f) Shall unload the irradiated fuel when appropriate, and as applicable44, in
accordance with the burnup values prescribed in the operational limits and
conditions.
7.80. In addition to the above activities, other activities shall be undertaken in the
core management programme to ensure the safe use of the fuel in the core or to
facilitate the basic activities for core management, such as:
(a) The assessment of the safety implications of any core component or
material proposed for irradiation;
(b) The conduct of investigations into the causes of fuel failures and experiment
failures and means of avoiding such failures;
(c) The assessment of the effects of irradiation on core components and core
support structure materials.
7.81. Procedures shall be prepared for the handling of fuel assemblies and
core components to ensure their quality and safety and to avoid damage or
degradation. In addition, operational limits and conditions shall be established
and procedures shall be prepared for dealing with failures of fuel elements,
control rods, reflectors or moderators, experimental devices or any other core
components so as to minimize the amounts of radioactive material released.

44

Low power research reactors and subcritical assemblies usually have a lifetime core,
which could be specified in the operational limits and conditions in terms of factors other
than burnup (e.g. completion of the experimental programme). Nevertheless, the value of the
maximum burnup is one of the parameters that is considered in the determination of the core
lifetime.

95

7.82. The integrity of the reactor core and the fuel shall be continuously
monitored by a system for the detection of failures of the cladding integrity
(e.g. by monitoring fission product activity in the coolant). Failed fuel shall be
stored in a manner that prevents the release of radioactive material while still
maintaining the requisite degree of residual heat removal and shielding and
subcriticality conditions.
7.83. The packaging and transport of fresh and irradiated fuel assemblies shall
be carried out in accordance with national and international requirements and,
as appropriate, in accordance with IAEA Safety Standards Series No.SSR-6,
Regulations for the Safe Transport of Radioactive Material (2012 Edition)[14].
7.84. A comprehensive records system shall be maintained in compliance with
the management system to cover core management and the handling and storage
of fuel, and core components.
Requirement 79: Fire safety
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall make
arrangements for ensuring fire safety.
7.85. The arrangements for ensuring fire safety made by the operating
organization shall cover the following: adequate management for fire safety;
preventing fires from starting; detecting and extinguishing quickly any fires that
do start; preventing the spread of those fires that have not been extinguished; and
providing protection from fire for structures, systems and components that are
necessary to shut down the reactor safely. Such arrangements shall include, but
are not limited to:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)

The application of the principle of defence in depth;


The control of combustible materials and ignition sources;
The maintenance, testing and inspection of fire protection measures;
The establishment of a manual firefighting capability at the reactor facility;
The assignment of responsibilities and training and exercising of personnel;
The assessment of the impact of modifications on fire safety measures.

7.86. In the arrangements for firefighting, special attention shall be given to cases
for which there is a risk of release of radioactive material in a fire. Appropriate
measures shall be established for the radiation protection of firefighting personnel
and the management of releases of radioactive material to the environment.

96

7.87. A comprehensive fire hazard analysis shall be developed for the research
reactor and associated facilities and shall be periodically reviewed and, if
necessary, updated.
Requirement 80: Non-radiation-related safety
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish
and implement a programme to ensure that safety related risks associated
with non-radiation-related hazards to personnel involved in activities at the
reactor facility are kept as low as reasonably achievable.
7.88. The non-radiation-related safety45 programme shall include arrangements
for the planning, implementation, monitoring and review of the relevant
preventive and protective measures, and it shall be integrated with the nuclear
and radiation safety programme. All personnel, suppliers, contractors and visitors
shall be appropriately trained to provide them with the necessary knowledge and
awareness of the non-radiation-related safety programme and its interface with
the nuclear and radiation safety programme, and shall comply with its safety
rules and practices. The operating organization shall provide support, guidance
and assistance for the personnel in the area of non-radiation-related hazards.
Requirement 81: Emergency preparedness
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall prepare
emergency arrangements for preparedness for, and response to, a nuclear or
radiological emergency.
7.89. The emergency arrangements shall be commensurate with the hazards
assessed and the potential consequences of an emergency should it occur.
Emergency arrangements shall cover the capability of maintaining protection and
safety in the event of an emergency; mitigating the consequences of accidents
if they do occur; protection of site personnel and the public; protection of the
environment; and communicating with the public in a timely manner. Emergency
arrangements shall include arrangements for the prompt declaration and
notification of an emergency; timely initiation of coordinated and preplanned
response; assessment of the progress of the emergency, its consequences and
any actions that need to be taken on the site; and the necessary provision of

45

Non-radiation-related safety concerns hazards other than radiation related hazards;


this is sometimes referred to as industrial safety or conventional safety.

97

information to the off-site authorities. Appropriate emergency arrangements shall


