Thermal Modeling of the HTR-10 Using the RELAP5-3D Code

Author(s):  
Maria Elizabeth Scari ◽  
Antonella Lombardi Costa ◽  
Claubia Pereira ◽  
Clarysson Alberto Mello da Silva ◽  
Maria Auxiliadora Fortini Veloso

Several efforts have been considered in the development of the modular High Temperature Gas cooled Reactor (HTGR) planned to be a safe and efficient nuclear energy source for the production of electricity and industrial applications. In this work, the RELAP5-3D thermal hydraulic code was used to simulate the steady state behavior of the 10 MW pebble bed high temperature gas cooled reactor (HTR-10), designed, constructed and operated by the Institute of Nuclear and New Energy Technology (INET), in China. The reactor core is cooled by helium gas. In the simulation, results of temperature distribution within the pebble bed, inlet and outlet coolant temperatures, coolant mass flow, and others parameters have been compared with the data available in a benchmark document published by the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) in 2013. This initial study demonstrates that the RELAP5-3D model is capable to reproduce the thermal behavior of the HTR-10.

Author(s):  
Zhe Dong ◽  
Xiaojin Huang ◽  
Liangju Zhang

The modular high-temperature gas-cooled nuclear reactor (MHTGR) is seen as one of the best candidates for the next generation of nuclear power plants. China began to research the MHTGR technology at the end of the 1970s, and a 10 MWth pebble-bed high temperature reactor HTR-10 has been built. On the basis of the design and operation of the HTR-10, the high temperature gas-cooled reactor pebble-bed module (HTR-PM) project is proposed. One of the main differences between the HTR-PM and HTR-10 is that the ratio of height to diameter corresponding to the core of the HTR-PM is much larger than that of the HTR-10. Therefore it is not proper to use the point kinetics based model for control system design and verification. Motivated by this, a nodal neutron kinetics model for the HTR-PM is derived, and the corresponding nodal thermal-hydraulic model is also established. This newly developed nodal model can reflect not only the total or average information but also the distribution information such as the power distribution as well. Numerical simulation results show that the static precision of the new core model is satisfactory, and the trend of the transient responses is consistent with physical rules.


Author(s):  
Yanhua Zhengy ◽  
Lei Shi

Depressurized loss of coolant accident (DLOCA) is one of the most important design basis accidents for high temperature gas-cooled reactors. Analysis of the reactor characteristic behavior during DLOCA can provide useful reference to the physics, thermo-hydraulic and structure designs of the reactor core. In this paper, according to the preliminary design of the 250MW Pebble-bed Modular High Temperature Gas-cooled Reactor (HTR-PM), three cases of DLOCA: a instantaneous depressurization along with a flow coastdown and scram at zero time, a main pipe with a diameter of 65mm rupture, and a instrument pipe with a diameter of 10mm broken, are studied by the help of two different kinds of software THERMIX and TINTE. The key parameters of different cases including reactor power, temperature distribution of the core and pressure vessel, and the decay power removal by the passive residual heat remove system (RHRS) are compared in detail. Some uncertainties, such as residual heat calculation, power distribution, heat conductivity of fuel element, etc., are analyzed in order to evaluate the safety margin of the maximum fuel temperature during DLOCA. The calculating results show that, the decay heat in the DLOCA can be removed from the reactor core solely by means of physical processes in a passive way, so that the temperature limits of fuel and components are still obeyed. It also illustrates that the HTR-PM can reach 250MW reactor power per unit and still can keep the inherent safety.


2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 128-139 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ziping Liu ◽  
Zeguang Li ◽  
Jun Sun

In the high-temperature gas-cooled reactor pebble-bed module, the helium bypass flow among graphite blocks cannot be ignored due to its effect on the temperature distribution as well as the maximum temperature in the reactor core. Bypass flow was previously analyzed in the discharging tube, in vertical gaps between graphite reflectors, and in control rod channels. The focus of this study is on the bypass flow that connects the small absorber sphere channels. Different from bypass flow connecting the control rod channels, there was no evident inlet or outlet flow paths into or out of the small absorber sphere channels at the top or bottom of the reactor core. Therefore, the bypass flow connecting the pebble bed with the small absorber sphere channels was mainly caused by the horizontal gaps, in which those gaps would also be irregular due to installation, thermal expansion, or irradiation of the graphite reflectors. After clarifying the resistant coefficients of those gaps by computational fluid dynamic tools, the bypass flow distribution was calculated by the flow network model including the flow in the reactor core, small absorber sphere channels, as well as horizontal gaps. Cases with various size combinations of gaps were adopted into the flow network model to test the sensitivity of bypass flow distribution to those parameters. Finally, the bypass flow in the small absorber sphere channels was concluded to be not significant in the reactor core.


