A high temperature gas-cooled reactor (HTGR) is a nuclear reactor that uses helium gas as its coolant and ceramic materials, mainly graphite, as its core structure. The minimum unit of the HTGR fuel is a coated fuel particle (CFP), which is shown in Fig. 1 (Goto et al., 2012). Fissile materials and fission products are confined in each CFP. The CFPs are bound with a matrix to form a fuel element. Graphite is used as the matrix now. For the high temperature engineering test reactor (HTTR) in Japan, cylindrical fuel elements (fuel compacts) are placed into a graphite sleeve to form a fuel rod. These fuel rods are then placed in a graphite block to form a fuel block, as shown in Fig. 1. The fuel blocks are stacked in the reactor's core to form its fuel region. An HTGR with this type of fuel is called a pin-in-block HTGR.The modified oxidation resistance in the core is important for improving the HTGR's safety, because its core consists mainly of graphite, as we described earlier. One measure for modifying the core's oxidation resistance is that a material including silicon carbide (SiC) is used as a matrix of the fuel element. Therefore, research was conducted on fabricating