be established from the time that nuclear fuel is first brought to the site, and all
emergency arrangements shall be completed before the commencement of fuel
loading.
7.90. The operating organization shall develop emergency arrangements that
include emergency plans and procedures for on-site preparedness and response
to an emergency in relation to the research reactor under its responsibility and
shall demonstrate to, and provide, the regulatory body with an assurance that the
emergency arrangements provide for an effective response on the site. The on-site
emergency arrangements shall be coordinated with those of off-site response
organizations with responsibilities in emergency preparedness and response, as
relevant (see GSRPart7[6]). Emergency plans and procedures shall be based on
the accidents analysed in the safety analysis report as well as those additionally
postulated for the purposes of emergency preparedness and response on the basis
of the hazard assessment. Emergency plans and procedures shall be subject to
approval by the regulatory body, as appropriate.
7.91. All personnel involved in responding to an emergency in relation to
the research reactor shall be qualified, trained and retrained periodically in
accordance with their assigned duties and shall be fit for their intended duty
(see GSRPart7[6]). The emergency response shall include persons with up to
date knowledge of the operations of the research reactor, for example the reactor
manager or a qualified delegate. All persons on the site shall receive instructions
on the steps to take in an emergency. Instructions shall be prominently displayed.
7.92. Exercises to test emergency arrangements shall be conducted at suitable
intervals and shall involve, to the extent practicable, all persons with duties in
responding to the emergency. The results of the exercises shall be reviewed
and, as necessary, the lessons learned shall be incorporated into revisions of
the emergency arrangements. The emergency plans and procedures shall be
periodically reviewed and shall be revised as necessary to ensure that feedback
from experience and other changes (e.g. the contact details of emergency
personnel) are incorporated.
7.93. Facilities, instruments, tools, equipment, documentation and communication
systems to be used in an emergency, including those necessary for communication
with off-site authorities, shall be kept available for use in a range of postulated
emergencies. They shall be maintained in good operational condition such that
it is unlikely that they would be affected by or made unavailable as a result of
the accident or an initiating event. The operating organization shall ensure that
98

the relevant information on the research reactor safety parameters and facility
conditions is available in the emergency centre and that communication is
effective between the control rooms and the emergency centre in the event of an
accident. These capabilities shall be tested periodically.
Requirement 82: Records and reports
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish and
maintain a system for the control of records and reports.
7.94. For the safe operation of the reactor, the operating organization shall retain
all essential information concerning the design, construction, commissioning,
current configuration and operation of the reactor. This information shall be
maintained up to date throughout the operational stage of the reactor and shall be
kept available during decommissioning.
7.95. Administrative procedures consistent with the management system shall be
developed for the generation, collection, retention and archiving of records and
reports. Information entries in logbooks, checklists and other appropriate records
shall be properly dated and signed.
7.96. Records of non-compliance and the measures taken to return the research
reactor to compliance shall be prepared and retained and shall be made available
to the regulatory body. The operating organization shall specify the records to be
retained and their retention periods, in accordance with regulatory requirements.
7.97. The arrangements made for storing and maintaining records and reports
shall be in accordance with the management system. The document management
system shall be designed to ensure that obsolete documents are archived and that
personnel use only the most recent approved version of each document.
Requirement 83: Utilization and modification of a research reactor
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish
and implement a programme to manage utilization and modifications of the
reactor.
7.98. The operating organization shall have the overall responsibility for all safety
aspects of the preparation and performance of a modification or experiment.
It may assign or subcontract the execution of certain tasks to other organizations,
but it shall not delegate its responsibilities.
99

7.99. The operating organization shall be responsible for ensuring the following:
(a) Safety analyses of the proposed utilization or modification are conducted
to ascertain whether all applicable safety requirements and provisions have
been satisfied.
(b) The relevant safety documentation for the experiment or modification
is prepared and presented (submitted) to the appropriate authority for
approval.
(c) The disposition path of any materials irradiated in the experiment is defined
and made subject to approval.
(d) All personnel who will be involved in making a proposed modification or
in conducting the proposed utilization are suitably trained, qualified and
experienced.
(e) All documents affected by the experiment or modification that relate to the
safety characteristics of the reactor, such as the safety analysis reports, the
operational limits and conditions, and the relevant procedures for operation,
maintenance and emergencies, are updated as necessary, prior to the new
utilization or to the commissioning of the modification.
(f) Safety precautions and controls are applied with regard to all personnel
involved in the performance of the experiment or modification.
7.100. Proposals for the utilization and modification of the research reactor
shall be categorized and relevant criteria for this categorization shall be
established. Proposals for utilization and modification shall be categorized either
in accordance with the safety significance of the proposal or on the basis of a
statement of whether or not the proposed change will put the operation of the
reactor outside the operational limits and conditions. Limiting conditions for safe
operation (see para.7.37) shall be prepared for the device and incorporated into
the operational limits and conditions of the research reactor.
7.101. Utilization and modification projects (including temporary modifications,
see para. 7.104) having major safety significance (see paras 3.133.20 of
SSG-24 [15]) shall be subject to safety analyses and to procedures for design,
construction and commissioning that are equivalent to those described in
paras6.119 and 6.121 for the reactor itself.
7.102. In implementing utilization and modification projects for a research
reactor, the radiation exposure of the workers and other personnel at the facility
shall be kept below authorized limits and as low as reasonably achievable.

100

7.103. The reactor manager shall establish a procedure, in accordance with


accepted engineering practice, for the review and approval of proposals for
experiments and modifications and for the control of their performance.
7.104. Temporary modifications shall be limited in time and number to minimize
their cumulative safety significance. Temporary modifications shall be clearly
identified at their location and at any relevant control position. The operating
organization shall establish a formal system for informing relevant personnel in
good time of temporary modifications and of their consequences for the operation
and safety of the facility.
7.105. The use and handling of experimental devices shall be controlled by
means of written procedures. The possible effects on the reactor, particularly
changes in reactivity or radiation levels, shall be taken into account in these
procedures.
7.106. Any modifications made to experimental devices shall be subject to the
same procedures for design, operation and approval as were followed for the
original experimental device.
Requirement 84: Radiation protection programme
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish and
implement a radiation protection programme.
7.107. The radiation protection programme shall ensure that for all operational
states and accident conditions, doses due to exposure to ionizing radiation at
the research reactor facility or doses due to any planned releases of radioactive
material from the facility are kept below authorized limits and are as low as
reasonably achievable.
7.108. The radiation protection programme of the operating organization shall
have sufficient independence and resources to be able to advise on and enforce
radiation protection regulations, standards and procedures, and safe working
practices.
7.109. The radiation protection programme shall be established by the operating
organization in accordance with regulatory requirements. It shall comply with
the requirements of GSRPart3[7] and shall be subject to the approval of the
regulatory body. This programme shall include a policy statement from the
operating organization that includes the fundamental safety objective of protecting
101

