Publications

29 Results
Skip to search filters

FY2022 Status Update: A Probabilistic Model for Stress Corrosion Cracking of SNF Dry Storage Canisters

Gilkey, Lindsay N.; Brooks, Dusty M.; Katona, Ryan M.; Bryan, Charles R.; Schaller, Rebecca S.

Understanding the potential risk of stress corrosion cracking of spent nuclear fuel dry storage canisters has been identified as a knowledge gap for determining the safety of long-term interim storage of spent nuclear fuel. To address this, the DOE is funding a multi-lab DOE effort to understand the timing, occurrence, and consequences of potential canister SCC. Sandia National Laboratories has developed a probabilistic model for canister penetration by SCC. This model has been continuously updated at SNL since 2014. Model uncertainties are treated using a nested loop structure, where the outer loop accounts for uncertainties due to lack of data and the inner aleatoric loop accounts for uncertainties due to variation in nature. By separating uncertainties into these categories, it is possible to focus future work on reducing the most influential epistemic uncertainties. Several experimental studies have already been performed to improve the modeling approach through expanded process understanding and improved model parameterization. The resulting code is physics-based and intended to inform future work by identifying (1) important modeling assumptions, (2) experimental data needs, and (3) necessary model developments. In this document, several of the sub-models in the probabilistic SCC model have been exercised, and the intermediate results, as the model progresses from one sub-model to the next, are presented. Evaluating the sub-models in this manner provides a better understanding of sub-model outputs and has identified several unintended consequences of model assumptions or parameterizations, requiring updates to the modeling approach. The following updates have been made, and future updates have been identified.

More Details

Numerical simulation of container breach and airborne release of solids due to mechanical insults

Journal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science

Louie, David L.; Le, San; Gilkey, Lindsay N.

Throughout U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) complexes, safety engineers employ the five-factor formula to calculate the source term (ST) that includes parameters of airborne release fraction (ARF), respirable fraction (RF) and damage ratio (DR). Limited experimental data on fragmentation of solids, such as ceramic pellets (i.e., PuO2), and container breach due to mechanical insults (i.e., drop and forklift impact), can be supplemented by modeling and simulation using high fidelity computational tools to estimate these parameters. This paper presents the use of Sandia National Laboratories' SIERRA solid mechanics (SM) finite element code to investigate the behavior of the widely utilized waste container (such as 7A Drum) subject to a range of free fall impact and puncture scenarios. The resulting behavior of the container is assessed, and the estimates are presented for bounding DRs from calculated breach areas for the various accident conditions considered. This paper also describes a novel multiscale constitutive model recently implemented in SIERRA/SM that simulates the fracture of brittle materials such as PuO2 and determines ARF during the fracture process. Comparisons are made between model predictions and simple bench-top experiments.

More Details

Computational modeling of terry turbine airflow testing to support the expansion of operating band in beyond design basis conditions

International Conference on Nuclear Engineering, Proceedings, ICONE

Gilkey, Lindsay N.; Andrews, Nathan; Ross, Kyle; Solom, Matthew

The performance of the Reactor Core Isolation Cooling (RCIC) system under beyond design basis event (BDBE) conditions is not well-characterized. The operating band of the RCIC system is currently specified utilizing conservative assumptions, with restrictive operational guidelines not allowing for an adequate credit of the true capability of the system. For example, it is assumed that battery power is needed for RCIC operation to maintain the reactor pressure vessel (RPV) water level—a loss of battery power is conservatively assumed to result in failure of the RCIC turbopump system in a range of safety and risk assessments. However, the accidents at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station (FDNPS) showed that the Unit 2 RCIC did not cease to operate following loss of battery power. In fact, it continued to inject water into the RPV for nearly 3 days following the earthquake. Improved understanding of Terry turbopump operations under BDBE conditions can support enhancement of accident management procedures and guidelines, promoting more robust severe accident prevention. Therefore, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), U.S. nuclear industry, and international stakeholders have funded the Terry Turbine Expanded Operating Band (TTEXOB) program. This program aims to better understand RCIC operations during BDBE conditions through combined experimental and modeling efforts. As part of the TTEXOB, airflow testing was performed at Texas A&M University (TAMU) of a small-scale ZS-1 and a full-scale GS-2 Terry turbine. This paper presents the corresponding efforts to model operation of the TAMU ZS-1 and GS-2 Terry turbines with Sandia National Laboratories’ (SNL) MELCOR code. The current MELCOR modeling approach represents the Terry turbine with a system of equations expressing the conservation of angular momentum. The joint analysis and experimental program identified that a) it is possible for the Terry turbine to develop the same power at different speeds, and b) turbine losses appear to be insensitive to the size of the turbine. As part of this program, further study of Terry turbine modeling unknowns and uncertainties is planned to support more extensive application of modeling and simulation to the enhancement of plant-specific operational and accident procedures.

