A new approach on modeling of the b-viii, the ultimate achievement of the second “Uranverain”
German Nazi state conducted researches in nuclear technologies as an attempt to achieve various military goals. As the result of these researches, German scientists developed different, advanced nuclear technologies in years before and during World War II. In an attempt to develop the “Uran...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
VINCA Institute of Nuclear Sciences
2018-01-01
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Series: | Nuclear Technology and Radiation Protection |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://www.doiserbia.nb.rs/img/doi/1451-3994/2018/1451-39941801001P.pdf |
Summary: | German Nazi state conducted researches in nuclear technologies as an attempt
to achieve various military goals. As the result of these researches, German
scientists developed different, advanced nuclear technologies in years before
and during World War II. In an attempt to develop the “Uranmaschinen”, in
which controlled release of high energy in fission process can be achieved,
various approaches were examined, theoretically and experimentally. These
studies were conducted under support of the German Nazi state and were known
as the First and Second “Uranverain” (Uranium Society/Club). Versions of the
“Uranmaschinen” were based, mainly, on natural uranium fuel and moderators of
heavy water, regular water or paraffin. The latest known fission device was
the subcritical nuclear fission reactor B-VIII, re-built in village
Haigerloch, Bavaria, Southern Germany, in first months of 1945. It was a tank
type device with natural uranium metal fuel and heavy water moderator,
reflected by graphite. Radiation shielding of the device was achieved,
primarily, by surrounding the reactor tank by regular water. The whole device
construction was assembled inside a concrete hole in the floor of an
underground cave, ex beer cellar. A recent neutronics study of this reactor
was done, assuming fuel rods with lumped parameters approximation, by Italian
Bologna University LIN (Laboratorio Ingegneria Nucleare) research group in
2009. This paper is a new approach to the neutronics study of the B-VIII
reactor with an attempt to model real fuel-moderator geometry. This study
points out many approximations and simplifications, made during the B-VIII
material composition and geometry modeling, due to missing data. The paper
investigates the influence to criticality of numerous uncertainties in the
material compositions, mass densities and geometry of the facility. The Monte
Carlo MCNP6.1 code with the latest ACE type neutron nuclear cross section
data is used for that purpose. Additionally, an attempt of estimation of the
uncertainty of the experimental result of the neutron multiplication was
given. Differences in the calculated values of the neutron multiplication and
the experimental one are investigated and tried to explain. These analyses
show that the B-VIII was a subcritical device, as it was shown by the
experimental results of the German scientists achieved in March-April 1945 in
Haigerloch. |
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ISSN: | 1451-3994 1452-8185 |