M .task/backlog.data M .task/completed.data M .task/pending.data M .task/undo.data A Class_Work/nuce2101/final/latex/SABO_NUCE2101_FINAL.pdf M Class_Work/nuce2101/final/latex/main.aux M Class_Work/nuce2101/final/latex/main.fdb_latexmk M Class_Work/nuce2101/final/latex/main.fls
188 lines
8.1 KiB
TeX
188 lines
8.1 KiB
TeX
\section*{Problem 10}
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\subsection*{Part A}
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To me, this looks like there was a major steam leak on the secondary side,
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temporarily increasing steam demand by a lot. I think this was on the secondary
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side because a primary side loss of coolant would be captured in the pressure
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data.
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\subsection*{Part B}
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\subsubsection*{Subpart 1}
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I'm going to assume a step change in reactivity, such that \(\dot \rho=0\).
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Because we're considering the first few milliseconds of the transient, we can
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ignore the contribution of precursors and delayed neutrons. This is an
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appropriate assumption because the fastest precursor is on the order of 300ms
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half-life. Much slower than our analysis.
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\[\frac{dn(t)}{dt} = \frac{n(t)(\rho - \beta)}{\Lambda}\]
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\[\frac{\dot n(t)}{n(t)} = \frac{(\rho - \beta)}{\Lambda}\]
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\[\frac{781.88}{26.06} = \frac{(\rho - 0.000650)}{0.00026}\]
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\[\rho = 0.008451\]
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\subsubsection*{Subpart 2}
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I would assume rise rate decreases so rapidly because fuel temperature would go
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through the roof and Doppler broadening would add a lot of negative reactivity.
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There is not enough time for any other physics to happen other than those at the
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quantum level.
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\subsection*{Part C}
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At near steady state (around 800 seconds on the chart), the reactor power and
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temperature have stabilized after the initial transient. We can estimate the
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moderator temperature coefficient using the relationship between reactivity
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change and temperature change.
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Given:
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\begin{itemize}
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\item Initial temperature: \(T_i = 600^\circ\)F
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\item Final temperature: \(T_f = 680^\circ\)F
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\item Temperature change: \(\Delta T = 80^\circ\)F
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\end{itemize}
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At near steady state, the reactor is critical, so the net reactivity is zero.
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The reactivity balance is:
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\[\rho_{net} = \rho_{inserted} + \alpha_m \Delta T = 0\]
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From Part B.1, we found the inserted reactivity:
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\[\rho_{inserted} = 0.008451 = 845.1 \text{ pcm}\]
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Solving for the moderator temperature coefficient:
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\[\alpha_m = -\frac{\rho_{inserted}}{\Delta T} = -\frac{845.1 \text{ pcm}}{80^\circ\text{F}}\]
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\[\boxed{\alpha_m \approx -10.6 \text{ pcm}/^\circ\text{F}}\]
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This value is reasonable for a PWR moderator temperature coefficient, typically
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ranging from -10 to -40 pcm/\(^\circ\)F depending on core conditions and boron
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concentration.
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\subsection*{Part D}
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Starting with the one delayed group prompt jump approximation:
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\[n(t) = \frac{\lambda_{eff} C(t) \Lambda + S\Lambda}{\beta - \rho}\]
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\[\dot C(t) = \frac{n(t)\beta}{\Lambda} - \lambda_{eff} C(t)\]
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To find \(\dot n(t)\), we take the implicit derivative of the first equation.
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Since both \(C(t)\) and \(\lambda_{eff}(t)\) can vary with time, we use the
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product rule:
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\[\dot n(t) = \frac{\Lambda}{\beta - \rho} \frac{d}{dt}[\lambda_{eff} C(t)] - \frac{\Lambda (\lambda_{eff} C + S)}{(\beta - \rho)^2} \dot \rho\]
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\[\dot n(t) = \frac{\Lambda}{\beta - \rho} \left[\dot \lambda_{eff} C(t) + \lambda_{eff} \dot C(t)\right] - \frac{\Lambda (\lambda_{eff} C + S)}{(\beta - \rho)^2} \dot \rho\]
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Substitute \(\dot C(t) = \frac{n(t)\beta}{\Lambda} - \lambda_{eff} C(t)\):
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\[\dot n(t) = \frac{\Lambda}{\beta - \rho} \left[\dot \lambda_{eff} C(t) + \lambda_{eff}\left(\frac{n(t)\beta}{\Lambda} - \lambda_{eff} C(t)\right)\right] - \frac{n(t)(\beta - \rho) + S\Lambda}{(\beta - \rho)^2} \dot \rho\]
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Simplify:
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\[\dot n(t) = \frac{\Lambda \dot \lambda_{eff} C(t)}{\beta - \rho} + \frac{\beta n(t)}{\beta - \rho} - \frac{\Lambda \lambda_{eff}^2 C(t)}{\beta - \rho} - \frac{n(t)\dot \rho}{\beta - \rho} - \frac{S\Lambda \dot \rho}{(\beta - \rho)^2}\]
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From the first equation: \(\lambda_{eff} C(t) \Lambda = n(t)(\beta - \rho) - S\Lambda\), so:
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\[\Lambda C(t) = \frac{n(t)(\beta - \rho) - S\Lambda}{\lambda_{eff}}\]
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After substitution and algebraic manipulation, we get:
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\[\frac{\dot n(t)}{n(t)} = \frac{\dot \rho + \frac{\dot \lambda_{eff}}{\lambda_{eff}}\left[(\beta - \rho) - \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}\right] + \lambda_{eff}\left(\rho + \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}\right)}{(\beta - \rho) + \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}}\]
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Power turning occurs when \(\dot n(t) = 0\):
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\[\dot \rho + \frac{\dot \lambda_{eff}}{\lambda_{eff}}\left[(\beta - \rho) - \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}\right] + \lambda_{eff}\left(\rho + \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}\right) = 0\]
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The key term \(\frac{\dot \lambda_{eff}}{\lambda_{eff}}\left[(\beta - \rho) - \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}\right]\) arises from the implicit derivative of the product \(\lambda_{eff} C(t)\). This accounts for the changing effective decay constant during the transient.
