The AGN-201 Digital Twin: A test bed for remotely monitoring nuclear reactors

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Abstract

Research reactors have historically provided researchers and scientists with a means for testing and understanding the workings of nuclear phenomena. With the lack of new research reactors built in the past decades, it is important now more than ever to utilize and provide evidence for the usefulness of research reactors. This work explores the use of the AGN-201 research reactor at Idaho State University as a test bed for developing a digital twin (named the AGN-201 DT) to realize remote monitoring for nuclear reactors. The goal of the AGN-201 DT is to monitor the AGN-201 reactor and detect when undeclared events take place to provide information for a monitoring agency. The AGN-201 DT was able to detect (without a priori knowledge) when multiple undeclared experiments were placed in the core using on-the-fly machine learning and reactor physics analysis. The AGN-201 reactor provided a test bed for developing, deploying, and testing a digital twin for monitoring nuclear reactors.

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APA

Stewart, R., Treviño, E., Shields, A., Heaps, K., Darrington, J., Williams, Q., … Ritter, C. (2025). The AGN-201 Digital Twin: A test bed for remotely monitoring nuclear reactors. Annals of Nuclear Energy, 213. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anucene.2024.111041

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