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AN MCNP PARAMETRIC STUDY OF GEORGE C. LAURENCE'S SUBCRITICAL PILE EXPERIMENT
Author(s) -
Ruxandra Dranga,
L. Blomeley,
Rebecca Carrington
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
aecl nuclear review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1929-6371
pISSN - 1929-8056
DOI - 10.12943/anr.2014.00037
Subject(s) - george (robot) , nuclear engineering , nuclear physics , criticality , nuclear science , nuclear fission , nuclear data , fission , parametric statistics , physics , engineering , neutron , art history , history , mathematics , statistics
In the early 1940s at the National Research Council (NRC) Laboratories in Ottawa, Canada, Dr. George Laurence conducted several experiments to determine if a sustained nuclear fission chain reaction in a carbon–uranium arrangement (or “pile”) was possible. Although Dr. Laurence did not achieve criticality, these pioneering experiments marked a significant historical event in nuclear science, and they provided a valuable reference for subsequent experiments that led to the design of Canada’s first heavy-water reactors at the Chalk River Nuclear Laboratories. This paper summarizes the results of a recent collaborative project between Atomic Energy of Canada Limited and the Deep River Science Academy undertaken to numerically explore the experiments carried out at the NRC Laboratories by Dr. Laurence, while teaching high school students about nuclear science and technology. In this study, a modern Monte Carlo reactor physics code, MCNP6, was utilized to identify and study the key parameters impacting the subcritical pile’s neutron multiplication factor (e.g., moderation, geometry, material impurities) and quantify their effect on the extent of subcriticality. The findings presented constitute the first endeavour to model, using a current computational reactor physics tool, the seminal experiment that provided the foundation of Canada’s nuclear science and technology program.

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