Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material

Spent fuel containing material (SFCM) can arise during severe nuclear reactor accident by melting of a reactor core and surrounding material (corium) or during accident in spent fuel storage. It consists of nuclear fuel, fission products, activation products and materials from fuel cladding, concret...

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Main Authors: Viererbl Ladislav, Lahodová Zdena, Zmítková Jelena, Vinš Miroslav, Šrank Jiří
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2016-01-01
Series:EPJ Nuclear Sciences & Technologies
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjn/2016024
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spelling doaj-ed309a6debe845f49d3c5bafbc7bc7c02021-03-02T09:29:39ZengEDP SciencesEPJ Nuclear Sciences & Technologies2491-92922016-01-0123110.1051/epjn/2016024epjn150070Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing materialViererbl LadislavLahodová ZdenaZmítková JelenaVinš MiroslavŠrank JiříSpent fuel containing material (SFCM) can arise during severe nuclear reactor accident by melting of a reactor core and surrounding material (corium) or during accident in spent fuel storage. It consists of nuclear fuel, fission products, activation products and materials from fuel cladding, concrete, etc. The paper deals with dose and temperature characteristics inside the SFCM after transition of the molten mixture to solid state. Calculations were made on simplified spherical models, without connection to some specific nuclear accident. The dose rate was estimated for alpha, beta and gamma radiation in times over the course of 30 years from the end of the fission chain reaction. Concentration of helium generated in the material by alpha decay was calculated. For the dose rate values estimation, computation code ORIGEN 2.2 with dosimetric library ENDF/B-IV were used. Temperature distribution inside the solid SFCM was calculated by FLUENT code. As source of heating, energy of radioactive decays was taken. Estimated dose and temperature characteristics can be used, e.g. for evaluation of radiation damage and temperature behaviour of SFCM or for radiation test design of corium simulating materials.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjn/2016024
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Viererbl Ladislav
Lahodová Zdena
Zmítková Jelena
Vinš Miroslav
Šrank Jiří
spellingShingle Viererbl Ladislav
Lahodová Zdena
Zmítková Jelena
Vinš Miroslav
Šrank Jiří
Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material
EPJ Nuclear Sciences & Technologies
author_facet Viererbl Ladislav
Lahodová Zdena
Zmítková Jelena
Vinš Miroslav
Šrank Jiří
author_sort Viererbl Ladislav
title Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material
title_short Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material
title_full Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material
title_fullStr Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material
title_full_unstemmed Dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material
title_sort dose and temperature distribution in spent fuel containing material
publisher EDP Sciences
series EPJ Nuclear Sciences & Technologies
issn 2491-9292
publishDate 2016-01-01
description Spent fuel containing material (SFCM) can arise during severe nuclear reactor accident by melting of a reactor core and surrounding material (corium) or during accident in spent fuel storage. It consists of nuclear fuel, fission products, activation products and materials from fuel cladding, concrete, etc. The paper deals with dose and temperature characteristics inside the SFCM after transition of the molten mixture to solid state. Calculations were made on simplified spherical models, without connection to some specific nuclear accident. The dose rate was estimated for alpha, beta and gamma radiation in times over the course of 30 years from the end of the fission chain reaction. Concentration of helium generated in the material by alpha decay was calculated. For the dose rate values estimation, computation code ORIGEN 2.2 with dosimetric library ENDF/B-IV were used. Temperature distribution inside the solid SFCM was calculated by FLUENT code. As source of heating, energy of radioactive decays was taken. Estimated dose and temperature characteristics can be used, e.g. for evaluation of radiation damage and temperature behaviour of SFCM or for radiation test design of corium simulating materials.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/epjn/2016024
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AT vinsmiroslav doseandtemperaturedistributioninspentfuelcontainingmaterial
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