people and the environment (see para. 2.1 of SF-1 [1] and Requirement 1 of
GSRPart3[7]) and a statement of the operating organizations commitment to
the principle of optimization of protection (Requirement11 of GSRPart3[7]).
7.110. The radiation protection programme is subject to the requirements for
occupational radiation protection (see GSR Part 3 [7] and RS-G-1.1 [16]) and
shall include in particular measures for the following:
(a) Ensuring that there is cooperation between the radiation protection staff
and other operating staff and experimental staff in establishing operating
procedures and maintenance procedures when radiation hazards are
anticipated, and ensuring that direct assistance is provided when required;
(b) Providing workplace monitoring and environmental monitoring;
(c) Providing for the decontamination of personnel, equipment and structures;
(d) Verifying compliance with applicable regulations for the transport of
radioactive material;
(e) Detecting and recording any releases of radioactive material;
(f) Recording the inventory of radiation sources;
(g) Providing adequate training in practices for radiation protection;
(h) Providing for the review and update of the programme in the light of
experience;
(i) Providing the review and analysis of materials, equipment and conditions
for experiments.
7.111. The operating organization shall verify, by means of surveillance,
inspections and audits, that the radiation protection programme is being correctly
implemented and that its objectives are being met. The radiation protection
programme shall be reviewed on a regular basis and shall be updated if necessary.
7.112. To assist the reactor management in ensuring that radiation doses are kept
as low as reasonably achievable, the operating organization shall establish dose
constraints (see paras1.221.28 and Requirement11 of GSRPart3[7]).
7.113. If the applicable dose limits for occupational or public exposure or the
authorized limits for radioactive releases are exceeded, the reactor manager, the
safety committee, the regulatory body and other competent authorities shall be
informed in accordance with the requirements.
7.114. All personnel who may be occupationally exposed to radiation at
significant levels shall have their doses measured, assessed and recorded, as
required by the regulatory body or other competent authorities, and these records
102

shall be made available to the supervisor of the health surveillance programme,


the reactor manager, the regulatory body and other competent authorities as
designated in the national regulations[16].
Requirement 85: Management of radioactive waste
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish and
implement a programme for the management of radioactive waste.
7.115. The operating organization shall establish and implement a programme
for the management of radioactive waste. The programme for the management
of radioactive waste shall include the characterization, classification, processing
(i.e. pretreatment, treatment and conditioning), transport, storage and disposal of
radioactive waste.46 Processing and storage of radioactive waste shall be strictly
controlled in a manner consistent with the requirements for the predisposal
management of radioactive waste [17]. Records shall be maintained for waste
generation and waste classification.
7.116. The reactor and its experimental devices shall be operated to minimize the
generation of radioactive waste of all kinds, to ensure that releases of radioactive
material to the environment are kept below permissible regulatory limits and as
low as reasonably achievable and to facilitate the handling and disposal of waste.
7.117. Releases of liquid and/or gaseous radioactive effluents to the environment
shall be monitored and the results shall be recorded in order to verify
compliance with the authorized limits. They shall also be reported periodically
to the regulatory body or another competent authority in accordance with its
requirements.
7.118. Written procedures shall be followed for the handling, processing,
transport and storage of radioactive waste. These activities shall be carried out
in accordance with the requirements of the regulatory body or other competent
authority.
7.119. An appropriate record shall be kept of the quantities, types and
characteristics of the radioactive waste processed and stored on the reactor site or
removed from the reactor site for the purpose of processing, storage or disposal.

46

Part of this process for the characterization, classification, processing, transport,


storage and disposal of radioactive waste could be carried out by another organization.

103

Requirement 86: Ageing management


The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall ensure that
an effective ageing management programme is implemented to manage the
ageing of items important to safety so that the required safety functions of
structures, systems and components are fulfilled over the entire operating
lifetime of the research reactor.
7.120. The ageing management programme shall determine the consequences
of ageing and the activities necessary to maintain the operability and reliability
of structures, systems and components. The ageing management programme
shall be coordinated with, and be consistent with, other relevant programmes,
including the programmes for in-service inspections, periodic safety review47
and maintenance. A systematic approach shall be taken to provide for the
development, implementation and continuous improvement of ageing
management programmes.
Periodic safety review
7.121. On the basis of the results of the periodic safety review, the operating
organization shall take any necessary corrective actions and shall consider
making justified modifications to enhance safety (see also para. 7.120 on the
interaction between ageing management and periodic safety reviews).
7.122. The operating organization shall report to the regulatory body as required,
in a timely manner, the confirmed findings of the periodic safety review that have
implications for safety.
Requirement 87: Extended shutdown
If an extended shutdown is planned or occurs, the operating organization
for a research reactor facility shall establish and implement arrangements to
ensure the safe management, planning, effective performance and control of
work activities during the extended shutdown.

