• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 4
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

The development of a novel technique for characterizing the MICE muon beam and demonstrating its suitability for a muon cooling measurement

Rayner, Mark Alastair January 2012 (has links)
The International Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) is designed to demonstrate the currently untested technique of ionization cooling. Theoretically, this process can condition the high quality muon beams required to build a neutrino factory or muon collider which will be the next generation of machines for the study of Particle Physics. The beam line to transport muons into the MICE cooling channel lattice cell was installed in December 2009. Step I of the experimental programme, whose goal was to demonstrate that the beam line can generate beams similar to those expected in a neutrino factory cooling channel, was completed in August 2010. Methods were developed to use time difference measurements in the MICE time of flight counters (TOFs) to obtain a transverse spatial resolution of approximately 10 mm and to track muons through the focusing elements of the beam line, thus allowing the trace space vectors of individual muons to be reconstructed and their integrated path length to be calculated. The TOFs were used to make an absolute measurement of the momentum of muons with zero bias and a systematic error of less than 3 MeV/c. The measured trace space vectors of single muons were used to estimate the emittances and approximate optical parameters of eighteen muon beams. The results of beam line simulations were compared with the measurements and, once the effects of experimental resolution had had been included, found to be in good agreement. A sample of individual muons whose phase space vectors had been measured was injected into a simulation of the full MICE cooling channel; the beam was found to be suitable for demonstrating muon cooling, although some fine tuning of the cooling channel optics will eventually be required.
2

Neutronic study of the mono-recycling of americum in PWR and of the core conversion INMNSR using the MURE code

Sogbadji, Robert 11 July 2012 (has links) (PDF)
The MURE code is based on the coupling of a Monte Carlo static code and the calculation of the evolution of the fuel during irradiation and cooling periods. The MURE code has been used to analyse two different questions, concerning the mono-recycling of Am in present French Pressurized Water Reactor, and the conversion of high enriched uranium (HEU) used in the Miniature Neutron Source Reactor in Ghana into low enriched uranium (LEU) due to proliferation resistance issues. In both cases, a detailed comparison is made on burnup and the induced radiotoxicity of waste or spent fuel. The UOX fuel assembly, as in the open cycle system, was designed to reach a burn-up of 46GWd/T and 68GWd/T. The spent UOX was reprocessed to fabricate MOX assemblies, by the extraction of Plutonium and addition of depleted Uranium to reach burn-ups of 46GWd/T and 68GWd/T, taking into account various cooling times of the spent UOX assembly in the repository. The effect of cooling time on burnup and radiotoxicity was then ascertained. Spent UOX fuel, after 30 years of cooling in the repository required higher concentration of Pu to be reprocessed into a MOX fuel due to the decay of Pu-241. Americium, with a mean half-life of 432 years, has high radiotoxic level, high mid-term residual heat and a precursor for other long lived isotope. An innovative strategy consists of reprocessing not only the plutonium from the UOX spent fuel but also the americium isotopes which dominate the radiotoxicity of present waste. The mono-recycling of Am is not a definitive solution because the once-through MOX cycle transmutation of Am in a PWR is not enough to destroy all the Am. The main objective is to propose a "waiting strategy" for both Am and Pu in the spent fuel so that they can be made available for further transmutation strategies. The MOXAm (MOX and Americium isotopes) fuel was fabricated to see the effect of americium in MOX fuel on the burn-up, neutronic behavior and on radiotoxicity. The MOXAm fuel showed relatively good indicators both on burnup and on radiotoxicity. A 68GWd/T MOX assembly produced from a reprocessed spent 46GWd/T UOX assembly showed a decrease in radiotoxicity as compared to the open cycle. All fuel types understudy in the PWR cycle showed good safety inherent feature with the exception of the some MOXAm assemblies which have a positive void coefficient in specific configurations, which could not be consistent with safety features. The core lifetimes of the current operating 90.2% HEU UAl fuel and the proposed 12.5% LEU UOX fuel of the MNSR were investigated using MURE code. Even though LEU core has a longer core life due to its higher core loading and low rate of uranium consumption, the LEU core will have it first beryllium top up to compensate for reactivity at earlier time than the HEU core. The HEU and LEU cores of the MNSR exhibited similar neutron fluxes in irradiation channels, negative feedback of temperature and void coefficients, but the LEU is more radiotoxic after fission product decay due to higher actinides presence at the end of its core lifetime.
3

