• Title/Summary/Keyword: Subchannel thermalhydraulics

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PREDICTIONS OF CRITICAL HEAT FLUX USING THE ASSERT-PV SUBCHANNEL CODE FOR A CANFLEX VARIANT BUNDLE

  • Onder, Ebru Nihan;Leung, Laurence Kim-Hung;Rao, Yanfei
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.41 no.7
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    • pp.969-978
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    • 2009
  • The ASSERT-PV subchannel code developed by AECL has been applied as a design-assist tool to the advanced $CANDU^{(R)1}$ reactor fuel bundle. Based primarily on the $CANFLEX^{(R)2}$ fuel bundle, several geometry changes (such as element sizes and pitch-circle diameters of various element rings) were examined to optimize the dryout power and pressure-drop performances of the new fuel bundle. An experiment was performed to obtain dryout power measurements for verification of the ASSERT-PV code predictions. It was carried out using an electrically heated, Refrigerant-134a cooled, fuel bundle string simulator. The axial power profile of the simulator was uniform, while the radial power profile of the element rings was varied simulating profiles in bundles with various fuel compositions and burn-ups. Dryout power measurements are predicted closely using the ASSERT-PV code, particularly at low flows and low pressures, but are overpredicted at high flows and high pressures. The majority of data shows that dryout powers are underpredicted at low inlet-fluid temperatures but overpredicted at high inlet-fluid temperatures.

Validation of Serpent-SUBCHANFLOW-TRANSURANUS pin-by-pin burnup calculations using experimental data from the Temelín II VVER-1000 reactor

  • Garcia, Manuel;Vocka, Radim;Tuominen, Riku;Gommlich, Andre;Leppanen, Jaakko;Valtavirta, Ville;Imke, Uwe;Ferraro, Diego;Uffelen, Paul Van;Milisdorfer, Lukas;Sanchez-Espinoza, Victor
    • Nuclear Engineering and Technology
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    • v.53 no.10
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    • pp.3133-3150
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    • 2021
  • This work deals with the validation of a high-fidelity multiphysics system coupling the Serpent 2 Monte Carlo neutron transport code with SUBCHANFLOW, a subchannel thermalhydraulics code, and TRANSURANUS, a fuel-performance analysis code. The results for a full-core pin-by-pin burnup calculation for the ninth operating cycle of the Temelín II VVER-1000 plant, which starts from a fresh core, are presented and assessed using experimental data. A good agreement is found comparing the critical boron concentration and a set of pin-level neutron flux profiles against measurements. In addition, the calculated axial and radial power distributions match closely the values reported by the core monitoring system. To demonstrate the modeling capabilities of the three-code coupling, pin-level neutronic, thermalhydraulic and thermomechanic results are shown as well. These studies are encompassed in the final phase of the EU Horizon 2020 McSAFE project, during which the Serpent-SUBCHANFLOW-TRANSURANUS system was developed.