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Investigations of Rod Positions for Treat M8CAL Analyses
Author(s) -
Zachary Weems,
Sedat Goluoglu,
Mark D. DeHart
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of nuclear engineering and radiation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.278
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 2332-8983
pISSN - 2332-8975
DOI - 10.1115/1.4038929
Subject(s) - shutdown , nuclear engineering , transient (computer programming) , control rod , materials science , cladding (metalworking) , calibration , mechanics , reactivity (psychology) , graphite , physics , nuclear physics , computer science , composite material , engineering , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , quantum mechanics , operating system
The transient reactor test facility (TREAT), a graphite moderated experimental reactor, is scheduled to restart in late 2017. There is now renewed interest in development of capabilities to model and simulate the TREAT transients using three-dimensional coupled physics. To validate existing transient analysis tools as well as those under development, several temperature-limited transients have been modeled and analyzed. These transients are from the M8 calibration (M8CAL) experiment series, a set of experiments performed to calibrate the reactor detectors for the planned M8 series of fuel tests. Detailed reactor models were prepared that were then used to calculate the pretransient and post-transient keff values as well as corresponding reactivity insertions. Alterations to modeled values of shutdown and initial transient rod insertion depths were made to better match the reported experimental values of reactivity insertions assuming just critical pretransient states. It was found that two of the altered media inputs, fuel and Zircaloy-3 cladding, had significant effects on the keff. In addition, increasing shutdown rod insertion by 3–5 cm and decreasing initial transient rod insertion by 1–2 cm gave perfect pretransient keff and total reactivity insertion values. However, the revised positions are as much as a factor of 3–20 different from reported uncertainty of 0.762 cm. This suggests that boron concentration uncertainties may play a significant role in accurately modeling the TREAT transients and should be investigated thoroughly.

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