47

Periodic safety review is a systematic reassessment of the safety of an existing facility


(or activity) carried out at regular intervals to deal with the cumulative effects of ageing,
modifications, operating experience, technical developments and siting aspects, and aimed at
ensuring a high level of safety throughout the service life of the facility (or activity)[8].

104

7.123. A research reactor facility may have a period of extended shutdown48


pending a decision on its future. The operating organization shall take appropriate
measures during an extended shutdown to ensure that materials and components
do not seriously degrade. The following measures shall be considered:
(a) Unloading the fuel elements from the reactor core to appropriate and safe
storage conditions;
(b) Changing the operational limits and conditions in accordance with the
requirements for the shutdown reactor;
(c) Removing components for protective storage;
(d) Taking measures to prevent accelerated corrosion and ageing;
(e) Retaining adequate staff in the facility for the purposes of performing the
necessary maintenance, periodic testing and inspection.
7.124. The operating organization shall be responsible for establishing
programmes and issuing procedures for managing extended shutdown and for
the provision of adequate resources for ensuring the safety of activities during
extended shutdown. Priority shall be given to safety related considerations in the
processes for planning and performing activities in the extended shutdown state.
Special attention shall be given to maintaining the reactor configuration up to
date in accordance with the operational limits and conditions.
7.125. The operating organization shall take the necessary decisions as soon
as possible to reduce the period of extended shutdown to a minimum. During a
period of extended shutdown, the operating organization shall consider the need
to meet licence conditions, and requirements for emergency planning and for
the qualification of the operating staff. Security shall be provided for as long as
nuclear fuel or other radioactive material is present at the facility.
Requirement 88: Feedback of operating experience
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall establish a
programme to learn from events at the reactor facility and events in other
research reactors and from the nuclear industry.

48

A research reactor in extended shutdown is one that is no longer operating, with no


decision on its decommissioning, and where there is no clear decision about the future of the
reactor as to whether it will be brought back into operation or decommissioned. Long shutdown
periods for maintenance or for implementation of refurbishment and modification projects are
not considered an extended shutdown state.

105

7.126. The operating organization shall report, collect, screen, analyse, trend,
document and communicate operating experience at the reactor facility in a
systematic way. It shall obtain and evaluate available information on relevant
operating experience at other nuclear installations to draw and incorporate
lessons for its own operations, including its emergency arrangements. It shall also
encourage the exchange of experience within national and international systems
for the feedback of operating experience. These activities shall be performed in
accordance with the management system.
7.127. Events with significant implications for safety shall be investigated
to identify their direct and root causes, including causes relating to equipment
design, operation and maintenance, or to human and organizational factors. The
results of such analyses shall be included, as appropriate, in relevant training
programmes and shall be used in reviewing procedures and instructions.
7.128. Information on operating experience shall be examined by competent
persons for any precursors to, or trends in, adverse conditions for safety so that
any necessary corrective actions can be taken before serious conditions arise.
7.129. The operating organization shall maintain liaison, as appropriate, with
support organizations (manufacturers, research organizations and designers)
involved in the design, in order to feed back information on operating experience
and to obtain advice, if necessary, in the event of equipment failure or in other
events.

8. PREPARATION FOR DECOMMISSIONING OF


A RESEARCH REACTOR
Requirement 89: Decommissioning plan
The operating organization for a research reactor facility shall prepare a
decommissioning plan and shall maintain it throughout the lifetime of the
research reactor, unless otherwise approved by the regulatory body, to
demonstrate that decommissioning can be accomplished safely and in such a
way as to meet the specified end state.

106

8.1. The decommissioning plan shall be prepared at the design stage and shall
be updated in accordance with changes in regulatory requirements, modifications
to the structures, systems and components, advances in technology, changes in
the need for decommissioning activities and changes in national policies for
decommissioning and/or the management of radioactive waste[11].
8.2. The decommissioning plan shall be submitted for review by the safety
committee and for approval by the regulatory body before decommissioning
activities are commenced.
8.3. Documentation of the reactor shall be kept up to date and information on
experience with the handling of contaminated or activated structures, systems
and components in the maintenance or modification of the reactor shall be
recorded to facilitate the planning of decommissioning. For some operating
research reactors, where the need for their ultimate decommissioning was not
taken into account in their design, a decommissioning plan shall be prepared to
ensure safety throughout the decommissioning process.
8.4. The decommissioning plan shall include an evaluation of one or more
approaches to decommissioning that are appropriate for the reactor concerned and
are in compliance with the requirements of the regulatory body. The following
are accepted approaches to decommissioning:
(a) Protective storage of the reactor in an intact condition after the removal of
all fuel assemblies and of all readily removable activated and contaminated
components and radioactive waste;
(b) Removal of all radioactive material and all removable activated
and contaminated components from the reactor and the thorough
decontamination of the remaining structures to permit the unrestricted use
of the facility.
8.5. In developing the decommissioning plan, aspects of the reactors design,
including those aspects that are particularly challenging to decommissioning,
shall be reviewed. In addition, all aspects of the facilitys operation that are
important in relation to decommissioning shall be reviewed. These include
any unintentional contamination whose cleanup has been deferred until the
reactors decommissioning, and any modifications that might not have been
fully documented. The decommissioning plan shall include all the steps that lead
to the ultimate completion of decommissioning to the point that safety can be
ensured with minimum or no surveillance. These stages may include storage and
surveillance, restricted site use and unrestricted site use.
107

8.6. Procedures for the handling, dismantling and disposal of experimental


devices and other irradiated equipment that require storage and eventual disposal
shall be established in advance, or as early as possible if the equipment concerned
has already been constructed and such procedures are not in place.
8.7. The operating organization shall be responsible for the preservation
of knowledge of the reactor facility and for the retention of key personnel to
facilitate decommissioning.
8.8. The implications for safety of the activities in the transition period,
if any, between permanent shutdown of operation and approval of the final
decommissioning plan shall be assessed and shall be managed so as to avoid
undue hazards and to ensure safety.

