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Benchmarking MELCOR's NAC Package to ABCOVE Tests AB5 and AB6

De Luna, Brandon; Phillips, Jesse

This report presents analyses of the AB5 and AB6 ABCOVE sodium spray fire experiments with the MELCOR code. This code simulates the progression of accident events for analysis and auditing purposes of nuclear facilities during accident conditions. Historically, the ABCOVE experiments have contributed to the validation of aerosol physics and related phenomena. Given advancements in sodium-cooled reactor designs, characterization of the sodium spray combustion may further the review and validation of newly incorporated sodium properties and physics packages, namely, the sodium equations of state (EOS) and the sodium combustion (NAC) package within MELCOR. By analyzing the AB5 and AB6 experiments with and without the NAC package, sodium specificity for spray combustion and aerosol formation as well as speciation of the combustion products are reviewed with the new packages. This effort provides code users with a demonstration of the current code capabilities. This report provides the current best practices for the NAC package as well as a discussion of any issues observed while performing the presented analyses.

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MELCOR Input Model for Spent Fuel Transportation and Storage Canister

Phillips, Jesse

This report documents the progress and current results of the MELCOR spent fuel cask input model. The MELCOR model is being developed to investigate aerosol transport and deposition given the aerosol physical phenomena models within MELCOR. To perform the analyses, a general portrayal of the MAGNASTOR® cask system has been employed; however, this system was selected based on available information to provide a reasonable representation of a spent fuel cask. The analytical results are not intended to characterize the performance of the MAGNASTOR® cask. Instead, the provided results are intended to enhance our general understanding of the aerosol behavior within casks and the validity of current models. The current model efforts are being performed to investigate hypothetical UO2 release from failed fuel pins within a spent fuel cask. The existing MELCOR model of the MAGNASTOR® cask system has been adapted to permit future comparative analyses with the GOTHIC representation of the MAGNASTOR® cask. To support this comparison, the PNNL model characteristics that are unrelated to the aerosol modeling were applied to the MELCOR model. These characteristics included improved comparability of the axial fidelity, total spent fuel power, fuel pin axial power profile, and heat losses from cannister. The thermal-hydraulic solutions are improved within the capability of the MELCOR code and will permit better overall agreement with the GOTHIC results. Detailed results are presented on the thermal-hydraulic analysis of the MELCOR cask as well as characterization of UO2 aerosol dispersion and deposition within the cask.

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Continued Investigations of Respirable Release Fractions for Stress Corrosion Crack-Like Geometries

Durbin, S.; Pulido, Ramon J.; Perales, Adrian G.; Lindgren, Eric; Jones, Philip G.; Mendoza, Hector; Phillips, Jesse; Lanza, M.; Casella, A.

The formation of a stress corrosion crack (SCC) in the canister wall of a dry cask storage system (DCSS) has been identified as a potential issue for the long-term storage of spent nuclear fuel. The presence of an SCC in a storage system could represent a through-wall flow path from the canister interior to the environment. Modern, vertical DCSSs are of particular interest due to the commercial practice of using relatively high backfill pressures (up to approximately 800 kPa) in the canister to enhance internal natural convection. This pressure differential offers a comparatively high driving potential for blowdown of any particulates that might be present in the canister. In this study, the rates of gas flow and aerosol transmission of a spent fuel surrogate through an engineered microchannel with dimensions representative of an SCC were evaluated experimentally using coupled mass flow and aerosol analyzers. The microchannel was formed by mating two gage blocks with a linearly tapering slot orifice nominally 13 μm (0.005 in.) tall on the upstream side and 25 μm (0.0010 in.) tall on the downstream side. The orifice is 12.7 mm (0.500 in.) wide by 8.89 mm (0.350 in.) long (flow length). Surrogate aerosols of cerium oxide, CeO2, were seeded and mixed with either helium or air inside a pressurized tank. The aerosol characteristics were measured immediately upstream and downstream of the simulated SCC at elevated and ambient pressures, respectively. These data sets are intended to demonstrate a new capability to characterize SCCs under well-controlled boundary conditions. Modeling efforts were also initiated that evaluate the depletion of aerosols in a commercial dry storage canister. These preliminary modeling and ongoing testing efforts are focused on understanding the evolution in both size and quantity of a hypothetical release of aerosolized spent fuel particles from failed fuel to the canister interior and ultimately through an SCC.

