Abstract

Light-water reactor cores are commonly surrounded by a stainless steel and water reflector. The reflectors are improving power distribution in the core, reducing the leakage of neutrons and thus also protecting the pressurized vessel from the neutron irradiation and the following embrittlement. Contrary to the standard procedures utilized for generation of the fuel assembly data, the reflector elements require a special approach. The major difficulty with the reflectors is represented by an absence of neutron sources in the reflector elements. Some artificial neutron source simulating the realistic source of neutrons from neutron leakage from the surrounding fuel assemblies must be added in the calculation model. The reflector data in the full-core calculations have a great impact on the power distribution in the core. The research in this field is usually focused on the square geometry, and therefore the accurate data for the hexagonal geometry are lacking. Improvements in this area are needed. Training Reactor VR-1 is used for measurements related to nuclear engineering. Department of Nuclear Reactors operating this reactor at the Czech Technical University in Prague is currently designing reflector elements containing stainless steel in order to provide measurable characteristics that can be compared to calculations realized by either Monte-Carlo codes or macroscopic core simulators. This article summarizes the methodology of development of the reflector assemblies to improve their similarity with the VVER-1000 reflector. The impact of the evaluated nuclear data is assessed. Further improvements of the proposed design is necessary to reach better agreement with the neutron spectrum in VVER-1000 reactor reflectors. The influence of evaluated data on the global characteristics was found negligible.

Highlights

  • The less efficient neutron thermalization in the reflector assemblies is clearly visible from the thermal flux distribution shift

  • The stainless steel reflectors are in the positions C6, D7, and E6 of the VR-1 reactor core

  • The plot in figure 12 shows the differences between individual reflector types in the VVER-1000 core for the beginning of cycle (BOC) and the reflector design 1 in the position C6 in the VR-1 reactor

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Summary

Motivation for Research

The reflectors from water and stainless steel surrounding a reactor core reduce leakage of neutrons and decrease the reactor vessel damaging fast neutron flux. There is no definite methodology to generate the macroscopic data in the non-fuel regions available. They influence both the reactor core reactivity and the power distribution in the core. Training reactor VR-1 is used for measurements related to nuclear engineering and it is equipped with multiple experimental devices to study various phenomena related to the nuclear reactor operation.

Training Reactor VR-1
Procedures
VVER-1000 and VR-1 reflector configurations
Flux distribution
Conclusions
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