Publications

Publications / Conference Poster

Status of MELCOR sodium models development

Louie, David L.; Humphries, Larry

A sodium coolant accident analysis code is necessary to provide regulators with a means of performing confirmatory analyses for future sodium reactor licensing submissions. MELCOR and CONTAIN, which have been employed by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission for light water reactor licensing, have been traditionally used for Level 2 and Level 3 probabilistic analyses as well as containment design basis accident analysis. To meet future regulatory needs, new models are being added to the MELCOR code for simulation of sodium reactor designs by integrating the existing models developed for separate effects codes into the MELCOR architecture. Sodium properties and equations of state, such as from the SAS4A code, have previously been implemented into MELCOR to replace the water properties and equation of state. Additional specific sodium-related models to address design basis accidents are now being implemented into MELCOR from CONTAIN-LMR. Although the codes are very different in the code architecture, the feasibility fit is being investigated, and the models for the sodium spray fire and the sodium pool fire have been integrated into MELCOR. A new package called Sodium Chemistry (NAC) has been added to MELCOR to handle all sodium related chemistry models for sodium reactor safety applications. Although MELCOR code requires the ambient condition to be above the freezing point of the coolant (e.g., sodium or water), the high relative freezing point of sodium requires MELCOR to handle situations, particularly far from the primary circuit, where the ambient temperatures are usually at room temperature. Because only a single coolant can be modeled in a problem at a time, any presence of water in the problem would be treated as a trace material, an aerosol, in MELCOR. This paper addresses and describe the integration of the sodium models from CONTAIN-LMR, and the testing of the sodium chemistry models in the NAC package of MELCOR that handles sodium type reactor accidents, using available sodium experiments on spray fire and pool fire. In addition, we describe the anticipated sodium models to be completed in this year, such as the atmospheric chemistry model and sodiumconcrete interaction model. Code-to-code comparison between MELCOR and CONTAIN-LMR results, in addition to the experiment code validations, will be demonstrated in this year.