9. INTERFACES BETWEEN SAFETY AND


SECURITY FOR A RESEARCH REACTOR
Requirement 90: Interfaces between nuclear safety and nuclear security
The interfaces between safety and security for a research reactor facility
shall be addressed in an integrated manner throughout the lifetime of the
reactor. Safety measures and security measures shall be established and
implemented in such a manner that they do not compromise one another.
9.1. The nuclear security fundamentals are provided in Ref. [18] and
recommendations on nuclear security are provided in Ref.[13]. In discharging its
prime responsibility for safety, the operating organization shall design, implement
and maintain technical and administrative measures to achieve the regulatory
requirements relating to the interfaces between safety and security, to maintain
coordination with State organizations that are involved in safety and security, and
to ensure availability of adequate trained personnel with knowledge and skills
relating to the interfaces between safety and security, as part of the management
system (see also Section4).
9.2. The general safety requirements on the interfaces between safety and
security in the areas of regulatory supervision and the management system are
established respectively in GSRPart1(Rev.1)[3] and GSRPart2[4]. These

108

requirements apply to research reactors with the appropriate use of a graded


approach.
9.3. Adequate measures shall be established by the operating organization at all
stages in the lifetime of the research reactor to ensure effective communication
and coordination among individuals with different objectives and backgrounds
to ensure that safety measures and security measures do not compromise one
another.
9.4. The selection of a research reactor site shall be based on both safety and
security related criteria. Recommendations on the interfaces between safety and
security in site selection and site evaluation for nuclear installations, including
research reactors, are provided in Ref.[13].
9.5. Interfaces of nuclear safety with nuclear security and safeguards in
the design of a research reactor are addressed by Requirement 11 (see also
Requirement39 on the prevention of unauthorized access).
9.6. A change control process shall be established to ensure that any proposed
changes of design, including new experimental facilities, of the layout of the
research reactor facility or of procedures are evaluated to verify that they do not
jeopardize safety or security.
9.7. During the construction stage and during major modifications of a research
reactor, access to the site by a large number and diversity of workers and other
personnel is typical. In this regard, measures shall be implemented to prevent
the inadvertent or intentional introduction of weaknesses, devices or any threat
that could lead to a security breach or radioactive releases during operation and
utilization of the reactor.
9.8. Adequate measures shall be implemented during the operation stage
to ensure effective management of the interfaces between safety and security.
Particular emphasis shall be placed on the activities relating to fuel handling
and storage and the management of radioactive waste and spent fuel, emergency
preparedness and response (see GSRPart7[6]), access control procedures, and
operating procedures for reactor utilization, maintenance, periodic testing and
inspection. These procedures shall be developed with the aim of ensuring an
appropriate balance between safety and security. Specific arrangements shall be
established to ensure the safety and security of fuel in case of long shutdown
periods and for research reactors in extended shutdown.

109

Appendix I
SELECTED POSTULATED INITIATING EVENTS FOR
RESEARCH REACTORS
I.1. The following are examples of selected postulated initiating events for
research reactors.49 Certain research reactors may have additional postulated
initiating events depending on specific characteristics of the design:
(a) Loss of electrical power supplies:
Loss of normal electrical power.50
(b) Insertion of excess reactivity:
Criticality during fuel handling and loading (due to an error in fuel
insertion);
Startup accident;
Control rod failure or control rod follower failure;
Control drive failure or control drive system failure;
Failure of other reactivity control devices (such as a moderator or
reflector);
Unbalanced rod positions;
Failure or collapse of structural components;
Insertion of cold or hot water;
Changes in the moderator (e.g. voids, leakage of D2O into H2O systems
or leakage of H2O into D2O systems);
Effects of experiments and experimental devices (e.g. flooding or
voiding, temperature effects, insertion of fissile material or removal of
absorber material);
Insufficient shutdown reactivity;
Inadvertent ejection of control rods;
Maintenance errors with reactivity devices;
Spurious control system signals;
Removal of poisons from the coolant or moderator.

49

Some of the postulated initiating events listed are not relevant for subcritical
assemblies.
50
Although a loss of normal electrical power is not considered an initiating event,
consideration has to be given to the loss of normal electrical power followed by the loss of
emergency power to ensure that the consequences would be acceptable under emergency
conditions (e.g. a drop in voltage may cause devices to fail at different times).

111

(c) Loss of flow:


Primary pump failure;
Reduction in flow of primary coolant (e.g. due to valve failure or a
blockage in piping or a heat exchanger);
Effect of the failure or mishandling of an experiment;
Rupture of the primary coolant boundary leading to a loss of flow;
Fuel channel blockage or flow reduction (e.g. due to foreign material);
Improper power distribution due to, for example, unbalanced rod
positions in core experiments or in fuel loading (powerflow mismatch);
Reduction in coolant flow due to bypassing of the core;
Deviation of system pressure from the specified limits;
Loss of heat sink (e.g. due to the failure of a valve or pump or a system
rupture).
(d) Loss of coolant:
Rupture of the primary coolant boundary;
Damaged pool;
Pump-down of the pool;
Failure of beam tubes or other penetrations.
(e) Erroneous handling or failure of equipment or components:
Failure of the cladding of a fuel element;
Mechanical damage to core or fuel (e.g. mishandling of fuel or dropping
of a transfer flask onto fuel);
Failure of the emergency core cooling system;
Malfunction of the reactor power control;
Criticality in fuel in storage;
Failure of the means of confinement, including the ventilation system;
Loss of coolant to fuel in transfer or storage;
Loss or reduction of proper shielding;
Failure of experimental apparatus or material (e.g. loop rupture);
Exceeding of fuel ratings.
(f) Special internal events:
Internal fires or explosions, including internally generated missiles;
Internal flooding;
Loss of support systems;
Security related incidents;
Malfunctions in reactor experiments;
Improper access by persons to restricted areas;
Fluid jets or pipe whip;
Exothermic chemical reactions;
Drop of heavy loads.

