Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9824461 Annals of Nuclear Energy 2005 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
Safety analyses of Accelerator Driven Systems (ADSs) are mainly performed by codes developed in the past for critical reactors, a point-kinetics model for computing the transient power being often employed. It is shown that this model - that assumes time-independent neutron direct and adjoint flux shapes - may be inaccurate in the ADS case even if it is acceptable for a similar “critical” case. Although the material distribution remains almost unchanged, flux (power) shape variations may be significant in the first case due to external source related effects. An option for a more refined modelling of the neutron adjoint flux in ADS analyses is discussed. This option is shown to be rather complicated in the general case: it may give rise to involvement of several adjoint flux shapes and several sets of related point-kinetics parameters (reactivity, etc.). To improve the accuracy of the point-kinetics treatment, an extended point-kinetics model, which employs several flux (or power) shapes precomputed at steady-state conditions, is proposed in the paper. This approach may help to avoid the spatial kinetics treatment if no strong material movement occurs. The reactivity and other point-kinetics parameters are defined similarly to a critical reactor.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Authors
, ,