Modeling of Reactivity Effects and Transient Behaviour of Large Sodium Fast Reactor

Author(s):  
Alexander Ponomarev ◽  
Konstantin Mikityuk

Abstract In the paper the reactivity characteristics of the core of the large sodium fast reactor Superphenix (SPX) were evaluated and compared with available experimental data. The analysis was performed using the TRACE system code modified for the fast reactor applications. The simplified core model was developed aiming to overcome the lack of detailed information on design and realistic core conditions. Point Kinetics neutronic model with all relevant reactivity feedbacks was used to calculate transient power. The paper focuses on challenging issue of modelling of the transient thermal responses of primary system structural elements resulting in reactivity feedbacks specific to such large fast reactor which cannot be neglected. For these effects, the model was equipped with dedicated heat structures to reproduce important feedbacks due to vessel wall, diagrid, strongback, control rod drive lines thermal expansion. Peculiarly, application of the model was considered for a whole range of core conditions from zero power to 100% nominal. The developed core model allowed reproducing satisfactorily the core reactivity balance between zero power at 180?C and full power conditions. Additionally, the reactivity coefficients k, g, h at three power levels were calculated and satisfactory agreement with experimental measurements was also observed. The study demonstrated feasibility of application of relatively simple model with adjusted parameters for analysis of different conditions of very complex system.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hui Guo ◽  
Xin Jin ◽  
Kuaiyuan Feng ◽  
Hanyang Gu

Abstract The next-generation reactors require improved safety performance and longer cycle length, which initiate the research on alternative absorber materials. In this context, potential absorber materials including borides (B4C, HfB2, and ZrB2), rare earth oxides (Eu2O3, Gd2O3, Sm2O3, and Dy2TiO5), metals/alloys (Hf and AIC), and metal hydride (HfHx) were compared in a large sodium fast reactor. The design of control rods for Generation-IV fast reactors strongly depends on the core characteristics. In this paper, some alternative absorbers are assessed in a lead fast reactor ALFRED using depletion capability in the Monte-Carlo particle transport code OpenMC. Results show that the ALFRED reference control rod design with B4C largely satisfies the shutdown and operation requirements. 60% 10B enriched HfB2 and HfH1.18 can replace the operation part of the reference design. In the future, the safe operating life of B4C and HfB2 should be assessed taking into account the irradiation-induced swelling, temperature margin, and gas release. HfH1.18 has a limited and local influence on the core power distribution. Eu2O3 has little loss on the absorption ability after 5 cycle irradiation. This oxide absorber satisfies the shutdown function even with only half control rod insertion, while its critical insertion depth at beginning of the cycle should be increased to realize reactivity compensation function.


Author(s):  
Alexander Ponomarev ◽  
Konstantin Mikityuk ◽  
Emil Fridman ◽  
Vincenzo Anthony Di Nora ◽  
Evaldas Bubelis ◽  
...  

Abstract The paper presents a transient simulation phase of the new benchmark on a large sodium fast reactor (SFR). This phase of the benchmark is devoted to the modelling of selected operational transients performed during start-up tests of the French SFR Superphénix. Six operational transients were selected for the analysis. The specifications of a simplified thermal hydraulic model equipped with point kinetics reactivity data and boundary conditions for the selected transients are given in the paper. The developed model contains necessary thermal hydraulic description of the primary system components, assumptions to account for thermal expansion reactivity feedbacks from out-of-core structures, neutron kinetics parameters, power distribution, and reactivity coefficients. The neutronic input parameters were obtained with the help of the Monte Carlo code Serpent during the first phase of the benchmark related to static neutronic characterization of the core. In this study, the solution of the transient benchmark was obtained with three thermal hydraulic system codes, namely TRACE, SIM-SFR, and ATHLET. The numerical results, compared to the available experimental data, exhibit a reasonable mutual agreement. Particular discrepancies between calculations and experiments could not be fully resolved. Therefore, a set of recommendations for achieving an improved agreement was proposed. In general, the proposed transient benchmark can be seen as an effective tool for validation and cross comparisons of system codes applied for safety analyses of SFRs, including approbation and comparison of different modelling features for thermal expansion of the out-of-core structures.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Hoai Nam Tran ◽  
Yasuyoshi Kato ◽  
Van Khanh Hoang ◽  
Sy Minh Tuan Hoang

