“…1 at.% of burnup corresponds to roughly 9.4 GWd/ MTHM Exposure When applied to in-core components and materials of construction this term refers to a duration and intensity of in-service use. Can be expressed in units of neutron fluence (n/cm 2 ), usually for neutrons of energy greater than 0.1 MeV (E > 0.1 MeV); units of proportional incident neutron or fission fragment collision (displacements per atom, or dpa), which incorporates neutron spectrum to reflect degree of radiation damage; or units of simple time of exposure, such as effective full-power days (EFPD) Fuel or Cladding Breach production reactors operated at Hanford, the Experimental Breeder Reactor (EBR, later renamed the Experimental Breeder Reactor I, or EBR-I) in Idaho, and the Dounreay Fast Reactor (DFR) in the UK [19,21,22]. The reasons for its selection included ease of fabrication, high-thermal conductivity and high-fissile and -fertile densities (which allowed higher breeding ratios and smaller core sizes for specific reactor power).…”