In-vessel melt-water interaction caused by the failure of the crust above the core support plate under molten pool / In- Vessel Schmelze- Wasser- Wechselwirkung verursacht durch die Zerstörung der Kruste auf der unteren Kerngitterplatte unter einem Schmelze-Pool

Kerntechnik ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 209-215
Author(s):  
Nikolay Ivanov Kolev
1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (104) ◽  
pp. 94-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Johannes Krüger ◽  
Henrik Højmark Thomsen

AbstractInvestigations have been made of the geomorphology, internal structure, and till fabric of small drumlins in a drumlin field exposed in front of the retreating northern part of Mýrdalsjökull, Iceland. The drumlins either comprise irregular drumlin complexes or they show clearly the shape of typical drumlins with their highest points at the up-glacier ends of streamlined hills.The core of each drumlin consists either of undisturbed glacio-fluvial deposits or glacio-dynamically deformed drift. The distribution of the first type often has a characteristic en échelon arrangement, similar to the interstream areas in the upper reaches of outwash fans. The second type forms a pattern with a predominant trend conforming to the glacier margin; this type is superimposed on overridden ice-margin push-moraine ridges. It is shown that the material in the drumlin cores is only slightly eroded by the glacier that formed the drumlins. The core is mantled by subglacial lodgement till about 0.1–1.5 m in thickness.Seventeen fabric analyses of 25 clasts each were performed on material from within the till mantle. These analyses show a preferred long-axis orientation but indicate a considerable between-site variability ranging up to 45° even between samples taken a few metres apart. The preferred clast orientation for samples taken along the drumlin crests only deviates 0–10° from the regional ice-flow direction indicated by fluted moraines, whereas the deviation for samples from the flanks and the stoss-sides is up to 35°. However, the fabrics show a characteristic pattern relative to the shape of the drumlin; on their tops, the clast fabric parallels the ice-flow direction, whereas it tends to follow the contour direction on the flanks and stoss-sides.It is concluded that the cores of the drumlins consist of pre-existing deposits, whereas the mantles are composed of subglacial till. Regarding the processes involved, the material contained in the core is mainly eroded by pro-glacial melt-water streams and not by ice. During the subsequent flow of ice across the area, the most prominent terrain elements have acted as subglacial obstacles, leading to localized till deposition and drumlin formation. Thus, the drumlins were formed mainly by subglacial deposition of till but the obstacles acted as an essential factor favouring their initiation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-14
Author(s):  
Long Doan Manh ◽  
Thai Nguyen Van ◽  
Thanh Tran Chi

In this study, the MELCOR v1.8.6 code was utilized to perform an analysis of the in-vessel accident progression in VVER1000 reactor during the Station Black-Out (SBO) accident with and without external reactor vessel cooling (ERVC) strategy. The analysis presented the predictions of the main phenomena during the accident such as failure of fuel cladding, collapse of lower core support plate, relocation of core debris to lower plenum and mass of debris components in lower plenum, and provided comparisons between two cases in term of main parameters such as integrity time of reactor and structure components of molten pool. These parameters are very important inputs for further research on the application of external vessel cooling strategy for VVER1000 reactor.


1985 ◽  
Vol 31 (109) ◽  
pp. 220-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott D. Stanford ◽  
David M. Mickelson

AbstractDeep gravel-pit exposures reveal the distribution and structure of till and underlying sand and gravel in drumlins near Waukesha, Wisconsin. The subglacial sediment is interpreted to have moved laterally into the drumlin sites because the till thickens from the margin to the core of the drumlins, the stone orientation in the till is perpendicular and oblique to ice flow on the drumlin margins, and recumbent isoclinal folds occur in sand on the drumlin margins with axes parallel to the drumlin axes. The resulting accumulations of sediment presented obstacles to ice flow and were streamlined into the minimum-drag drumlin shape by erosion on the margins and by remolding of material in the core of the drumlins. These drumlin nuclei may have formed at spots where there was low effective stress on the bed. The subglacial sediment became mobile as a result of high pore pressure that may have developed as ground water and subglacial melt water were trapped behind a frozen bed at the ice margin. Under certain conditions, however, lateral sediment flow might also have occurred when the sediment was frozen.


