Abstract

The paper analyzes the cooling conditions of the control rods in the mixed core of the WWER-1000 reactor containing fuel assemblies of different vendors (TVSA, WFA/RWFA). The coolant heat-up in the guide thimbles due to own energy release in control rod materials and control rod temperatures required to justify safe operation were calculated for the most conservative case, when the core consists only of TVSAs with a standardized guide thimble inlet plug of NCCP. The energy release was obtained using the calculation method for the boron carbide absorber (B4C), dysprosium titanate (Dy2O3·TiO2), control rod cladding (42CrNiMo), water gap between the cladding and the guide thimble and in the guide thimble (zirconium alloy), fully immersed and 70% immersed RCCA 10th control group. The highest calculated energy release will be observed in fully immersed control rods with boron carbide material at the height position corresponding to the zone of maximum neutron fluence and will be 43.8 W/cm3. The maximum energy release of the 70% immersed (from the bottom of the core) 10th control group is 29.4 W/cm3 for fresh B4C. For the condition of the reactor facility at which the temperatures in FA guide thimbles are maximum, for a "fresh" control rod characterized by maximum energy release in the neutron-absorbing material, the maximum coolant heat-up in the guide thimbles does not exceed 28.9 °C, with the maximum coolant heat-up in FAs being 44 °C, and the maximum control rod cladding temperature not exceeding 335.6 °C at a coolant saturation temperature of 345.8 °C, which indicates that there will be no coolant boiling in the guide thimbles under operation. The maximum temperature typical for the central part of the control rod absorber and for the most conservative calculation for a "fresh" absorber is 529.6 °C, which is significantly lower the melting point of boron carbide, which is ~2350 °C. The maximum calculated temperature in the contact zone of the B4C absorber with control rod cladding is 348 °C. The performed calculations and further analysis of the results confirm that during operation of the RCCA control rods with both “fresh” and “burned-up” B4C, there will be no boiling of the coolant and melting of the absorber in the central part of the control rod. This means that the VVER-1000 core with TVSAs and WFAs/RWFAs and the RCCA rods are reliably cooled.

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