Successive collision calculation of resonance absorption (open access)

Successive collision calculation of resonance absorption

The successive collision method for calculating resonance absorption solves numerically the neutron slowing down problem in reactor lattices. A discrete energy mesh is used with cross sections taken from a Monte Carlo library. The major physical approximations used are isotropic scattering in both the laboratory and center-of-mass systems. This procedure is intended for day-to-day analysis calculations and has been incorporated into the current version of MUFT. The calculational model used for the analysis of the nuclear performance of LWBR includes this resonance absorption procedure. Test comparisons of results with RCPO1 give very good agreement.
Date: July 1, 1980
Creator: Schmidt, E. & Eisenhart, L.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Critical heat flux experiments in a circular tube with heavy water and light water. (open access)

Critical heat flux experiments in a circular tube with heavy water and light water.

Experiments were performed to establish the critical heat flux (CHF) characteristics of heavy water and light water. Testing was performed with the up-flow of heavy and of light water within a 0.3744 inch inside diameter circular tube with 72.3 inches of heated length. Comparisons were made between heavy water and light water critical heat flux levels for the same local equilibrium quality at CHF, operating pressure, and nominal mass velocity. Results showed that heavy water CHF values were, on the average, 8 percent below the light water CHF values.
Date: May 1980
Creator: Williams, C. L. & Beus, S. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Review of thorium-U233 cycle thermal reactor benchmark studies (open access)

Review of thorium-U233 cycle thermal reactor benchmark studies

A survey is made of existing integral experiments for U233 systems and thorium-uranium based fuel systems. The aim is to understand to what extent they give a consistent test of ENDF/B-IV nuclear data. A principal result is that ENDF/B-IV leads to an underprediction of neutron leakage. Results from testing alternate thorium data sets are presented. For one evaluation due to Leonard, the results depict a possible growing discrepancy between measured integral parameters such as rho/sup 02/ and I/sup 232/ and the differential data, which underpredicts these parameters. Sensitivities to other nuclear data components, notably the fission neutron spectrum, were determined. A new harder U233 spectrum significantly reduces a bias trend in K/sub eff/ vs leakage.
Date: March 1, 1980
Creator: Ullo, J.J.; Hardy, J. Jr. & Steen, N.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fission gas release from oxide fuels at high burnups (open access)

Fission gas release from oxide fuels at high burnups

The steady state gas release, swelling and densification model previously developed for oxide fuels has been modified to accommodate the slow transients in temperature, temperature gradient, fission rate and pressure that are encountered in normal reactor operation. The gas release predictions made by the model were then compared to gas release data on LMFBR-EBRII fuels obtained by Dutt and Baker and reported by Meyer, Beyer, and Voglewede. Good agreement between the model and the data was found. A comparison between the model and three other sets of gas release data is also shown, again with good agreement.
Date: February 1, 1981
Creator: Dollins, C. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Swelling and gas release in oxide fuels during fast transients (open access)

Swelling and gas release in oxide fuels during fast transients

The previously reported swelling and gas release model for oxide fuels has been modified to predict fission gas bahavior during fast temperature transients. Under steady state or slowly varying conditions it has been assumed in the previous model that the pressure caused by the fission gas within the gas bubbles is in equilibrium with the surface tension of the bubbles. During a fast transient, however, net vacancy migration to the bubbles may be insufficient to maintain this equilibrium. In order to ascertain the net vacancy flow, it is necessary to model the point defect behaviour in the fuel. This model is reported. Knowing the net flow of vacancies to the bubble, the bubble size, the diffusivity can be determined and the long range migration of the gas out of the fuel can be calculated. The model has also been modified to allow release of all the gas on the grain boundaries during a fast temperature transient.
Date: February 1, 1981
Creator: Dollins, C. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monte Carlo analysis of Pu-H/sub 2/O and UO/sub 2/-PuO/sub 2/-H/sub 2/O critical assemblies with ENDF/B-IV data (open access)

