This thesis documents significant contributions to the quantification of input and modelling uncertainties in the simulation of nuclear power plants. This work is intended to support the simulations that are performed to demonstrate the safety of nuclear power plants in general, and in CANDU reactors specifically. The work presented in this thesis extends the methodologies for uncertainty propagation established internationally to CANDU plants and pioneers the integration of these tools with important plant features in CANDUs, such as online fueling. This thesis documents a series of simulation studies performed to quantify the impact of uncertainties (primarily nuclear data uncertainties), on simulations of CANDU stations and light water reactors (LWRs).
The novel part of this work includes quantifying the role of operational feedbacks such as online refuelling and reactor control systems, and important modelling uncertainties, on CANDU simulations. To achieve this objective, this thesis examines 4 important areas as documented in journal papers.
To demonstrate understanding of the tools developed for the UAM-LWR benchmark and to support the ongoing international effort, select studies from the UAM-LWR benchmark study exercises were performed and published in the first journal paper. Time-dependent PWR neutronics exercises, considering both nuclear data and manufacturing uncertainties, were completed. This work found that the relative importance of nuclear data uncertainties and manufacturing uncertainties depended on whether the parameter of interest was “local”, such as pin power factors, or “global”, such as homogenized assembly properties.
The second publication in this thesis documents the adaption of the tools from the first paper to consider CANDU specific features, such as spatial control systems and online refuelling. This paper demonstrated the significant effect that consistent feedback from fuelling operations has on reducing the total uncertainty in core level simulations of CANDU plants. The tools developed for this work were used to support downstream studies by generating extensive sets of realistic initial conditions for many different possible nuclear datasets.
The next publications utilized the tools developed above and then extends the methods to include operational aspects of CANDUs in the assessments for the first time. In the third paper these methods were then used to demonstrate the tools’ capabilities to simulate an operational transient (a power maneuver from 100% full power to 59% full power) in a CANDU station and compared the resultant prediction and uncertainties to measure plant responses. A further study, on the role of nuclear data and initial burnup distribution uncertainty on a CANDU plant’s response to perturbations to liquid zone controller levels, was also performed to examine the effect of the commonly used “superposition principle” utilized in industry to make safety analysis of CANDU’s various fueling states more tractable. In both cases the role of nuclear data uncertainties was generally found to be similar in magnitude to the role of uncertainty in the core initial conditions.
The results of this work support the continued safe operation of CANDU nuclear generating stations in Canada by quantifying the role of select uncertainties on safety simulation outputs, informing future BEPU analysis for CANDU plants and demonstrating the exceptional flexibility of the CANDU reactor design. This is reflected in one of the major conclusions of these works, which demonstrates that the natural feedbacks in CANDU operation help to minimize the effect of uncertainties in the outcome of many safety analysis. / Thesis / Candidate in Philosophy
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/29325 |
Date | January 2023 |
Creators | Tucker, Michael |
Contributors | Novog, David, Engineering Physics |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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