EPJ Web of Conferences (Jan 2023)
Development of a specialised calibration and infra-red emissivity correction to enable the temperature monitoring of intermediate level nuclear waste using thermal imaging
Abstract
The temperature measurement of intermediate level nuclear waste containers is vital to monitor thermal stability and track temperature trends over time. The use of thermal imaging for this monitoring has numerous advantages compared to using a single spot radiation thermometer, and Sellafield wish to employ this approach for their ‘3 m3 box’ intermediate level waste containers. In order to achieve this objective with confidence a custom temperature calibration is required for low uncertainty temperature measurement. Another key consideration for practical non-contact temperature measurement is the emissivity of the surface being measured at the relevant infrared wavelengths, as such the emissivity of the Sellafield 3 m3 box materials was measured and then corrected for. The implementation of a calibrated instrument and emissivity correction were validated using temperature controlled, 1:10 scale model 3 m3 box containers within a climatic chamber. The surface temperature of the scale containers was determined to an uncertainty of ± 6.5 °C (k = 2.1) for the container walls, ± 3.5 °C (k = 2.1) for the container lid and ± 1.5 °C (k = 2.1) for the container vents. The measurement techniques used to determine the temperature of the 1:10 scale 3 m3 box containers were therefore successful and there is a clear development path to monitoring the containers in storage using thermal imaging.
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