Abstract
Molten salt reactors have gained substantial interest in recent years due to their flexibility and their potential for simplified closed fuel cycle operation for massive net-zero energy production. However, a zero-power reactor experiment will be an essential first step in the process of delivering this technology. The topic of the control and shutdown for a zero-power reactor is, for the first time, introduced through a literature review and a reduction in the control approaches to a limited number of basic functions with different variations. In the following, the requirements for the control and shutdown systems for a reactor experiment are formulated, and based on these assessments, an approach for the shutdown, i.e., splitting the lower part of the core with a reflector, and an approach for the control, i.e., a vertically movable radial reflector, are proposed. Both systems will be usable for a zero-power system with a liquid as well as a solid core, and even more importantly, both systems somehow work at the integral system level without disturbing the central part of the core which will be the essential area for the experimental measurements. Both approaches were investigated as a singular system, in addition to their interactions with one another and the sensitivity of the control system. This study demonstrates that both proposed systems are able to deliver the required characteristics with a sufficient shutdown margin and a sufficiently wide control span. The interaction of the system is shown to be manageable, and the sensitivity is at a very good level. The multi-group Monte Carlo approach was cross-evaluated by a continuous energy test, leading to good results, but they also demonstrate that there is room for improvement.
Highlights
In the development of innovative reactor systems, zero or very low power experiments have historically been seen as the first step in the development of a new reactor program or a new technology [1]
A zero-power reactor experiment for a molten salt reactor is significantly different to the existing heterogeneous experiments based on pins with the requirement to understand the effects of heterogeneity
The serial studies on enrichment variation and the analysis of the effect of the removal of the reflector are based on another code of the SCALE package, POLARIS [27], which normally provides a 2D lattice physics analysis capability that uses a multi-group self-shielding method called the embedded self-shielding method (ESSM) and a transport solver based on the method of characteristics (MoC)
Summary
In the development of innovative reactor systems, zero or very low power experiments have historically been seen as the first step in the development of a new reactor program or a new technology [1]. In the most recent zero-power experiments for accelerator-driven systems, YALINA [22] and GUINEVERE [23], the control and shutdown function was provided through accelerator beam control Based on this literature overview on control and shutdown mechanisms, the work we provide here will aim to develop and evaluate diverse control and shutdown approaches as well as their interplay on the control and shutdown of a homogeneous critical zeropower experiment for a potential molten salt fast reactor through the use of a multitude of modeling and simulation results using different tools of the SCALE package. Control via a vertically movable radial reflector as a movable sleeve around the reactor Both systems will be usable for a zero-power system with a liquid as well as a solid core, and even more importantly, both systems should somehow work at the integral system level without disturbing the central part of the core, which will be the essential area for the experimental measurements. Their interaction and the sensitivity of the control system will be investigated in the following through the use of a multitude of modeling and simulation results using deterministic and Monte Carlo tools of the SCALE package
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