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  • HTGR Reactor Physics, Thermal-Hydraulics and Depletion Uncertainty Analysis

    Closed for Proposals

    Project Type

    Coordinated Research Project

    Project Code

    I31020

    CRP

    1866

    Approved Date

    11 November 2011

    Project Status

    Closed

    Start Date

    19 April 2012

    Expected End Date

    18 April 2019

    Completed Date

    7 February 2023

    Participating Countries

    China

    Description

    The continued development of the High Temperature Gas Cooled Reactors (HTGRs) requires verification of HTGR design and safety features with reliable high fidelity physics models and robust, efficient, and accurate codes. The predictive capability of coupled neutronics/thermal-hydraulics simulations for reactor design and safety analysis can be assessed with sensitivity analysis (SA) and uncertainty analysis (UA) methods. Uncertainty originates from errors in physical data, manufacturing uncertainties, and modelling and computational algorithms. SA is helpful to partition the prediction uncertainty to various contributing sources of uncertainty and error. SA and UA is required to address cost, safety, and licensing needs and should be applied to all aspects of reactor multi-physics simulation. SA and UA can guide experimental, modelling, and algorithm research and development. Current SA and UA rely either on derivative based methods such as stochastic sampling methods or on generalized perturbation theory to obtain sensitivity coefficients. Neither approach addresses all needs.?In order to benefit from recent advances in modelling and simulation and the availability of new covariance data (nuclear data uncertainties) extensive sensitivity and uncertainty studies are needed for quantification of the impact of different sources of uncertainties on the design and safety parameters of HTGRs. Only a parallel effort in advanced simulation and in nuclear data improvement will be able to provide designers with more general and well validated calculation tools to meet design target accuracies.

    Objectives

    To contribute new knowledge towards improving the fidelity of calculational models in the design and safety analysis of high temperature gas-cooled reactors by fully accounting for all sources of uncertainty in calculations.

    Specific Objectives

    To determine the uncertainty in HTGR calculations at all stages of coupled reactor physics/thermal hydraulics and depletion calculations. In order to accomplish this objective a benchmark platform for uncertainty analysis in best-estimate coupled code calculations for design and safety analysis of HTGRs will be defined and utilized. The full chain of uncertainty propagation from basic data, engineering uncertainties, across different scales (multi-scale), and physics phenomena (multi-physics) will be tested on a number of benchmark exercises with maximum utilization of the available experimental data, published benchmark results and released design details.

    Impact

    VERY HIGH IMPACT
    During the CRP duration several PhD and Masters degrees has been completed based on the CRP topic and work including the examples below.
    PhD:
    ? Sineh F. Sihlangu, “Uncertainty and sensitivity analysis of aspects of the neutronics of a prismatic block-type HTGR”, 2020
    Masters:
    ? Fortune P. Molokwane, “Assessing the effect of using supercells instead of lattice blocks on multigroup cross sections of the MHTGR-350 reactor”, 2020
    ? Dumisani.A. Maretele, “Uncertainty analysis of the fuel compact of the prismatic high temperature gas-cooled reactor test problem using SCALE 6.1”, 2016
    This is still the main activity on uncertainties in HTGR analysis available today.

    Relevance

    The IAEA CRP on HTGRs was the only activity on uncertainties on HTGRs at the time and results were presented at many OECD-NEA uncertainty workshops. It also gave impetus to the additional development work at INL, and also at ORNL where the uncertainty evaluation of HTGRs were expanded within the SCALE code system. Several improvements and adjustments were made to SCALE and many other code systems due to the work performed.

    CRP Publications

    Joined paper: Germany, USA
    Journal paper: Annals of Nuclear Energy 90 (2016) 343–352
    2016
    Criticality calculations of the Very High Temperature Reactor Critical Assembly benchmark with Serpent and SCALE/KENO-VI

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