Abstract
The transfer function of a zero-power thermal reactor was successfully measured thanks to neutron noise techniques from 1 mHz to 160 Hz. During a month-long experimental campaign, the fluctuations of the neutron population in critical and subcritical configurations of the core were acquired using excore fission chambers and analysed through Cross-Power Spectral Density (CPSD) methodology. Firstly, the reactor’s kinetic parameters, i.e. prompt decay constant, effective delayed neutron fraction and generation time, were obtained at critical state. It required calibrating the reactor’s power, which was done by metal foil activation and measurement of the 235U fission rate. Secondly, these parameters were used to estimate the groups’ abundances of delayed neutrons from the CPSD measured in a sub-critical state. Fitting data with a point kinetic model was done with Bayesian inference - CONRAD and Stan programs were used. A very good agreement was found between experimental abundances and the ones computed with TRIPOLI-4 Monte-Carlo transport code and JEFF3.1.1 nuclear data library. Uncertainties on prior abundances between 6 % to 101 %, held mainly by nuclear data, were lowered down to 4 % to 54 %, depending on the delayed group.
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