Abstract

The work is devoted to the development of methodologies for determining the thermal and thermal-stress states of the main equipment in dry container storage facilities for spent nuclear fuel. Storage facilities of this type are most common for spent fuel of nuclear power reactors. The safety of storage equipment in terms of assessing its service life is not covered widely enough in the world scientific literature. In particular, there are no effective methods for calculating the thermal and thermal-stress states of the equipment that would take into account the influence of many external factors throughout the life of a storage facility. To assess the thermal state of the containers, forward conjugate heat transfer problems, accounting for the mutual heat transfer in both a solid body and in the fluid environment (air), are proposed to be solved. Based on the solution of the conjugate heat transfer problems, the boundary conditions are to be determined to further assess the thermal-stress state of storage containers using inverse heat transfer problems. The proposed approach to determining the thermal and thermal-stress states of a concrete spent fuel container will promote more effective methods for assessing the service life of dry spent fuel storage facilities, which is, in turn, necessary in the development of ageing management programs for storage equipment and long-term safe operation.

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