Back to Search Start Over

Neutronic performance of fully ceramic microencapsulated of uranium oxycarbide and uranium nitride composite fuel in SMR.

Authors :
Al-Zahrani, Yahya A.
Mehboob, Khurram
Mohamad, Daud
Alhawsawi, Abdulsalam
Abolaban, Fouad A.
Source :
Annals of Nuclear Energy. Jun2021, Vol. 155, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

• Analysis of Tri-Structural isotropic (TRISO) layers Fuel in SMART. • Converting SMART UO 2 core to the UCO and UN core. • Reducing the amount of 238U by using FCM concept. • Enhancing the retention of the fission product. The existing commercial nuclear power plants (PWR and BWR) utilize the oxide fuels, i.e., UO 2. This fuel selection is not questionable, where the safety and economy are the top priority in the nuclear industry. In this work, the potential advantages of microencapsulated fuels to System Integrated Modular Advanced Reactor "SMART" has been explored. The UN and UCO have been considered as the candidate fuel material for the SMART reactor. The detailed design and fuel assembly configurations with different fuel types of the SMART reactor have been investigated for criticality with depletion (burn up), fuel and moderator temperature coefficients, and power peaking factor using OpenMC. The fissile and fertile fuel elements with coated particles are embedded in graphite matrices. The results are presented with a review of attributes and potential benefits. The nitride fuel has an advantage of mechanical stability, enhanced thermal conductivity, and high fuel density compared to dioxide fuel (UO 2). The melting point of standard fuel, UN, and UCO are similar. Thus, they have higher safety margins under NPP's operating conditions. Therefore, nitride (UN) and carbide (UCO) fuel types are more attractive than standard uranium oxides because they are safer and beneficial. The dioxide fuel (UO 2) is considered as the reference and compared with candidate material. The neutronic assessment within SMART core specification examined the effective multiplication factor, thermal flux distribution, axial and radial power distribution, and power peaking factor at the beginning, and end of the fuel cycle. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03064549
Volume :
155
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Annals of Nuclear Energy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149332355
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anucene.2021.108152