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\subsection*{Part E}
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Values estimated from graphs at t = 17.2s (power peak):
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\begin{itemize}
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\item \(\Delta T_{ave} \approx 611 - 600 = 11^\circ\)F
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\item \(\frac{d(\Delta T_{ave})}{dt} \approx \frac{620 - 600}{25 - 5} = 1.0^\circ\)F/s
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\item \(\lambda_{eff} \approx 0.13\) s\(^{-1}\)
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\item \(\dot \lambda_{eff} \approx 0.081\) s\(^{-2}\)
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\item From Part B.1: \(\rho_0 = 0.008451\) (845.1 pcm)
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\item From Part C: \(\alpha_m \approx -10.6\) pcm/\(^\circ\)F
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\item \(\beta = 0.0065\) (650 pcm)
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\end{itemize}
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At power turning (\(\dot n(t) = 0\)):
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\[\dot \rho + \frac{\dot \lambda_{eff}}{\lambda_{eff}}\left[(\beta - \rho) - \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}\right] + \lambda_{eff}\left(\rho + \frac{S\Lambda}{n(t)}\right) = 0\]
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Assuming negligible source term \(S \approx 0\) at high power:
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\[\dot \rho + \frac{\dot \lambda_{eff}}{\lambda_{eff}}(\beta - \rho) + \lambda_{eff} \rho = 0\]
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The reactivity includes both moderator and fuel temperature feedback:
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\[\rho(t) = \rho_0 + \alpha_m \Delta T_{ave} + \alpha_f \Delta T_{ave}\]
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\[\dot \rho = (\alpha_m + \alpha_f) \frac{d(\Delta T_{ave})}{dt}\]
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Substituting into the power turning equation:
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\[(\alpha_m + \alpha_f) \frac{d(\Delta T_{ave})}{dt} + \frac{\dot \lambda_{eff}}{\lambda_{eff}}\left[\beta - \left(\rho_0 + \alpha_m \Delta T_{ave} + \alpha_f \Delta T_{ave}\right)\right] + \lambda_{eff} \left(\rho_0 + \alpha_m \Delta T_{ave} + \alpha_f \Delta T_{ave}\right) = 0\]
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Solving numerically for \(\alpha_f\) using the given values:
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\begin{align*}
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\alpha_m &= -10.6 \times 10^{-5} \text{ per }^\circ\text{F} \\
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\rho &= 0.008451 + (-10.6 \times 10^{-5})(11) + \alpha_f (11) \\
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\dot \rho &= (-10.6 \times 10^{-5} + \alpha_f)(1.0)
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\end{align*}
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Using SymPy to solve:
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\[\boxed{\alpha_f \approx 7.96 \text{ pcm}/^\circ\text{F}}\]
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\textbf{Note:} This positive value is non-physical, as fuel temperature
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coefficients should always be negative due to Doppler broadening. This suggests
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the model assumptions may not be valid for this extreme transient.
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\textbf{Physical interpretation:} The only physically reasonable explanation for
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the continued increase in average coolant temperature even as power is turning
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is that the fuel temperature is much hotter than the moderator temperature and
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continues dumping heat into the coolant via conduction. This large temperature
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gradient between fuel and moderator violates our assumption that both can be
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approximated by \(\Delta T_{ave}\). The fuel has likely reached extreme
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temperatures above normal operating
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conditions while the moderator lags significantly behind. In a real scenario,
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fuel damage or melting would likely have occurred.
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\subsection*{Part F}
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\textbf{Recommendation: Do NOT restart this plant without extensive inspection
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and fuel integrity assessment.}
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The analysis reveals several concerning indicators:
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\textbf{Evidence of severe fuel damage:}
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\begin{itemize}
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\item The non-physical positive fuel temperature coefficient from Part E
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indicates the normal reactor physics models have broken down
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\item The continued increase in average coolant temperature even as power was
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turning suggests fuel temperature was far exceeding moderator temperature
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\item The extreme reactivity insertion (845 pcm) combined with the rapid power
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excursion likely caused fuel temperatures to reach damage thresholds
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\item Power rose extremely rapidly in the first few seconds, indicating
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prompt-critical-like behavior that would cause severe thermal stress
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\end{itemize}
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The fuel almost certainly experienced temperatures well
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beyond design limits. Cladding integrity is highly suspect. Restart should be
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prohibited until a comprehensive inspection confirms the core is safe to
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operate, and additional care should be paid to the chemistry of the coolant to
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look for zirconium or zirconium-irradiated products.
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