112

(g) External events:


Earthquakes (including seismically induced faulting and landslides);
Flooding (including failure of an upstream or downstream dam and
blockage of a river and damage due to a tsunami or high waves);
Tornadoes and tornado missiles;
Sandstorms;
Hurricanes, storms and lightning;
Tropical cyclones;
Explosions;
Aircraft crashes;
Fires;
Toxic spills;
Accidents on transport routes (including collisions into the research
reactor building);
Effects from adjacent facilities (e.g. nuclear facilities, chemical facilities
and waste management facilities);
Biological hazards such as microbial corrosion, structural damage or
damage to equipment by rodents or insects;
Extreme meteorological phenomena;
Electromagnetic interference (e.g. from solar events);
Lightning strikes;
Power or voltage surges on the external supply line.
(h) Human errors.

113

Appendix II
OPERATIONAL ASPECTS OF RESEARCH REACTORS
WARRANTING PARTICULAR CONSIDERATION
II.1. This appendix highlights operational aspects of research reactors that
warrant particular consideration.
REACTIVITY AND CRITICALITY MANAGEMENT
II.2. The core configuration of a research reactor is frequently changed and
these changes involve the manipulation of components, such as fuel assemblies,
control rods and experimental devices, many of which represent considerable
reactivity value. Care shall be taken to ensure that the relevant subcriticality
limits and reactivity limits for fuel storage and core loading are not exceeded at
any time.
CORE THERMAL SAFETY
II.3. The frequent changes in core loading affect the nuclear and thermal
characteristics of the core. Measures shall be established to ensure, for each
change, that these characteristics are correctly determined and that they are
checked against the relevant conditions for nuclear and thermal safety before the
reactor is put into operation.
SAFETY OF EXPERIMENTAL DEVICES
II.4. Experimental devices used in research reactors may, by virtue of their
technical, nuclear or operational characteristics, significantly affect the safety
of the reactor. Measures shall be taken to ensure that the technical, nuclear and
operational characteristics of experimental devices are adequately assessed for
their safety implications and that this assessment is suitably documented.

114

MODIFICATION OF RESEARCH REACTORS


II.5. Research reactors and their associated experimental devices are often
modified in order to adapt their operational and experimental capabilities to
changing requirements for their utilization. Special attention shall be given to the
need to verify that every modification has been properly assessed, documented
and reported in terms of its potential effects on safety, and that the research reactor
is not restarted without formal approval after the completion of modifications
with major implications for safety.
MANIPULATIONS OF COMPONENTS AND MATERIAL
II.6. In pool type research reactors in particular, components, experimental
devices and material are frequently manipulated in the vicinity of the reactor
core. Care shall be taken to ensure that the operating personnel carrying out
these manipulations adhere strictly to the procedures and restrictions established
to prevent any nuclear or mechanical interference with the reactor, to minimize
the probability of a blockage in the fuel cooling system by uncontrolled foreign
objects, and to prevent radioactive releases and undue radiation exposures.
SAFETY MEASURES FOR VISITORS
II.7. Guest scientists, trainees, students and other persons who visit the research
reactor may have access to controlled areas and may be actively involved in the
operation or utilization of the reactor. Measures such as procedures, restrictions
and controls shall be established to ensure that visitors have safe working
conditions, that their activities will not affect the safety of the reactor and that
safety instructions are strictly observed.

115

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[1] EUROPEAN ATOMIC ENERGY COMMUNITY, FOOD AND AGRICULTURE
ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS, INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC
ENERGY
AGENCY,
INTERNATIONAL
LABOUR
ORGANIZATION,
INTERNATIONAL MARITIME ORGANIZATION, OECD NUCLEAR ENERGY
AGENCY, PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION, UNITED NATIONS
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION,
Fundamental Safety Principles, IAEA Safety Standards Series No. SF-1, IAEA,
Vienna(2006).
[2] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Use of a Graded Approach in the
Application of the Safety Requirements for Research Reactors, IAEA Safety Standards
Series No.SSG-22, IAEA, Vienna(2012).
[3] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Governmental, Legal and
Regulatory Framework for Safety, IAEA Safety Standards Series No. GSR Part 1
(Rev.1), IAEA, Vienna(2016).
[4] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Leadership and Management for
Safety, IAEA Safety Standards Series No.GSR Part2, IAEA, Vienna(2016).
[5] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Site Evaluation for Nuclear
Installations, IAEA Safety Standards Series No.NS-R-3 (Rev.1), IAEA, Vienna(2016).
[6] FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS,
INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, INTERNATIONAL CIVIL
AVIATION ORGANIZATION, INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION,
INTERNATIONAL
MARITIME
ORGANIZATION,
INTERPOL,
OECD
NUCLEAR ENERGY AGENCY, PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION,
PREPARATORY COMMISSION FOR THE COMPREHENSIVE NUCLEARTEST-BAN TREATY ORGANIZATION, UNITED NATIONS ENVIRONMENT
PROGRAMME, UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR THE COORDINATION OF
HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION, WORLD
METEOROLOGICAL ORGANIZATION, Preparedness and Response for a Nuclear
or Radiological Emergency, IAEA Safety Standards Series No. GSR Part7, IAEA,
Vienna(2015).
[7] EUROPEAN COMMISSION, FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION
OF THE UNITED NATIONS, INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY,
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION, OECD NUCLEAR ENERGY
AGENCY, PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION, UNITED NATIONS
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION, Radiation
Protection and Safety of Radiation Sources: International Basic Safety Standards, IAEA
Safety Standards Series No.GSRPart3, IAEA, Vienna(2014).
[8] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, IAEA Safety Glossary:
Terminology Used in Nuclear Safety and Radiation Protection (2007 Edition), IAEA,
Vienna(2007).
[9] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Safety of Nuclear Power Plants:
Design, IAEA Safety Standards Series No.SSR-2/1 (Rev.1), IAEA, Vienna(2016).

