Abstract

System Analysis Module (SAM) is a system-level thermal hydraulics code being developed at Argonne National Laboratory for advanced nuclear reactor analysis. In addition to a wide range of interests from the advanced reactor design community, SAM has also been adopted by the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission’s suite of codes purposed for advanced reactor licensing. Nevertheless, the code is still under active development and new capabilities are being added to address various modeling and simulation challenges for advanced reactor analysis. One such phenomenon important to the thermal behavior of some advanced reactor concepts is radiative heat transfer (radHT). Conditions, such as high temperatures and long optical paths, increase the radiative contributions from solids and coolants alike. This paper discusses the development of radHT modeling in SAM and describes the new capabilities provided for thermal analysis. Depending on the geometry and temperatures of the system at hand, as well as the coolant in question, thermal transfer due to thermal radiation will vary dramatically. Therefore, the ability to model variable radiative systems was maintained as a priority during development of SAM radHT modeling. This newly developed simulation feature provides a flexible solid-to-fluid radiative heat transfer framework necessary for SAM to perform accurate analysis for advanced reactor designs. Test cases are also presented and shown to match analytical solutions, which demonstrate the radHT model’s efficacy.

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