Abstract

Abstract Thermalhydraulic analyses using subchannel codes (e.g., ASSERT-PV) are performed as a support tool to evaluate safety margins and the key parameters. Advanced fuels have recently attracted the international community's interest to improve safety margins during normal operation and accident scenarios by utilizing special coatings and barriers in a heterogeneous, multiregion, multicoating, multiclad annular fuel. In addition, advanced fuels improve the performance characteristics such as a higher burnup and better uranium utilization. Therefore, there is a need to understand the implications of such advanced unconventional fuels for the landscape of the Canadian nuclear industry and Canadian policy for energy development. In this work, subchannel thermalhydraulic analysis of a small modular reactor based on pressurized water reactor technology (PWR-small modular reactor (SMR)) core is performed using ASSERT-PV. A benchmark of a 17 × 17 fuel assembly with conventional fuel elements in comparison to PWR-SMR specification was conducted. The advanced fuel element system is also investigated and compared with the conventional one. The results indicated that the advanced fuel achieves a significant reduction in fuel element temperature by 15%. In addition, the results revealed that the proposed advanced fuel could achieve a minimum critical heat flux ratio (MCHFR) higher than the conventional fuel by 17%.

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