1985 ◽  
Vol 31 (109) ◽  
pp. 220-228 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott D. Stanford ◽  
David M. Mickelson

AbstractDeep gravel-pit exposures reveal the distribution and structure of till and underlying sand and gravel in drumlins near Waukesha, Wisconsin. The subglacial sediment is interpreted to have moved laterally into the drumlin sites because the till thickens from the margin to the core of the drumlins, the stone orientation in the till is perpendicular and oblique to ice flow on the drumlin margins, and recumbent isoclinal folds occur in sand on the drumlin margins with axes parallel to the drumlin axes. The resulting accumulations of sediment presented obstacles to ice flow and were streamlined into the minimum-drag drumlin shape by erosion on the margins and by remolding of material in the core of the drumlins. These drumlin nuclei may have formed at spots where there was low effective stress on the bed. The subglacial sediment became mobile as a result of high pore pressure that may have developed as ground water and subglacial melt water were trapped behind a frozen bed at the ice margin. Under certain conditions, however, lateral sediment flow might also have occurred when the sediment was frozen.


Author(s):  
H. E. Unger ◽  
M. Bürger ◽  
E. F. Hicken
Keyword(s):  

Icarus ◽  
1983 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
K.H. Wohletz ◽  
M.F. Sheridan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Ingo D. Kleinhietpaß ◽  
Hermann Unger ◽  
Hermann-Josef Wagner ◽  
Marco K. Koch

With the purpose of modeling and calculating the core behavior during severe accidents in nuclear power plants system codes are under development worldwide. Modeling of radionuclide release and transport in the case of beyond design basis accidents is an integrated feature of the deterministic safety analysis of nuclear power plants. Following a hypothetical, uncontrolled temperature escalation in the core of light water reactors, significant parts of the core structures may degrade and melt down under formation of molten pools, leading to an accumulation of large amounts of radioactive materials. The possible release of radionuclides from the molten pool provides a potential contribution to the aerosol source term in the late phase of core degradation accidents. The relevance of the amount of transferred oxygen from the gas atmosphere into the molten pool on the specification of a radionuclide and its release depends strongly on the initial oxygen inventory. Particularly for a low oxygen potential in the melt as it is the case for stratification when a metallic phase forms the upper layer and, respectively, when the oxidation has proceeded so far so that zirconium was completely oxidized, a significant influence of atmospheric oxygen on the specification and the release of some radionuclides has to be anticipated. The code RELOS (Release of Low Volatile Fission Products from Molten Surfaces) is under development at the Department of Energy Systems and Energy Economics (formerly Department of Nuclear and New Energy Systems) of the Ruhr-University Bochum. It is based on a mechanistic model to describe the diffusive and convective transport of fission products from the surface of a molten pool into a cooler gas atmosphere. This paper presents the code RELOS, i. e. the features and abilities of the latest code version V2.3 and the new model improvements of V2.4 and the calculated results evaluating the implemented models which deal with the oxygen transfer from the liquid side of the phase boundary to the bulk of the melt by diffusion or by taking into account natural convection. Both models help to estimate the amount of oxygen entering into the liquid upper pool volume and being available for the oxidation reaction. For both models the metallic, the oxidic and a mixture phase can be taken into account when defining the composition of the upper pool volume. The influence of crust formation, i. e. the decrease of the liquid pool surface area is taken care of because it yields the relevant amount of fission products released into the atmosphere. The difference of the partial density between the gas side of the phase boundary and the bulk of the gas phase is the driving force of mass transport.


1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
C C Chu ◽  
J J Sienicki ◽  
B W Spencer
Keyword(s):  

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