Rasterized coarse mesh finite difference acceleration on method of characteristics for a reactor core with a generalized boundary

2021 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 108483
Author(s):  
Ao Zhang ◽  
Ming Dai ◽  
Maosong Cheng ◽  
Jianhui Wu ◽  
Chunyan Zou ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Tian XiaoRui ◽  
Zhou Tao ◽  
Li Zichao ◽  
Yu Tao

In reactor core physics analysis,the research about the pre-processing of Method of Characteristic (MOC) including the generation and storage of characteristic line,the progress of calculation and the choosing of different quadrature set.In addition,doing some simulations,which is based on OpenMOC code and C5G7-MOX benchmark,about different parameters (including the track spacing,azimuthal angles and polar angles) and calculated its impacts on the computational efficiency and accuracy.the simulation results are as following:setting the track spacing as 0.1 cm or the azimuthal angle number as 4,the simulation results have better accuracy. Whether choosing the Leonard’s optimum quadrature set or the Tabuchi-Yamamoto quadrature set,the number of polar angles have tiny impact on accuracy.


1982 ◽  
Vol 22 (03) ◽  
pp. 409-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
R.G. Larson

Abstract The variably-timed flux updating (VTU) finite difference technique is extended to two dimensions. VTU simulations of miscible floods on a repeated five-spot pattern are compared with exact solutions and with solutions obtained by front tracking. It is found that for neutral and favorable mobility ratios. VTU gives accurate results even on a coarse mesh and reduces numerical dispersion by a factor of 10 or more over the level generated by conventional single-point (SP) upstream weighting. For highly unfavorable mobility ratios, VTU reduces numerical dispersion. but on a coarse mesh the simulation is nevertheless inaccurate because of the inherent inadequacy of the finite-difference estimation of the flow field. Introduction A companion paper (see Pages 399-408) introduced the one-dimensional version of VTU for controlling numerical dispersion in finite-difference simulation of displacements in porous media. For linear and nonlinear, one- and two-independent-component problems, VTU resulted in more than an order-of-magnitude reduction in numerical dispersion over conventional explicit. SP upstream-weighted simulations with the same number of gridblocks. In this paper, the technique is extended to two dimensional (2D) problems, which require solution of a set of coupled partial differential equations that express conservation of material components-i.e., (1) and (2) Fi, the fractional flux of component i, is a function of the set of s - 1 independent-component fractional concentrations {Ci}, which prevail at the given position and time., the dispersion flux, is given by an expression that is linear in the specie concentration gradients. The velocity, is proportional to the pressure gradient,. (3) where lambda, in general, can be a function of composition and of the magnitude of the pressure gradient. The premises on which Eqs. 1 through 3 rest are stated in the companion paper. VTU in Two Dimensions The basic idea of variably-timed flux updating is to use finite-difference discretization of time and space, but to update the flux of a component not every timestep, but with a frequency determined by the corresponding concentration velocity -i.e., the velocity of propagation of fixed concentration of that component. The concentration velocity is a function of time and position. In the formulation described here, the convected flux is upstream-weighted, and all variables except pressure are evaluated explicitly. As described in the companion paper (SPE 8027), the crux of the method is the estimation of the number of timesteps required for a fixed concentration to traverse from an inflow to an outflow face of a gridblock. This task is simpler in one dimension, where there is only one inflow and one outflow face per gridblock, than it is in two dimensions, where each gridblock has in general multiple inflow and outflow faces. SPEJ P. 409^


2003 ◽  
Vol 144 (1) ◽  
pp. 23-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nuria García-Herranz ◽  
Oscar Cabellos ◽  
José M. Aragonés ◽  
Carol Ahnert

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