Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 1 CH.VI: REACTIVITY BALANCE AND REACTOR CONTROL REACTIVITY BALANCE OPERATION AND CONTROL CHARACTERISTIC TIMES INTRODUCTION TO PERTURBATION THEORY NEUTRON IMPORTANCE REACTIVITY COEFFICIENTS DEFINITION EXAMPLES LONG-TERM NEED FOR REACTIVITY CONTROL CONTEXT ISOTOPE CONCENTRATION EVOLUTION XENON EFFECT XENON POISONING XENON OSCILLATIONS MEANS TO ENSURE CONTROL EXTERNAL MEANS REACTIVITY EVOLUTION
2
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 2 VI.1 REACTIVITY BALANCE OPERATION AND CONTROL Variation of the reactor parameters reactivity Loss of the neutron cycle equilibrium transient Control Criticality to maintain/manage in all circumstances: power, shutdown, cold shutdown, new/used fuel, whatever q ty of fission products… Reactivity margins: available at any moment same magnitude as and opposite sign to the reactivity change caused by any factor affecting Characteristic time comparable to that on which occurs
3
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 3 CHARACTERISTIC TIMES Some orders of magnitude Consumption of fissile matter1000 h Xenon effect (see below)10 h Delayed n10 s Circulation of coolant in the primary circuit10 s Transit of the coolant in the core1 s Heat transfer from the fuel element to the coolant 0.1 s Asymptotic period at the prompt-critical threshold for =10 -8 s (small fast reactor) 10 -3 s Mean lifetime of the n10 -3 - 10 -8 s
4
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 4 INTRODUCTION TO PERTURBATION THEORY Necessity to be able to compute in all situations In practice, calculation of rarely possible because Actual reactor geometry ideal geometry used in the computations Presence of detectors in the core Consummation and production of isotopes = non-uniform f(t) Simple way to estimate : perturbation from a reference stationary state Perturbed state:
5
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 5 Let : arbitrary weight function Static reactivity: If : solution of the adjoint reference problem Reference statePerturbed state JoJo J = J o + J KoKo K = K o + K oo = o + 0 ()() 1 st order
6
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 6 NEUTRON IMPORTANCE Physical meaning of the adjoint flux Introduction of 1 n at point with velocity in a critical reactor secondary n and Corresponding augmentation of ? The more important the added n, the larger the increase Consider a reaction rate with Importance H(P) of a n – entering a collision at P – for R? Direct contribution due to a collision at point P: f(P) Expected contribution due to the next collisions: (see chap.2)
7
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 7 Adjoint equation: H(P) *(P) Expression of the reaction rate based on importance? n emitted by the source, then transported to a 1 st collision Adjoint transport problem in differential form + adjoint BC for a reactor in vacuum: no importance of the outgoing n through One speed case: ifsolution of the direct problem on the volume V of the reactor with BC in vacuum, then solution of the adjoint problem with adjoint BC in vacuum
8
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 8 Adjoint diffusion problem with BC at the extrapolated boundary One speed diffusion diffusion operator: self-adjoint * (at a c st ) Ex: impact of a cross section variation: Variation of weighted by the flux squared Application: of a control rod more important at mid-height in the core
9
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 9 VI.2 REACTIVITY COEFFICIENTS DEFINITION Reactivity variations calculable by perturbation theory Trace back the causes of the variations of J and K ? Modification of the isotope density Dilatation due to the of t o Production/destruction of isotopes Void rate (BWR mainly) Move of matter (expulsion of coolant outside the core) Modification of microscopic cross sections Doppler effect (see chap.VIII) NB: Effects due to variations of power, or of fuel or coolant t o
10
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 10 Variation T c of the fuel t o One speed diffusion model: Let, with c : mean t o and the spatial distribution of T c. If perturbation T c only affects c : < 0 (dilatation) > 0 (Doppler) 0 : reactivity coefficient
11
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 11 In general N independent parameters i N reactivity coef. s.t. EXAMPLES Power coefficient If i fct of , hence of P: Doppler coefficient Two t o to account for: fuel T c and moderator T m < 0 for stability! (Doppler effect) and Both < 0 Fast variationsSlower variations