2021 ◽  
Vol 927 (1) ◽  
pp. 012037
Author(s):  
Daddy Setyawan

Abstract In order to support the verification and validation of computational methods and codes for the safety assessment of pebble bed High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors (HTGRs), the calculation of first criticality and full power initial core of the high-temperature pebble bed reactor 10 MWt (HTR-10) has been defined as one of the problems specified for both code-to-code and code-to-experiment benchmarking with a focus on neutronics. HTR-10 Experimental facility serves as the source of information for the currently designed high-temperature gas-cooled nuclear reactor. It is also desired to verify the existing codes against the data obtained in the facility. In HTR-10, the core is filled with thousands of graphite and fuel pebbles. Fuel pebbles in the reactor consist of TRISO particles, which are embedded in the graphite matrix stochastically. The reactor core is also stochastically filled with pebbles. These two stochastic geometries comprise the so-called double heterogeneity of this type of reactor. In this paper, the first criticality and the power distribution in full power initial core calculations of HTR-10 are used to demonstrate treatment of this double heterogeneity using TORT-TD and Serpent for cross-section generation. HTR-10 has unique characteristics in terms of the randomness in geometry, as in all pebble bed reactors. In this technique, the core structure is modeled by TORT-TD, and Serpent is used to provide the cross-section in a double heterogeneity approach. Results obtained by TORT-TD calculations are compared with available data. It is observed that TORT-TD calculation yield sufficiently accurate results in terms of initial criticality and power distribution in full power initial core of the HTR-10 reactor.


Author(s):  
Cheng Ren ◽  
Xing-Tuan Yang ◽  
Cong-Xin Li ◽  
Zhi-Yong Liu ◽  
Sheng-Yao Jiang

High Temperature Gas-cooled Reactor (HTGR) is a typical representation of Generation IV nuclear power system for its advantages like inherent safety, high efficiency, widely application as high-temperature heat source. The first two 250-MWt high temperature reactor pebble bed modules (HTR-PM) have be installing at the Shidaowan plant in Shandong Province, China, which have the cylindrical core structure with thousands of spherical fuel elements randomly packed inside. The values of the effective thermal conductivity of the pebble bed core under different temperatures are essential parameters for the design of HTGR, which are needed to analyze the maximum fuel temperature, temperature distribution and residual heat releasing ability in reactor core. For this purpose, Tsinghua University in China has proposed a full-scale heat transfer experiment to conduct comprehensive thermal transfer tests in packed pebble bed and to determine the effective thermal conductivity through the pebble bed under vacuum condition and helium environment with temperature up to 1600°C. An essential material test equipment is built in advance to provide reliable materials and technical support for the design of the final experimental device aimed at measuring the effective thermal conductivity of pebble bed type reactor core of the high temperature gas-cooled reactor. The design of the essential material test equipment is introduced in detail, including the heat element, the insulation structure, the temperature detector, cooling water system, vacuum system, hydraulic lifting system, data acquisition system and so on. Several key technologies in design are described in detail. Test temperature in the equipment was elevated up to 1600°C, which covers the whole temperature range of the normal operation and accident condition of HTGR and could fully meet the test requirements of materials used in the reactor. The construction and commissioning of the test equipment shows that the test equipment has met the design requirements and verified the feasibility of the related materials and structures.


Author(s):  
Yanhua Zheng ◽  
Fubing Chen ◽  
Lei Shi

Pebble bed modular high temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTR), due to their characteristics of low power density, slender structure, large thermal inertia of fuel elements and reactor component materials (graphite), have good inherent safety features. However, the reflectors consisting of large piles of graphite blocks will form huge numbers of certain bypass gaps in the radial, axial and circumferential directions, thus affecting the effective cooling flow into the reactor core, which is one of the concerned issues of HTRs. According to the preliminary design of the Chinese high temperature gas-cooled reactor pebble-bed modular (HTR-PM), the thermal-hydraulic calculation model is established in this paper. Based on this model, considering different bypass flow, that is to say, different core cooling flow, fuel element temperature, outlet helium temperature and the core pressure drop in the normal operation, as well as the maximal fuel temperature during the depressurized loss of forced cooling (DLOFC) accident are analyzed. This study on bypass effects on the steady-state and transient phases can further demonstrate the HTR safety features.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Jinghan Zhang ◽  
Jun Zhao ◽  
Jiejuan Tong

Nuclear safety goal is the basic standard for limiting the operational risks of nuclear power plants. The statistics of societal risks are the basis for nuclear safety goals. Core damage frequency (CDF) and large early release frequency (LERF) are typical probabilistic safety goals that are used in the regulation of water-cooled reactors currently. In fact, Chinese current probabilistic safety goals refer to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) and the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), and they are not based on Chinese societal risks. And the CDF and LERF proposed for water reactor are not suitable for high-temperature gas-cooled reactors (HTGR), because the design of HTGR is very different from that of water reactor. And current nuclear safety goals are established for single reactor rather than unit or site. Therefore, in this paper, the development of the safety goal of NRC was investigated firstly; then, the societal risks in China were investigated in order to establish the correlation between the probabilistic safety goal of multimodule HTGR and Chinese societal risks. In the end, some other matters about multireactor site were discussed in detail.


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