This paper presents the neutronics characteristics of a prototype gas-cooled (supercritical CO2-cooled) fast reactor (GCFR) with minor actinide (MA) loading in the fuel. The GCFR core is designed with a thermal output of 600 MWt as a part of a direct supercritical CO2 (S-CO2) gas turbine cycle. Transmutation of MAs in the GCFR has been investigated for attaining low burnup reactivity swing and reducing long-life radioactive waste. Minor actinides are loaded uniformly in the fuel regions of the core. The burnup reactivity swing is minimized to 0.11% ∆k/kk’ over the cycle length of 10 years when the MA content is 6.0 wt%. The low burnup reactivity swing enables minimization of control rod operation during burnup. The MA transmutation rate is 42.2 kg/yr, which is equivalent to the production rates in 7 LWRs of the same electrical output.


2014 ◽  
Vol 118 ◽  
pp. 535-537
Author(s):  
J.J. Herrero ◽  
R. Ochoa ◽  
J.S. Martínez ◽  
C.J. Díez ◽  
N. García-Herranz ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Alexander Ponomarev ◽  
Konstantin Mikityuk ◽  
Liang Zhang ◽  
Evgeny Nikitin ◽  
Emil Fridman ◽  
...  

Abstract In the paper, the specification of a new neutronics benchmark for a large Sodium cooled Fast Reactor core and results of modelling by different participants are presented. The neutronics benchmark describes the core of the French sodium cooled reactor Superphénix at its startup configuration, which in particular was used for experimental measurement of reactivity characteristics. The benchmark consists of the detailed heterogeneous core specification for neutronic analysis and results of the reference solution. Different core geometries and thermal conditions from cold “as fabricated” up to full power were considered. The reference Monte Carlo solution of Serpent 2 includes data on multiplication factor, power distribution, axial and radial reaction rates distribution, reactivity coefficients and safety characteristics, control rods worth, kinetic data. The results of modelling with seven other solutions using deterministic and Monte Carlo methods are also presented and compared to the reference solution. The comparisons results demonstrate appropriate agreement of evaluated characteristics. The neutronics results will be used in the second phase of the benchmark for evaluation of transient behaviour of the core.


Author(s):  
Liancheng Guo ◽  
Andrei Rineiski

To avoid settling of molten materials directly on the vessel wall in severe accident sequences, the implementation of a ‘core catcher’ device in the lower plenum of sodium fast reactor designs is considered. The device is to collect, retain and cool the debris, created when the corium falls down and accumulates in the core catcher, while interacting with surrounding coolant. This Fuel-Coolant Interaction (FCI) leads to a potentially energetic heat and mass transfer process which may threaten the vessel integrity. For simulations of severe accidents, including FCI, the SIMMER code family is employed at KIT. SIMMER-III and SIMMER-IV are advanced tools for the core disruptive accidents (CDA) analysis of liquid-metal fast reactors (LMFRs) and other GEN-IV systems. They are 2D/3D multi-velocity-field, multiphase, multicomponent, Eulerian, fluid dynamics codes coupled with a fuel-pin model and a space- and energy-dependent neutron kinetics model. However, the experience of SIMMER application to simulation of corium relocation and related FCI is limited. It should be mentioned that the SIMMER code was not firstly developed for the FCI simulation. However, the related models show its basic capability in such complicate multiphase phenomena. The objective of the study was to preliminarily apply this code in a large-scale simulation. An in-vessel model based on European Sodium Fast Reactor (ESFR) was established and calculated by the SIMMER code. In addition, a sensitivity analysis on some modeling parameters is also conducted to examine their impacts. The characteristics of the debris in the core catcher region, such as debris mass and composition are compared. Besides that, the pressure history in this region, the mass of generated sodium vapor and average temperature of liquid sodium, which can be considered as FCI quantitative parameters, are also discussed. It is expected that the present study can provide some numerical experience of the SIMMER code in plant-scale corium relocation and related FCI simulation.