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Aerosol Deposition Inside a Spent Fuel Transportation and Storage Canister (Interim Report)

Phillips, Jesse; Gelbard, Fred M.

This report documents the progress in preparing the ANSYS/Fluent® and MELCOR models to perform characterization studies of aerosols dispersal and deposition within a select spent fuel cask system. Steady state thermal-hydraulic cask response is modeled with both codes, at present, while the MELCOR source code is being modified to allow imposed thermal-hydraulic conditions with aerosol physics calculations. This will allow the MELCOR model to assume the thermal-hydraulic calculation from the ANSYS/Fluent®, while only computing the aerosol physics. Detailed results are presented on the thermal-hydraulic analysis of the MAGNASTOR® cask for the current ANSYS/Fluent® model, with convergent conditions observed over two fidelities. While the MELCOR computation computes the steady state conditions, they differ sufficiently from that computed with ANSYS/Fluent®. The MELCOR analysis include a set of UO2 sources to investigate system response for interim reporting. The airborne concentrations and evolving distributions are presented. Model development is anticipated to continue as additional components impacting flow conditions or aerosol deposition within the MAGNASTOR® cask and Westinghouse fuel assemblies are identified.

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MELCOR Code Change History (Revision 14959 to 18019)

Humphries, Larry L.; Phillips, Jesse; Schmidt, Rodney C.; Beeny, Bradley A.; Foulk, James W.; Bixler, Nathan E.

This document summarily provides brief descriptions of the MELCOR code enhancement made between code revision number 14959and 18019. Revision 14959 represents the previous official code release; therefore, the modeling features described within this document are provided to assist users that update to the newest official MELCOR code release, 18019. Along with the newly updated MELCOR Users Guide and Reference Manual, users are aware and able to assess the new capabilities for their modeling and analysis applications.

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MELCOR Code Change History: Revision 11932 to 14959 Patch Release Addendum

Humphries, Larry L.; Phillips, Jesse; Schmidt, Rodney C.; Beeny, Bradley A.; Wagner, Kenneth C.; Foulk, James W.

This document summarily provides brief descriptions of the MELCOR code enhancement made between code revision number 11932 and 14959. Revision 11932 represents the last official code release; therefore, the modeling features described within this document are provided to assist users that update to the newest official MELCOR code release, 14959. Along with the newly updated MELCOR Users' Guide and Reference Manual, users will be aware and able to assess the new capabilities for their modeling and analysis applications. Following the official release an addendum section has been added to this report detailing modifications made to the official release which support the accompanying patch release. The addendums address user reported issues and previously known issues within the official code release which extends the original Quick look document to also support the patch release. Furthermore, the addendums section documents the recent changes to input records in the Users' Guide applicable to the patch release and corrects a few issues in the revision 14959 release as well.

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MELCOR Code Change History: Revision 11932 to 14959

Phillips, Jesse

This document summarily provides brief descriptions of the MELCOR code enhancement made between code revision number 11932 and 14959. Revision 11932 represents the last official code release; therefore, the modeling features described within this document are provided to assist users that update to the newest official MELCOR code release, 14959. Along with the newly updated MELCOR Users' Guide and Reference Manual, users will be aware and able to assess the new capabilities for their modeling and analysis applications.

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An Assessment of MELCOR 2.1: Containment Thermal-Hydraulic Tests in the Heissdampfreaktor (HDR) Facility

Phillips, Jesse; Tills, Jack; Notafrancesco, Allen

MELCOR is being developed at Sandia National Laboratories for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission. MELCOR is a fully integrated code (encompassing the reactor coolant system and the containment building) that models the progression of postulated accidents in light water reactor power plants. It provides a capability for independently auditing analyses submitted by reactor manufacturers and utilities. In order to assess the adequacy of containment thermal - hydraulic modeling incorporated in the MELCOR code, a key containment test facility was analyzed. This report documents MELCOR code calculations for simulating steam - water blowdown tests performed in the Heissdampfreaktor ( HDR) de-commissioned containment facility located near Frankfurt , Germany . These tests are a series of blowdown experiments in a large scaled test facility ; including some tests with the addition of hydrogen release which are intended to simulate a variety of postulated break s inside large containment buildings. The key objectives of this MELCOR assessment are to study: (1) the expansion and transport of high energy steam - water releases, (2) heat and mass transfer to structural passive heat sinks, and (3) containment gas mixing and stratification. Moreover, MELCOR results are compared to the CONTAIN code for the same tests.

