학술논문

Benchmarking of Graphite Reflected Critical Assemblies of UO2
Document Type
Conference
Author
Source
Conference: 2011 ANS Winter Meeting,Washington D.C.,10/30/2011,11/03/2011
Subject
11 NUCLEAR FUEL CYCLE AND FUEL MATERIALS
24 POWER TRANSMISSION AND DISTRIBUTION
73 NUCLEAR PHYSICS AND RADIATION PHYSICS
97 MATHEMATICAL METHODS AND COMPUTING BENCHMARKS
BERYLLIUM
CADMIUM
CRITICALITY
DISTRIBUTION
EVALUATION
FISSION
FUEL RODS
GRAPHITE
MANUALS
ORNL
POWER SYSTEMS
REACTIVITY COEFFICIENTS
REACTOR PHYSICS
RESEARCH PROGRAMS
SAFETY
VALIDATION
ZERO POWER REACTORS NESDPS Office of Nuclear Energy Space and Defense Power Systems
benchmark
Critical Assembly
Graphite Reflected
HEU
UO2
NESDPS Office of Nuclear Energy Space and Defense Power Systems
Language
English
Abstract
A series of experiments were carried out in 1963 at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Critical Experiments Facility (ORCEF) for use in space reactor research programs. A core containing 93.2% enriched UO2 fuel rods was used in these experiments. The first part of the experimental series consisted of 253 tightly-packed fuel rods (1.27 cm triangular pitch) with graphite reflectors [1], the second part used 253 graphite-reflected fuel rods organized in a 1.506 cm triangular pitch [2], and the final part of the experimental series consisted of 253 beryllium-reflected fuel rods with a 1.506 cm triangular pitch. [3] Fission rate distribution and cadmium ratio measurements were taken for all three parts of the experimental series. Reactivity coefficient measurements were taken for various materials placed in the beryllium reflected core. The first part of this experimental series has been evaluated for inclusion in the International Reactor Physics Experiment Evaluation Project (IRPhEP) [4] and the International Criticality Safety Benchmark Evaluation Project (ICSBEP) Handbooks, [5] and is discussed below. These experiments are of interest as benchmarks because they support the validation of compact reactor designs with similar characteristics to the design parameters for a space nuclear fission surface power systems. [6]