Abstract

An increasing interest on the development of highly accurate methodologies in reactor physics is nowadays observed, mainly stimulated by the availability of vast computational resources. As a result, an on-going development of a wide range of coupled calculation tools is observed within diverse projects worldwide. Under this framework, the McSAFE European Union project is a coordinated effort aimed to develop multiphysics tools based on Monte Carlo neutron transport and subchannel thermal-hydraulics codes. These tools are aimed to be suitable for high-fidelity calculations both for PWR and VVER reactors, with the final goal of performing pin-by-pin coupled calculations at full core scope including burnup. Several intermediate steps are to be analyzed in-depth before jumping into this final goal in order to provide insights and to identify resources requirements. As part of this process, this work presents the results for a pin-by-pin coupling calculation using the Serpent 2 code (developed by VTT, Finland) and the subchannel code SUBCHANFLOW (SCF, developed by KIT, Germany) for a full-core VVER model. For such purpose, a recently refurbished master-slave coupling scheme is used within a High Performance Computing architecture. A full-core benchmark for a VVER-1000 that provides experimental data is considered, where the first burnup step (i.e. fresh core at hot-full rated power state) is calculated. For such purpose a detailed (i.e. pin-by-pin) coupled Serpent-SCF model is developed, including a simplified equilibrium xenon distribution (i.e. by fuel assembly). Comparisons with main global reported results are presented and briefly discussed, together with a raw estimation of resources requirements and a brief demonstration of the inherent capabilities of the proposed approach. The results presented here provide valuable insights and pave the way to tackle the final goals of the on-going high-fidelity project.

Highlights

  • INTRODUCTIONThese analyses, usually identified as high-fidelity, tend to diminish the level of approximations in the involved coupled physics through the full-scope coupling of codes with high detail modelling capabilities

  • The McSAFE European Union project is a coordinated effort aimed to develop multiphysics tools based on Monte Carlo neutron transport and subchannel thermal-hydraulics codes

  • The McSAFE European Union project [2] is a coordinated effort aimed to develop multiphysics tools based on Monte Carlo (MC) neutron transport and subchannel thermal-hydraulics codes, suitable for high-fidelity calculations for PWR and VVER reactors for steady-state, burnup and transient calculations

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

These analyses, usually identified as high-fidelity, tend to diminish the level of approximations in the involved coupled physics through the full-scope coupling of codes with high detail modelling capabilities. In view of the stated high-fidelity goals, a series of detailed analysis are presented to show the potential capabilities of this scheme, together with the associated computational requirements

COUPLED SCHEME
Serpent 2
Coupling Serpent and SCF considering equilibrium xenon
VVER-1000 BENCHMARK TEST CASE DESCRIPTION
Serpent and SCF Models
RESULTS
Potential drawbacks and limitations: main resources requirement analysis
CONCLUSIONS
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