Author(s):  
Andrei Rineiski ◽  
Clément Mériot ◽  
Marco Marchetti ◽  
Jiri Krepel ◽  
Christine Coquelet ◽  
...  

Abstract A large 3600 MW-thermal European Sodium Fast Reactor (ESFR) concept has been studied in Horizon-2020 ESFR-SMART (ESFR Safety Measures Assessment and Research Tools) project since September 2017, following an earlier EURATOM project, CP-ESFR. In the paper, we describe new ESFR core safety measures focused on prevention and mitigation of severe accidents. In particular, we propose a new core configuration for reducing the sodium void effect, introduce passive shutdown systems, and implement special paths in the core for facilitation of molten fuel discharge in order to avoid re-criticalities after a hypothetical severe accident. We describe and assess the control and shutdown system, and consider options for burning minor actinides.


2011 ◽  
Vol 48 (4) ◽  
pp. 628-634 ◽  
Author(s):  
Giuseppe PALMIOTTI ◽  
Massimo SALVATORES ◽  
Monchai ASSAWAROONGRUENGCHOT

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Massimo Sarotto ◽  
Gabriele Firpo ◽  
Anatoly Kochetkov ◽  
Antonin Krása ◽  
Emil Fridman ◽  
...  

Abstract During the EURATOM FP7 project FREYA, a number of experiments were performed in a critical core assembled in the VENUS-F zero-power reactor able to reproduce the ALFRED lead-cooled fast reactor spectrum in a dedicated island. The experiments dealt with the measurements of integral and local neutronic parameters, such as the core criticality, the control rod and the lead void reactivity worth, the axial distributions of fission rates for the nuclides of major interest in a fast spectrum, the spectral indices of important actinides (238U, 239Pu, 237 Np) with respect to 235U. With the main aim to validate the neutronic codes adopted for the ALFRED core design, the VENUS-F core and its characterization measurements were simulated with both deterministic (ERANOS) and stochastic (MCNP, SERPENT) codes, by adopting different nuclear data libraries (JEFF, ENDF/B, JENDL, TENDL). This paper summarizes the main results obtained by highlighting a general agreement between measurements and simulations, with few discrepancies for some parameters that are discussed here. Additionally, a sensitivity and uncertainty analysis was performed with deterministic methods for the core reactivity: it clearly indicates that the small over-criticality estimated by the different codes/libraries resulted to be lower than the uncertainties due to nuclear data.


2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 15-25
Author(s):  
Viet Ha Pham Nhu ◽  
Min Jae Lee ◽  
Sunghwan Yun ◽  
Sang Ji Kim

Power regulation systems of fast reactors are based on the signals of excore detectors. The excore detector weighting functions, which establish correspondence between the core power distribution and detector signal, are very useful for detector response analyses, e.g., in rod drop experiments. This paper presents the calculation of the weighting functions for a TRU burner mockup of the Korean Prototype Generation-IV Sodium-cooled Fast Reactor (named BFS-76-1A) using the MCNP5 multi-group adjoint capability. For generation of the weighting functions, all fuel assemblies were considered and each of them was divided into ten horizontal layers. Then the weighting functions for individual fuel assembly horizontal layers, the assembly weighting functions, and the shape annealing functions at RCP (Reactor Critical Point) and at conditions under which a control rod group was fully inserted into the core while other control rods at RCP were determined and evaluated. The results indicate that the weighting functions can be considered relatively insensitive to the control rods position during the rod drop experiments and therefore those weighting values at RCP can be applied to the dynamic rod worth simulation for the BFS-76-1A.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document