Abstract

Advances in computational architecture have prompted a resurgence in the simulation of reactor transients from first principles. Most codes are unable to simulate transient events with complex models, and require numerous approximations. The code T-ReX (Transient-Reactor eXperiment simulator), an extensive update to TDKENO, has been developed as a transient analysis tool with few geometric limitations, and minimal theoretical approximations. T-ReX achieves this by employing the Improved Quasi-Static (IQS) method to solve the time-dependent Boltzmann transport equation with explicit representation of delayed neutrons. The primary change in T-ReX relative to TDKENO is the incorporation of a modified version of the Monte Carlo code KENO-VI to calculate the flux shape and model the geometry of a problem. Using KENO-VI to model systems allows exact representation of the geometry. The changes to T-ReX are verified by comparison of solutions to computational benchmark problems found with a previous version of TDKENO that made use of KENO V.a, and several other codes with time-dependent capabilities. In addition, a three-dimensional KENO-VI model of the Transient Reactor Test Facility (TREAT) core is used in simulations of several temperature-limited transient experiments from the M8 Calibration series. T-ReX produces results that agree with benchmark problems and are in better agreement with TREAT experimental data than TDKENO.

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