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Software Requirements of SNAP for Editing MELCOR 2.2 Models

Phillips, Jesse; Fu, Chun; Faucett, Christopher A.

Applications of the severe accident analysis code MELCOR, developed for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL), have been supported by the graphical user-interface and post-processing suite Symbolic Nuclear Analysis Package (SNAP), developed for the NRC by Applied Programming Technology (APT). With the release of MELCOR 2.2, new user functionality and models have been introduced and an update to the SNAP MELCOR plugin user interface is necessary to access these new features. This document relates all new features introduced into MELCOR to the development team at APT as well as the NRC.

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MELCOR Computer Code Manuals Volume 3: MELCOR Assessment Problems [Draft]

Humphries, Larry L.; Foulk, James W.; Figueroa Faria, Victor G.; Young, Michael F.; Weber, Scott; Ross, Kyle; Phillips, Jesse

MELCOR is a fully integrated, engineering-level computer code that models the progression of severe accidents in light-water reactor nuclear power plants. MELCOR is being developed at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) for the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) as a second-generation plant risk assessment tool and the successor to the Source Term Code package. A broad spectrum of severe accident phenomena in both boiling and pressurized water reactors is treated in MELCOR in a unified framework. These include thermal-hydraulic response in the reactor coolant system (RCS), reactor cavity, containment, and confinement buildings; core heatup, degradation, and relocation; core-concrete attack; hydrogen production, transport, and combustion; and fission product release and transport behavior. Current uses of MELCOR include estimation of severe accident source terms and their sensitivities and uncertainties in a variety of applications. This publication of the MELCOR computer code manuals corresponds to MELCOR 2.0, released to users in September 2008. Volume 1 contains a primer that describes MELCOR's phenomenological scope, organization (by package), and documentation. The remainder of Volume 1 contains the MELCOR User's Guides, which provide the input instructions and guidelines for each package. Volume 2 contains the MELCOR Reference Manuals, which describe the phenomenological models that have been implemented in each package. Volume 3, MELCOR Assessment Problems, presents a portfolio of test and sample problems consisting of both analyses of experiments and of full plant problems. These analyses will be repeated with future releases of MELCOR in order to provide a metric on code predictions as new versions are released.

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Interim MELCOR Simulation of the Fukushima Daiichi Unit 2 Accident Reactor Core Isolation Cooling Operation

Ross, Kyle; Gauntt, Randall O.; Cardoni, Jeffrey; Phillips, Jesse; Kalinich, Donald; Osborn, Douglas

Data, a brief description of key boundary conditions, and results of Sandia National Laboratories’ ongoing MELCOR analysis of the Fukushima Unit 2 accident are given for the reactor core isolation cooling (RCIC) system. Important assumptions and related boundary conditions in the current analysis additional to or different than what was assumed/imposed in the work of SAND2012-6173 are identified. This work is for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Nuclear Energy University Programs fiscal year 2014 Reactor Safety Technologies Research and Development Program RC-7: RCIC Performance under Severe Accident Conditions.

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MELCOR simulations of the severe accident at the Fukushima 1F1 reactor

International Meeting on Severe Accident Assessment and Management 2012: Lessons Learned from Fukushima Dai-ichi

Gauntt, Randall O.; Kalinich, Donald; Cardoni, Jeffrey; Phillips, Jesse

In response to the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station in Japan, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Department of Energy agreed to jointly sponsor an accident reconstruction study as a means of the assessing severe accident modeling capability of the MELCOR code. Objectives of the project included reconstruction of the accident progressions using computer models and accident data, and validation of the MELCOR code and the Fukushima models against plant data.