117

[10] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Safety of Nuclear Power Plants:


Commissioning and Operation, IAEA Safety Standards Series No. SSR-2/2 (Rev. 1),
IAEA, Vienna(2016).
[11] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Decommissioning of Facilities,
IAEA Safety Standards Series No.GSRPart6, IAEA, Vienna(2014).
[12] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Safety Assessment for Facilities
and Activities, IAEA Safety Standards Series No. GSR Part 4 (Rev. 1), IAEA,
Vienna(2016).
[13] INTERNATIONAL
ATOMIC
ENERGY
AGENCY,
Nuclear
Security
Recommendations on Physical Protection of Nuclear Material and Nuclear
Facilities (INFCIRC/225/Revision5), IAEA Nuclear Security Series No. 13, IAEA,
Vienna(2011).
[14] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Regulations for the Safe Transport
of Radioactive Material (2012 Edition), IAEA Safety Standards Series No. SSR-6,
IAEA, Vienna(2012).
[15] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Safety in the Utilization and
Modification of Research Reactors, IAEA Safety Standards Series No.SSG-24, IAEA,
Vienna(2012).
[16] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, INTERNATIONAL LABOUR
OFFICE, Occupational Radiation Protection, IAEA Safety Standards Series
No.RS-G-1.1, IAEA, Vienna(1999). (A revision of this publication is in preparation.)
[17] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Predisposal Management of
Radioactive Waste, IAEA Safety Standards Series No.GSRPart5, IAEA, Vienna(2009).
[18] INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY, Objective and Essential Elements
of a States Nuclear Security Regime, IAEA Nuclear Security Series No. 20, IAEA,
Vienna(2013).

118

Annex I
SELECTED SAFETY FUNCTIONS FOR RESEARCH REACTORS
I1. Selected safety functions for research reactors are shown in Table I1.
Safety functions are the essential characteristic functions associated with
structures, systems and components for ensuring the safety of the reactor.
The safety functions will depend on the particular design of reactor. Some
safety functions are not relevant for some types of research reactor. The safety
functions are one of the key elements in grading the application of requirements
to structures, systems and components. The safety functions that each structure,
system or component fulfils have to be identified. The selected safety functions
presented in Table I1 are for consideration by the operating organization for
a research reactor. A justification needs to be made for not providing for the
fulfilment of any of these safety functions for a particular reactor.
TABLEI1.
REACTORS

SELECTED

Items important to safety


Buildings and structures

SAFETY

FUNCTIONS

FOR

RESEARCH

Safety functions
To form a barrier to the uncontrolled release of radioactive
material to the environment
To provide protection against external and internal events for
the enclosed safety systems
To provide shielding against radiation

Reactor core

To maintain the fuel geometry and the necessary coolant flow


path so as to ensure the possibility of shutdown and heat removal
in all operational states of the reactor and in design basis
accidents
To provide negative feedback of reactivity
To provide a means of moderating and controlling neutron fluxes

Fuel matrix and cladding

To form a barrier to the release of fission products and other


radioactive material from the fuel
To provide a coolable fuel configuration

Reactivity control system


(including the reactor
shutdown system)

To control the reactivity of the reactor core to ensure that the


reactor can be safely shut down and to ensure that the fuel design
limits and other limits will not be exceeded in any operational
state of the reactor or in design basis accidents

119

TABLEI1. SELECTED
REACTORS (cont.)

SAFETY

FUNCTIONS

FOR

RESEARCH

Items important to safety

Safety functions

Reactor coolant primary


circuit

To provide adequate core cooling and to ensure that the specified


limits for the fuel and the coolant will not be exceeded in any
operational state of the reactor or in design basis accidents

Emergency core cooling


system

To transfer heat from the reactor core following a loss of


coolant accident at an adequate rate to prevent significant
damage to the fuel

Reactor protection system

To take protective actions to shut down the reactor and to


cool and contain radioactive material, and to mitigate the
consequences of accidents
To control interlocks to protect against operational errors if
the required conditions have not been met

Other safety related


instrumentation and
control systems

To keep reactor parameters within operational limits without


reaching safety limits

Electrical power supply

To provide sufficient power of suitable quality to systems and


equipment to ensure their capability to perform their safety
functions when required