12
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 12 VI.3 LONG-TERM NEED FOR REACTIVITY CONTROL CONTEXT Time-dependent issues considered up to now (see chap.V) on time scales characteristic of prompt/delayed n generation Longer-term time-dependent effects to be considered in the neutron balance: consumption of fissile material, decay of fission products… Interaction: material consumption/production dependent on , which in turn depends on the material composition of the reactor Reaction rates (Boltzmann)
13
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 Time scales likely to be different, however Usually: flux calculations with N i constant at each time step t of the irradiation history of the fuel (from ‘begin of cycle’ (BOC) till ‘end of cycle’ (EOC)) then N i evolution (via a depletion code) at the end of the time step with constant Burnup calculations 13 Irradiation history T BOC T EOC ∆t (possibility to do better than an explicit Euler scheme but calculations of are time-consuming)
14
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 14 ISOTOPE CONCENTRATION EVOLUTION Source balance for isotope i Positive sources Isotope i as a fission fragment (fraction ji of fissions with j) Isotope i as a result of a n capture by isotope ‘i-1’ Radioactive decay from parent isotopes Negative sources Isotope i absorbing (capture + fission) a n Radioactive decay to daughter isotopes (Bateman equations)
15
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 15 VI.4 XENON EFFECT XENON POISONING a (Xe 135 ) = 2.7 10 6 barn at 2200 ms -1 (thermal) !! Particular role among all fission products Production? Let X, I be the atomic densities of Xe 135 and I 135 (stable) Fission I = 0.061 X = 0.003 < 0.5 min 6.7 h9.2 h2.6 10 6 ans ( a (I 135 ) neglected) ( I = 2.89 10 -5 s -1 ) ( X = 2.09 10 -5 s -1 ) Linked to the current Linked to the before (Bateman equations) (Q: other assumptions?)
16
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 16
17
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 17 In stationary regime with constant flux: Saturation in Xe for Let : ratio of the nb of n absorbed by Xe over the nb of fission n Reactivity (1G diffusion) : Positive reactivity margin to have in store! and (U 235 )
18
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 18 Reactor shutdown in asymptotic regime We have [Xe] increases due to disintegration of I 135 without destruction by the n flux ([Xe] maximum after 11h), then decreases If starting from a stationary regime, [Xe] first before Negative reactivity following the maximum in [Xe] Other isotope (poison) with similar effects: Sm (U 235 )
19
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 19 XENON OSCILLATIONS Reactor of large size, i.e. R(radius)/L(diffusion length) >> 1 Sufficiently distant regions: Both critical Might be seen as +/- uncoupled TimingZone 1Zone 2 t = 0 starts to swing Short tConc.Xe?Production? Mainly due to fission 10h earlier (see I >> X ) Destruction? Present fission X X X Reactivity? <0 >0 Swing increased Longer tConc.Xe?XX XX Reactivity? >0 <0 Swing reversed … Accurate calculation? Complex (no point kinetics!) Risks? Power peaks, but long characteristic time Easily detected Mitigation? Differential insertion of the control rods
20
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 20 VI.5 MEANS TO ENSURE CONTROL EXTERNAL MEANS Control rods Highly absorbing isotopes (e.g. Ag 80%, In 15%, Cd 5%) Impenetrable for thermal n Decreasing in their neighborhood Reactivity source > or < 0 in normal operation Prompt anti-reactivity source if scram Chemical poisons Boric acid: uniformly distributed reactivity source spatial power distribution unchanged
21
PHYS-H406 – Nuclear Reactor Physics – Academic year 2013-2014 21 Consumable poisons (e.g. borate pyrex rods B 2 O 3 ) Isotopes with high , initially put inside the reactor and depleted because of the (n, ) reaction of a and compensation for: of a due to fission products of ( f - a ) due to the depletion of the fissile matter REACTIVITY EVOLUTION Cold reactor, P = 0, no poisons (Xe, Sm): k eff = 1.229 Reactor in power, poisons in a steady state: k eff = 1.126 cause due to the of both the moderator and fuel t o Criticality? Obtained by partly inserting the control rods (PWR with fresh fuel)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.