Uncertainty and sensitivity analysis applied to LWR neutronic and thermal-hydraulic calculations

Sammanfattning: The deterministic modeling of LWRs begins with the computation of energy‐collapsed and homogenizedmacroscopic cross‐sections by means of a lattice code. Once these parameters are functionalized as a functionof the reactor state variables and discretized in space, they are used as input variables by core simulators inorder to calculate the spatial distribution of the neutron flux and thus, the spatial distribution of the power.Once the power is determined, the thermal‐hydraulic variables are updated, and the process repeated untilconvergence. This thesis is divided in three different parts related to the possible neutronic and thermalhydraulicmodeling strategies. In the first part, microscopic cross‐section uncertainties based on two modernnuclear data libraries such as JENDL‐4 and ENDF/B‐VII.1 were derived in multi‐group format. These werepropagated through lattice calculations in order to perform uncertainty analysis on the infinite neutronmultiplication factor (???, and on two‐group homogenized macroscopic cross‐sections corresponding to a PWRfuel segment. The aim is to compare the uncertainty assessment on ?? and on the macroscopic cross‐sectionswhen the different nuclear libraries are employed. It was found that the computed uncertainties based onJENDL‐4 are much higher than the computed uncertainties based on ENDF/B‐VII.1. A sensitivity analysisshowed that the multi‐group variances of the Uranium‐235 fission reaction based on JENDL‐4 are very high,being this the main reason of the observed large discrepancies in the different uncertainty assessments.In the second part of the thesis, two types of uncertainty analyses were performed on core simulations. Thefirst one corresponds to the forward approach of input uncertainty propagation, where the input uncertainspace formed by the nodal two‐group macroscopic cross sections and diffusion coefficients is sampled bothwith SRS and LHS. The possible ranges of variation of such an input space are based on data from a depletioncalculation corresponding to the cycle 26 of the Swedish Ringhals‐1 BWR. The aim of this study is to comparethe efficiency of the uncertainty assessment performed on the nodal thermal flux when SRS and LHS areemployed. On the other hand, in the second type of uncertainty analysis presented in this chapter,discrepancies between spatial measured and calculated fluxes in Ringhals‐1 are used to perform an inverseuncertainty analysis on the spatial dependence of the different core parameters. This analysis is carried outusing Bayesian statistics, where, for a certain cycle, the frequency distributions of macroscopic cross‐sectionsand diffusion coefficients at every assembly node are updated based on the error distribution of the spatialthermal flux. Emphasis was made on performing uncertainty analysis as well on the coefficients of a nodalcross‐section model. Although a very simple model was derived, the aim is to propose an uncertaintyassessment based on replicated sampling techniques such as the general bootstrap method.Finally, in the third part of the thesis, uncertainty and sensitivity analyses were applied to thermal‐hydrauliccalculations. The objective is to show that when experimental data are available, uncertainty analysis can beused in the validation process of a BE code. Quantitative limits based on a statistical theory were computed tovalidate code thermal‐hydraulic features in predicting pressure drop, void fraction and critical heat flux basedon the macroscopic exercises of the OECD/NRC BWR Full‐Size Fine‐Mesh Bundle Test (BFBT) benchmark.The present study performs a realistic analysis of nuclear reactors, particularly in the uncertainty prediction ofimportant neutronic and thermal‐hydraulic parameters of light water reactors.

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