Fuel handling and storage


system

To minimize radiation exposure

To provide and present to the reactor operator sufficient


information to determine readily the status of the reactor
protection system and to take the correct safety related actions

To prevent inadvertent criticality


To limit any rise in fuel temperature
To store fresh and irradiated fuel
To prevent mechanical or corrosive damage of fuel

Radiation monitoring
system

To provide measurements and warnings to minimize the


radiation exposure of operating personnel and
research personnel

Fire protection system

To ensure that the adverse effects of fire or fire induced


explosions do not prevent items important to safety from
performing their safety function when required to do so

120

Annex II
OVERVIEW OF THE APPLICATION OF
THE SAFETY REQUIREMENTS TO SUBCRITICAL ASSEMBLIES
II1. Subcritical assemblies are of a variety of designs, operating arrangements
and utilization programmes. Owing to this, all the overarching requirements
(Requirements 1 to 90) are applicable to subcritical assemblies with the use
of a graded approach that is commensurate with the potential hazard of the
facility. Specifically, para. 1.9 states that Each case in which the application
of requirements is graded shall be identified, with account taken of the nature
and possible magnitude of the hazards presented by the given facility and the
activities conducted. The factors to be considered in deciding whether the
application of certain requirements may be graded are set out in para.2.17.
II2. As a consequence, the way in which the requirements are applied for high
performance subcritical assemblies might be different from that for subcritical
assemblies with low potential hazards. In particular, for subcritical assemblies
with natural uranium fuel with light water reflector or moderator, application of
the safety requirements, including those relating to the licensing process, can
be significantly graded (i.e. in view of the negligible radiation risk of certain
subcritical assemblies, certain requirements might not need to be applied).
It thus follows that the national authorization process for the use of radioactive
material, developed and applied in accordance with IAEA Safety Standards
Series No. GSR Part 3, Radiation Protection and Safety of Radiation Sources:
International Basic Safety Standards [II1], may be adequate for safety
demonstration.
REFERENCE TO ANNEX II
[II1] EUROPEAN COMMISSION, FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF
THE UNITED NATIONS, INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY,
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION, OECD NUCLEAR ENERGY
AGENCY, PAN AMERICAN HEALTH ORGANIZATION, UNITED NATIONS
ENVIRONMENT PROGRAMME, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION, Radiation
Protection and Safety of Radiation Sources: International Basic Safety Standards,
IAEA Safety Standards Series No.GSRPart3, IAEA, Vienna(2014).

121

DEFINITIONS
The following definitions differ from those in the IAEA Safety
Glossary: Terminology Used in Nuclear Safety and Radiation Protection
(2007 Edition), IAEA, Vienna (2007):
http://www-pub.iaea.org/books/IAEABooks/7648/IAEA-Safety-Glossary
The 2016 revision of the IAEA Safety Glossary is available at
http://www-ns.iaea.org/standards/safety-glossary.asp
The symbol denotes an information note.
controlled state. State of the reactor facility, following an anticipated operational
occurrence or accident conditions, in which fulfilment of the main safety
functions can be ensured and which can be maintained for a time sufficient
to implement provisions to reach a safe state.
facility states (postulated states of a research reactor facility as considered for
design purposes)

Operationalstates

Accidentconditions

Designextension
conditions

Normaloperation

Anticipated
operational
occurrences

Designbasis
accidents

Without
significant
fuel
degradation

Withcore
melting

accident conditions. Deviations from normal operation that are less


frequent and more severe than anticipated operational occurrences, and
which comprise design basis accidents and design extension conditions.

123

design basis accident. A postulated accident leading to accident


conditions for which a facility is designed in accordance with established
design criteria and conservative methodology, and for which releases of
radioactive material are kept within acceptable limits.
design extension conditions. Postulated accident conditions that
are not considered for design basis accidents, but that are considered
in the design process of the facility in accordance with best estimate
methodology, and for which releases of radioactive material are kept
within acceptable limits.
Design extension conditions comprise conditions in events

without significant fuel degradation and conditions in events


with melting of the reactor core.

safe state. State of the reactor facility, following an anticipated operational


occurrence or accident conditions, in which the reactor is subcritical and
the main safety functions can be ensured and maintained stable for a long
time.
safety feature (for design extension conditions). Item that is designed
to perform a safety function for or that has a safety function for design
extension conditions.
safety system settings. Settings for levels at which safety systems are
automatically actuated in the event of anticipated operational occurrences
or design basis accidents, to prevent safety limits from being exceeded.

124

CONTRIBUTORS TO DRAFTING AND REVIEW


Abou Yehia, H.

Institute for Radiological Protection and


Nuclear Safety, France

Adams, A.

Nuclear Regulatory Commission,


United States of America

Boado Magn, H.

Consultant

DArcy, A.J.

South African Nuclear Energy Corporation,


South Africa

Deitrich, L.W.

Consultant

Hargitai, T.

International Atomic Energy Agency

Hirshfeld, H.

Israel Atomic Energy Commission, Israel

Polyakov, D.

Rostechnadzor, Russian Federation

Sears, D.F.

International Atomic Energy Agency

Shokr, A.M.

International Atomic Energy Agency

125

No. 24

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16-19431

Safety through international standards

Governments, regulatory bodies and operators everywhere must


ensure that nuclear material and radiation sources are used
beneficially, safely and ethically. The IAEA safety standards are
designed to facilitate this, and I encourage all Member States to
make use of them.
Yukiya Amano
Director General

INTERNATIONAL ATOMIC ENERGY AGENCY


VIENNA
ISBN 9789201048165
ISSN 1020525X

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