Neutronic study of the mono-recycling of americum in PWR and of the core conversion INMNSR using the MURE code / Étude neutronique du mono-recyclage de l'Américium en REP et la conversion du coeur MNSR à l'aide du code MURE

Sogbadji, Robert 11 July 2012 (has links)
Le code MURE est basé sur le couplage d’un code Monte Carlo statique et le calcul de l’évolution pendant l’irradiation et les différentes périodes du cycle (refroidissement, fabrication). Le code MURE est ici utilisé pour analyser deux différentes questions : le mono-recyclage de l’Am dans les réacteurs français de type REP et la conversion du coeur du MNSR (Miniature Neutron Source Reactor) au Ghana d’un combustible à uranium hautement enrichi (HEU) vers un combustible faiblement enrichi (LEU), dans le cadre de la lutte contre la prolifération. Dans les deux cas, une comparaison détaillée est menée sur les taux d’irradiation et les radiotoxicités induites (combustibles usés, déchets).Le combustible UOX envisagé est enrichi de telle sorte qu’il atteigne un taux d’irradiation de 46 GWj/t et 68 GWj/t. Le combustible UOX usé est retraité, et le retraitement standard consiste à séparer le plutonium afin de fabriquer un combustible MOX sur base d’uranium appauvri. La concentration du Pu dans le MOX est déterminée pour atteindre un taux d’irradiation du MOX de 46 et 68 GWj/t. L’impact du temps de refroidissement de l’UOX usé est étudié (5 à 30 ans), afin de quantifier l’impact de la disparition du 241PU (fissile) par décroissance radioactive (T=14,3 ans). Un refroidissement de 30 ans demande à augmenter la teneur en Pu dans le MOX. L’241Am, avec une durée de vie de 432 ans, jour un rôle important dans le dimensionnement du site de stockage des déchets vitrifiés et dans leur radiotoxicité à long terme. Il est le candidat principal à la transmutation, et nous envisageons donc son recyclage dans le MOX, avec le plutonium. Cette stratégie permet de minimiser la puissance résiduelle et la radiotoxicité des verres, en laissant l’Am disponible dans les MOX usés pour une transmutation éventuelle future dans les réacteurs rapides. Nous avons étudié l’impact neutronique d’un tel recyclage. Le temps de refroidissement de l’UOX est encore plus sensible ici car l’241Am recyclé est un fort poison neutronique qui dégrade les performances du combustible (taux d’irradiation, coefficients de vide et de température). Néanmoins, à l’exception de quelques configurations, le recyclage de l’Am ne dégrade pas les coefficients de sûreté de base. Le réacteur MNSR du Ghana fonctionne aujourd’hui avec de l’uranium enrichi à 90,2% (HEU), et nous étudions ici la possibilité de le faire fonctionner avec de l’uranium enrichi à 12,5%, en passant d’un combustible sur base d’aluminium à un oxyde. Les simulations ont été menées avec le code MURE, et montrent que le coeur LEU peut-être irradié plus longtemps, mais demande d’intervenir plus tôt sur le pilotage en jouant sur la quantité de béryllium en coeur. Les flux de neutrons dans les canaux d’irradiation sont similaires pour les coeurs HEU et LEU, de même pour les coefficients de vide. Le combustible LEU usé présente cependant une radiotoxicité et une chaleur résiduelle plus élevée, du fait de la production plus importante de transuraniens pendant l’irradiation. / The MURE code is based on the coupling of a Monte Carlo static code and the calculation of the evolution of the fuel during irradiation and cooling periods. The MURE code has been used to analyse two different questions, concerning the mono-recycling of Am in present French Pressurized Water Reactor, and the conversion of high enriched uranium (HEU) used in the Miniature Neutron Source Reactor in Ghana into low enriched uranium (LEU) due to proliferation resistance issues. In both cases, a detailed comparison is made on burnup and the induced radiotoxicity of waste or spent fuel. The UOX fuel assembly, as in the open cycle system, was designed to reach a burn-up of 46GWd/T and 