Abstract

The possibility of instabilities in future nuclear reactors cooled by supercritical water is a matter of concern due to sharp changes in thermodynamic properties of coolant within the core. In the present work, a lumped parameter dynamic model of supercritical water-cooled reactor has been developed for analysis of coupled neutronic-thermohydraulic instabilities. The coolant channel is divided into two nodes with a moving boundary between them. The heater wall dynamics is described by a lumped parameter energy balance. Point neutron kinetics with one group of delayed neutrons has been used to model the power dynamics. Simple non-dimensional equations of state have been obtained for evaluating thermodynamic properties. Stability analysis has been done for various values of parameters such as the reactor power, coolant mass flow rate and inlet temperature. Stability maps have been plotted in the parameter planes. Dynamic simulations have been performed in the time domain to study the nature of operating transients. The stability analysis with neutronics is found to be more conservative. Transient simulations without neutronics indicate a supercritical Hopf bifurcation and the existence of a stable limit cycles in the unstable region. However, simulations with coupled neutronics indicate a subcritical Hopf bifurcation and the existence of unstable limit cycles in the stable region. Therefore, the analysis with neutronics is more conservative and shows that the system can be unstable for large perturbations, even if it is stable for small perturbations.

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