Abstract
This work on fuel dispersion aims at quantifying the design and safety of the MYRRHA nuclear reactor. A
number of accidents leading to the release of a secondary phase into the primary coolant loop are investigated.
Among these scenarios, an incident leading to the failure of one or more of the fuel pins is simulated
while the reactor is operating in nominal conditions, but also in natural convection regime either
during accident transients such as loss-of-flow or during the normal shut-down of the reactor.
Two single-phase CFD models of the MYRRHA reactor are constructed in ANSYS Fluent to represent the
reactor in nominal and natural convection conditions. An Euler–Lagrange approach with one-way coupling
is used for the flow and particle tracking. Firstly, a steady state RANS solution is obtained for each
of the three conditions. Secondly, the particles are released downstream from the core outlet and particle
distributions are provided over the coolant circuit. Their size and density are defined such that test cases
represent potential extremes that may occur. Analysis of the results highlights different particle behaviors,
depending essentially on gravity forces and kinematic effects. Statistical distributions highlight
potential accumulation regions that may form at the free-surfaces, on top of the upper diaphragm plate
or at the bottom of the vessel. These results help to localize regions of fuel accumulation in order to provide
insight for development of strategies for accident mitigation.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 137-146 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Nuclear Engineering and Design |
Volume | 312 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - 23 Jun 2016 |