68GWd/T. The spent UOX was reprocessed to fabricate MOX assemblies, by the extraction of Plutonium and addition of depleted Uranium to reach burn-ups of 46GWd/T and 68GWd/T, taking into account various cooling times of the spent UOX assembly in the repository. The effect of cooling time on burnup and radiotoxicity was then ascertained. Spent UOX fuel, after 30 years of cooling in the repository required higher concentration of Pu to be reprocessed into a MOX fuel due to the decay of Pu-241. Americium, with a mean half-life of 432 years, has high radiotoxic level, high mid-term residual heat and a precursor for other long lived isotope. An innovative strategy consists of reprocessing not only the plutonium from the UOX spent fuel but also the americium isotopes which dominate the radiotoxicity of present waste. The mono-recycling of Am is not a definitive solution because the once-through MOX cycle transmutation of Am in a PWR is not enough to destroy all the Am. The main objective is to propose a “waiting strategy” for both Am and Pu in the spent fuel so that they can be made available for further transmutation strategies. The MOXAm (MOX and Americium isotopes) fuel was fabricated to see the effect of americium in MOX fuel on the burn-up, neutronic behavior and on radiotoxicity. The MOXAm fuel showed relatively good indicators both on burnup and on radiotoxicity. A 68GWd/T MOX assembly produced from a reprocessed spent 46GWd/T UOX assembly showed a decrease in radiotoxicity as compared to the open cycle. All fuel types understudy in the PWR cycle showed good safety inherent feature with the exception of the some MOXAm assemblies which have a positive void coefficient in specific configurations, which could not be consistent with safety features. The core lifetimes of the current operating 90.2% HEU UAl fuel and the proposed 12.5% LEU UOX fuel of the MNSR were investigated using MURE code. Even though LEU core has a longer core life due to its higher core loading and low rate of uranium consumption, the LEU core will have it first beryllium top up to compensate for reactivity at earlier time than the HEU core. The HEU and LEU cores of the MNSR exhibited similar neutron fluxes in irradiation channels, negative feedback of temperature and void coefficients, but the LEU is more radiotoxic after fission product decay due to higher actinides presence at the end of its core lifetime.
4

Technologie vstřikování zkušebních těles z termoplastů / Technology of injection molding of thermoplastic test specimens

Khamzin, Yersin January 2021 (has links)
The diploma thesis focuses on the optimization of technological parameters of plastic injection molding and the study of the influence of technological parameters on the quality of molded test specimens’ type 1A. The quality of molded parts for 3 types of polypropylene (PP) with different melt flow rate (Mosten GB 002, Mosten GB 218, Mosten MA 230) and 1 type of polystyrene (PS) (Krasten PS GP 154) was evaluated in terms of dimensional stability and weight. The contribution of software for modeling the plastic injection molding process was evaluated in this work. SOLIDWORKS Plastics software was used to optimize technological parameters. The construction of the bodies, mold and cooling system was constructed, and test bodies were produced on the basis of parameters obtained from the simulation of the injection molding process. Their quality parameters were compared with a 3D model and for each of the studied materials the optimal technological parameters were selected in terms of quality and the degree of influence of individual injection parameters on the quality of moldings was evaluated. The accordance of the results of the theoretical simulation with the real experiment was proved and a computational module independent of the optimized quality parameters, generally suitable for optimizing the quality parameters of the injected parts, was developed.

Page generated in 0.0712 seconds