Monte Carlo analysis of Pu-H/sub 2/O and UO/sub 2/-PuO/sub 2/-H/sub 2/O critical assemblies with ENDF/B-IV data

A set of critical experiments, comprising thirteen homogeneous Pu-H/sub 2/O assemblies and twelve UO/sub 2/-PuO/sub 2/ lattices, was analyzed with ENDF/B-IV data and the RCPO1 Monte Carlo program, which modeled the experiments explicitly. Some major data sensitivities were also evaluated. For the Pu-H/sub 2/O assemblies, calculated K/sub eff/ averaged 1.011. The large (2.7%) scatter of K/sub eff/ values for these assemblies was attributed mostly to uncertainties in physical specifications since no clear trends of K/sub eff/ were evident and data sensitivities were insignificant. The UO/sub 2/-PuO/sub 2/ lattices showed just one trend of K/sub eff/, which indicated an overprediction of U238 capture consistent with that observed for uranium-H/sub 2/O experiments. There was however a approx. 1% discrepancy in calculated K/sub eff/ between the two sets of UO/sub 2/-PuO/sub 2/ lattices studied.
Date: April 1, 1981
Creator: Hardy, J. Jr. & Ullo, J.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monte Carlo analyses of simple U233 O/sub 2/-ThO/sub 2/ and U235 O/sub 2/-ThO/sub 2/ lattices with ENDF/B-IV data (open access)

Monte Carlo analyses of simple U233 O/sub 2/-ThO/sub 2/ and U235 O/sub 2/-ThO/sub 2/ lattices with ENDF/B-IV data

A number of water-moderated Th-U235 and Th-U233 lattice integral experiments were analyzed in a consistent manner, with ENDF/B-IV data and detailed Monte Carlo methods. These experiments provide a consistent test of the nuclear data. The ENDF/B-IV data are found to perform reasonably well. Adequate agreement is found with integral measurements of thorium capture. Calculated K/sub eff/ values show a generally coherent pattern which is consistent with K/sub eff/ results obtained for homogeneous aqueous critical assemblies. Harder prompt fission spectra for U233 and U235 can correct the principal discrepancy observed with ENDF/B-IV, a bias trend in K/sub eff/ attributed to an underprediction of leakage.
Date: September 1, 1980
Creator: Hardy, J. Jr. & Ullo, J.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Critical heat flux experiments in an internally heated annulus with a non-uniform, alternate high and low axial heat flux distribution (open access)

Critical heat flux experiments in an internally heated annulus with a non-uniform, alternate high and low axial heat flux distribution

Critical heat flux experiments were performed with an alternate high and low heat flux profile in an internally heated annulus. The heated length was 84 inches (213 cm) with a chopped wave heat flux profile over the last 24 inches (61 cm) having a maximum-to-average heat flux ratio of 1.26. Three test sections were employed: one with an axially uniform heat flux profile as a base case and two with 60 inch (152 cm) uniform and 24 inch (61 cm) alternating high and low heat flux sections. The third test section had a 2.15 inch (5.46 cm) section with a peak-to-average heat flux ratio of 2.19 (hot patch) superimposed at the exit end of the alternating high and low heat flux profile.
Date: February 1981
Creator: Beus, S. G. & Seebold, O. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermomechanical theory of materials undergoing large elastic and viscoplastic deformation (open access)

Thermomechanical theory of materials undergoing large elastic and viscoplastic deformation

A thermomechanical theory of large deformation elastic-inelastic material behavior is developed which is based on a multiplicative decomposition of the strain. Very general assumptions are made for the elastic and inelastic constitutive relations and effects such as thermally-activated creep, fast-neutron-flux-induced creep and growth, annealing, and strain recovery are compatible with the theory. Reduced forms of the constitutive equations are derived by use of the second law of thermodynamics in the form of the Clausius-Duhem inequality. Observer invariant equations are derived by use of an invariance principle which is a generalization of the principle of material frame indifference.
Date: November 1, 1980
Creator: Martin, S.E. & Newman, J.B.
System: The UNT Digital Library