Fission product behaviour and graphite corrosion under accident conditions in the HTR

1990 ◽  
Vol 121 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Katscher ◽  
R. Moormann ◽  
K. Verfondern ◽  
C.B.v.d Decken ◽  
N. Iniotakis ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 107510 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raymond S. Dickson ◽  
J. Stuart Bell ◽  
Robert F. O'Connor ◽  
Jeffrey Sheedy ◽  
Randy T. Peplinskie ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
T. Kanzleiter ◽  
G. Poss ◽  
F. Funke ◽  
H.-J. Allelein

The THAI experimental programme includes combined-effect investigations on thermal hydraulics, hydrogen, and fission product (iodine and aerosols) behaviour in LWR containments under severe accident conditions. An overview on the experiments performed up to now and on the future test program is presented, in combination with a selection of typical results to illustrate the versatility of the test facility and the broad variety of topics investigated.


Author(s):  
Karl Verfondern ◽  
Heinz Nabielek

Various countries engaged in the development and fabrication of modern fuel for the High Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (HTGR) have initiated activities of modeling the fuel and fission product release behavior with the aim of predicting the fuel performance under operating and accidental conditions of future HTGRs. Within the IAEA directed Coordinated Research Project CRP6 on “Advances in HTGR Fuel Technology Development” active since 2002, the 13 participating Member States have agreed upon benchmark studies on fuel performance during normal operation and under accident conditions. While the former has been completed in the meantime, the focus is now on the extension of the national code developments to become applicable to core heatup accident conditions. These activities are supported by the fact that core heatup simulation experiments have been resumed recently providing new, highly valuable data. Work on accident performance will be — similar to the normal operation benchmark — consisting of three essential parts comprising both code verification that establishes the correspondence of code work with the underlying physical, chemical and mathematical laws, and code validation that establishes reasonable agreement with the existing experimental data base, but including also predictive calculations for future heating tests and/or reactor concepts. The paper will describe the cases to be studied and the calculational results obtained with the German computer model FRESCO. Among the benchmark cases in consideration are tests which were most recently conducted in the new heating facility KUEFA. Therefore this study will also re-open the discussion and analysis of both the validity of diffusion models and the transport data of the principal fission product species in the HTGR fuel materials as essential input data for the codes.


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