Dose dispersion map using the fall-out stack model of the HYSPLIT code for a pool-type 5 MW research reactor under normal operation

2019 ◽  
Vol 165 ◽  
pp. 108412
Author(s):  
Y. Hamidi Athar ◽  
F. Faghihi
2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kwon-Yeong Lee ◽  
Hyun-Gi Yoon

In an open-pool type research reactor, the primary cooling system can be designed to have a downward flow inside the core during normal operation because of the plate type fuel geometry. There is a flow inversion inside the core from the downward flow by the inertia force of the primary coolant to the upward flow by the natural circulation when the pump is turned off. To delay the flow inversion time, an innovative passive system with pump flywheel and GCCT is developed to remove the residual heat. Before the primary cooling pump starts up, the water level of the GCCT is the same as that of the reactor pool. During the primary cooling pump operation, the water in the GCCT is moved into the reactor pool because of the pump suction head. After the pump stops, the potential head generates a downward flow inside the core by moving the water from the reactor pool to the GCCT and removes the residual heat. When the water levels of the two pools are the same again, the core flow has an inversion of the flow direction, and natural circulation is developed through the flap valves.


2018 ◽  
Vol 33 (1) ◽  
pp. 31-46
Author(s):  
Stoyan Kadalev

The present paper considers the approach to an assessment of technological radiation sources in the primary water-water reactor circulation loop. In principle, such an evaluation is a multidisciplinary task that covers not only the irradiation of the nuclei, the formation of new isotopes and their decay when they are unstable, but also calculations in the field of hydraulics in order to perform an assessment of the irradiation time and the decay time. A general and a more detailed review of the radiation sources formation in the nuclear facilities and the pool type research reactors with demineralized water as a heat carrier are prepared. The initial isotopic composition of the heat carrier has been adopted according to the Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water recommended by the International Atomic Energy Agency. The general mathematical model of the processes of nuclei irradiation, the formation of new isotopes and their decay, the assessment of the irradiation time and the decay time is described in details, enabling the repetition of this evaluation to a particular facility. The presented approach is applied in the reconstruction design of the nuclear research reactor IRT-2000, Sofia, Bulgaria.


Author(s):  
Yong-Chul Park ◽  
Yong-Sup Lee ◽  
Bong-Soo Kim

HANARO, an open-tank-in-pool type research reactor of 30 MWth power in Korea, has been operating normally since its initial criticality in February, 1995. For the last ten years, HANARO has carried out ten years periodic in-service inspections (ISI as below) in accordance with Article IWD in ASME SEC. XI to verify the mechanical and structural integrities of the pressure retaining components of the safety related systems and the integral attachments of the supports and restraints of the components which are NPS 4 and above, to be within a specified boundary. This paper describes the results of the ISI including a system pressure test and a VT-3 visual inspection. From the results, it was confirmed through the ISI that the pressure retaining components and parts were stable to within the specified boundaries for their mechanical and structural integrities.


1999 ◽  
Vol 26 (8) ◽  
pp. 709-728 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walmir Maximo Torres ◽  
Benedito Dias Baptista Filho ◽  
Daniel Kao Sun Ting

2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 317-321
Author(s):  
Thi Zieu Chang Doan ◽  
Georgy E. Lazarenko ◽  
Denis G. Lazarenko

Having thoroughly analyzed the design features of VVER-type pressurized water reactors and VVR-type research reactors, the authors propose a design of a research reactor with low-enriched fuel based on deeply updated VVER-440 fuel assemblies. The research reactor is intended to solve a wide range of applied problems in nuclear physics, radiation chemistry, materials science, biology, and medicine. The calculated thermal hydraulics confirms the correctness of the fundamental approaches laid down in the reactor design. An equivalent reactor core model in the form of a thick-walled cylinder was considered, and the radial power density distribution was obtained. According to the heat power level, five groups of FAs were identified. For each group, the coolant mass flow rate was calculated, which ensures alignment with the outlet coolant temperature. The coolant flow regime was also estimated. It turned out that for the first row of FAs, the flow regime is in the transition region, while for the other rows the flow regime is laminar. A test by the Gr.Pr≥1.105 criterion showed its conformity (the calculated value was 1.96.106), indicating the transition to a viscous-gravitational regime. The FE surface overheating was calculated relative to the mixed coolant average temperature. The axial coolant flow temperature distribution is the same in all the FAs, the change in power is compensated by the corresponding change in the coolant flow. The maximum coolant overheating on the FE wall relative to the flow core is observed in the central FAs, reaching 31 °C, the boiling margin is about 15 °C. The estimates showed a significant dynamic pressure margin during natural thermal-convective circulation. By calculation, the values of the FE surface overheating during the reactor normal operation were obtained. An approximately 15-degree surface overheating margin relative to the saturation curve is shown, which guarantees the absence of cavitation wear of the FE claddings. In general, the performed calculations confirmed the correctness of the approaches laid down in the reactor design and made it possible to specify the core thermal hydraulics necessary for further developing the concept.


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