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MELCOR simulations of the severe accident at the Fukushima 1F3 Reactor

International Meeting on Severe Accident Assessment and Management 2012: Lessons Learned from Fukushima Dai-ichi

Cardoni, Jeffrey; Gauntt, Randall O.; Kalinich, Donald; Phillips, Jesse

In response to the accident at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power station in Japan, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission and Department of Energy agreed to jointly sponsor an accident reconstruction study as a means of the assessing severe accident modeling capability of the MELCOR code. Objectives of the project included reconstruction of the accident progressions using computer models and accident data, and validation of the MELCOR code and the Fukushima models against plant data.

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Sodium fast reactor safety and licensing research plan. Volume II

Lachance, Jeffrey L.; Suo-Anttila, Jill M.; Hewson, John C.; Olivier, Tara J.; Phillips, Jesse; Denman, Matthew R.; Powers, Dana A.; Schmidt, Rodney C.

Expert panels comprised of subject matter experts identified at the U.S. National Laboratories (SNL, ANL, INL, ORNL, LBL, and BNL), universities (University of Wisconsin and Ohio State University), international agencies (IRSN, CEA, JAEA, KAERI, and JRC-IE) and private consultation companies (Radiation Effects Consulting) were assembled to perform a gap analysis for sodium fast reactor licensing. Expert-opinion elicitation was performed to qualitatively assess the current state of sodium fast reactor technologies. Five independent gap analyses were performed resulting in the following topical reports: (1) Accident Initiators and Sequences (i.e., Initiators/Sequences Technology Gap Analysis), (2) Sodium Technology Phenomena (i.e., Advanced Burner Reactor Sodium Technology Gap Analysis), (3) Fuels and Materials (i.e., Sodium Fast Reactor Fuels and Materials: Research Needs), (4) Source Term Characterization (i.e., Advanced Sodium Fast Reactor Accident Source Terms: Research Needs), and (5) Computer Codes and Models (i.e., Sodium Fast Reactor Gaps Analysis of Computer Codes and Models for Accident Analysis and Reactor Safety). Volume II of the Sodium Research Plan consolidates the five gap analysis reports produced by each expert panel, wherein the importance of the identified phenomena and necessities of further experimental research and code development were addressed. The findings from these five reports comprised the basis for the analysis in Sodium Fast Reactor Research Plan Volume I.

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The development of a realistic source term for sodium-cooled fast reactors : assessment of current status and future needs

Parma, Edward J.; Olivier, Tara J.; Phillips, Jesse; Lachance, Jeffrey L.

Sodium-cooled fast reactors (SFRs) continue to be proposed and designed throughout the United States and the world. Although the number of SFRs actually operating has declined substantially since the 1980s, a significant interest in advancing these types of reactor systems remains. Of the many issues associated with the development and deployment of SFRs, one of high regulatory importance is the source term to be used in the siting of the reactor. A substantial amount of modeling and experimental work has been performed over the past four decades on accident analysis, sodium coolant behavior, and radionuclide release for SFRs. The objective of this report is to aid in determining the gaps and issues related to the development of a realistic, mechanistically derived source term for SFRs. This report will allow the reader to become familiar with the severe accident source term concept and gain a broad understanding of the current status of the models and experimental work. Further, this report will allow insight into future work, in terms of both model development and experimental validation, which is necessary in order to develop a realistic source term for SFRs.

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Risk associated with the use of barriers in hydrogen refueling stations

Houf, William G.; Phillips, Jesse

Separation distances are used in hydrogen refueling stations to protect people, structures, and equipment from the consequences of accidental hydrogen releases. Specifically, hydrogen jet flames resulting from ignition of unintended releases can be extensive in length and pose significant radiation and impingement hazards. Depending on the leak diameter and source pressure, the resulting separation distances can be unacceptably large. One possible mitigation strategy to reduce exposure to hydrogen flames is to incorporate barriers around hydrogen storage, process piping, and delivery equipment. The effectiveness of barrier walls to reduce hazards at hydrogen facilities has been previously evaluated using experimental and modeling information developed at Sandia National Laboratories. The effect of barriers on the risk from different types of hazards including direct flame contact, radiation heat fluxes, and overpressures associated with delayed hydrogen ignition has subsequently been evaluated and used to identify potential reductions in separation distances in hydrogen facilities. Both the frequency and consequences used in this risk assessment and the risk results are described. The results of the barrier risk analysis can also be used to help establish risk-informed barrier design requirements for use in hydrogen codes and standards.

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Results 1–50 of 51
Results 1–50 of 51