Parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation

The ability to obtain fast and accurate solutions of the neutron transport equation is of great importance for various reactor physics and radiation shielding applications. This thesis first presents an overview of the techniques used to solve the neutron transport equation using discontinuous Galer...

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Main Author: O'Malley, Benedict John
Other Authors: Eaton, Matthew ; Bluck, Mike
Published: Imperial College London 2017
Subjects:
621
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.745262
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7452622019-03-05T15:34:01ZParallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equationO'Malley, Benedict JohnEaton, Matthew ; Bluck, Mike2017The ability to obtain fast and accurate solutions of the neutron transport equation is of great importance for various reactor physics and radiation shielding applications. This thesis first presents an overview of the techniques used to solve the neutron transport equation using discontinuous Galerkin finite element methods. It then presents two sets of techniques which aim to improve the effectiveness of a neutron transport code and provides various computational results to support their effectiveness. The first methods studied are two preconditioners designed to accelerate the solution of the neutron diffusion equation which in turn is used to accelerate the neutron transport equation using diffusion synthetic acceleration. They are first presented in a form appropriate for solving finite element problems using first-order basis functions, and then expanded so that they may be used on problems containing second and higher-order basis functions. The second study is for sets of basis functions for pyramid finite elements used in the solution of neutron transport and neutron diffusion problems, demonstrating the effectiveness of these elements in comparison to other element types. This thesis provides substantial evidence for the effectiveness of the methods described alongside an analysis of where their use is appropriate. Numerous computational examples are used, including several reactor physics and radiation shielding benchmark problems obtained from benchmark specifications. These serve to demonstrate the strengths and in some cases the weaknesses of the techniques presented. The methods presented have significant practical applications in the fields of reactor physics and radiation shielding.621Imperial College Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.745262http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/58934Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 621
spellingShingle 621
O'Malley, Benedict John
Parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation
description The ability to obtain fast and accurate solutions of the neutron transport equation is of great importance for various reactor physics and radiation shielding applications. This thesis first presents an overview of the techniques used to solve the neutron transport equation using discontinuous Galerkin finite element methods. It then presents two sets of techniques which aim to improve the effectiveness of a neutron transport code and provides various computational results to support their effectiveness. The first methods studied are two preconditioners designed to accelerate the solution of the neutron diffusion equation which in turn is used to accelerate the neutron transport equation using diffusion synthetic acceleration. They are first presented in a form appropriate for solving finite element problems using first-order basis functions, and then expanded so that they may be used on problems containing second and higher-order basis functions. The second study is for sets of basis functions for pyramid finite elements used in the solution of neutron transport and neutron diffusion problems, demonstrating the effectiveness of these elements in comparison to other element types. This thesis provides substantial evidence for the effectiveness of the methods described alongside an analysis of where their use is appropriate. Numerous computational examples are used, including several reactor physics and radiation shielding benchmark problems obtained from benchmark specifications. These serve to demonstrate the strengths and in some cases the weaknesses of the techniques presented. The methods presented have significant practical applications in the fields of reactor physics and radiation shielding.
author2 Eaton, Matthew ; Bluck, Mike
author_facet Eaton, Matthew ; Bluck, Mike
O'Malley, Benedict John
author O'Malley, Benedict John
author_sort O'Malley, Benedict John
title Parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation
title_short Parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation
title_full Parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation
title_fullStr Parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation
title_full_unstemmed Parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation
title_sort parallel, hierarchical solution algorithms for diffusion synthetic acceleration of the neutron transport equation
publisher Imperial College London
publishDate 2017
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.745262
work_keys_str_mv AT omalleybenedictjohn parallelhierarchicalsolutionalgorithmsfordiffusionsyntheticaccelerationoftheneutrontransportequation
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