More Details

Terry Turbopump Expanded Operating Band Modeling and Full-Scale Test Development Efforts in Fiscal Year 2019 ? Progress Report

Solom, Matthew A.; Gilkey, Lindsay N.; Andrews, Nathan A.

The Terry Turbine Expanded Operating Band Project is currently conducting testing at Texas A&M University, and the resulting data has been incorporated into MELCOR models of the Terry turbines used in nuclear power plants. These improved models have produced improvements in the Fukushima Daiichi Unit 2 simulations while providing new insights into the behavior of the plant. The development of future experimental test efforts is ongoing. Development of and refinements to the plans for full-scale steam and steam-water turbine ingestion testing has been performed. These full-scale steam-based tests will complement the testing occurring at Texas A&M University, and will resolve the remaining questions regarding scale or working fluid. Planning work has also begun for future testing intended to explore the uncontrolled RCIC self-regulation theorized to have occurred in Fukushima Daiichi Unit 2.

More Details

Computational capability to study airborne release of solids and container breach due to mechanical insults

International Conference on Nuclear Engineering, Proceedings, ICONE

Louie, David L.; Dingreville, Remi P.; Bignell, John B.; Gilkey, Lindsay N.; Le, San L.; Gordon, Natalie G.

Engineers performing safety analyses throughout the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) complex rely heavily on the information provided in the DOE Handbook, DOE-HDBK-3010, Airborne Release Fractions/Rates and Respirable Fractions for Nonreactor Nuclear Facilities, to determine radionuclide source terms from postulated accident scenarios. In calculating source terms, analysts tend to use the DOE Handbook's bounding values on airborne release fractions (ARFs) and respirable fractions (RFs) for various categories of insults (representing potential accident release categories). This is typically due to both time constraints and the avoidance of regulatory critique. Limited experimental data on fragmentation of solids, such as ceramic pellets (i.e., PuO2), and container breach due to mechanical insults (i.e., explosion-induced fragmentation, drop and forklift impact), can be supplemented by modeling and simulation using high fidelity computational tools. This paper presents the use of Sandia National Laboratories' SIERRA Solid Mechanics (SIERRA/SM) finite element code to investigate the behavior of two widely utilized waste containers (Standard Waste Box and 7A Drum) subject to a range of free fall impact and puncture scenarios. The resulting behavior of the containers is assessed, and a methodology is presented for calculating bounding airborne release fractions from calculated breach areas for the various accident conditions considered. The paper also describes a novel multi-scale constitutive model recently implemented in SIERRA/SM that can simulate the fracture of brittle materials such as PuO2 and determining the amount of hazardous respirable particles generated during the fracture process. Comparisons are made between model predictions and simple bench-top experiments.

More Details

NSRD-16: Computational Capability to Substantiate DOE-HDBk-3010 Data

Louie, David L.; Bignell, John B.; Le, San L.; Dingreville, Remi P.; Gilkey, Lindsay N.; Gordon, Natalie G.; Fascitelli, Dominic G.

Safety basis analysts throughout the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) complex rely heavily on the information provided in the DOE Handbook, DOE-HDBK-3010,Airborne Release Fractions/Rates and Respirable Fractions for Nonreactor Nuclear Facilities, to determine radionuclide source terms from postulated accident scenarios. In calculating source terms, analysts tend to use the DOE Handbook's bounding values on airborne release fractions (ARFs) and respirable fractions (RFs) for various categories of insults (representing potential accident release categories). This is typically due to both time constraints and the avoidance of regulatory critique. Unfortunately, these bounding ARFs/RFs represent extremely conservative values. Moreover, they were derived from very limited small-scale bench/laboratory experiments and/or from engineered judgment.Thus, the basis for the data may not be representative of the actual unique accident conditions and configurations being evaluated.

More Details

Blind prediction of the response of an additively manufactured tensile test coupon loaded to failure

American Society of Mechanical Engineers, Pressure Vessels and Piping Division (Publication) PVP

Gilkey, Lindsay N.; Bignell, John B.; Dingreville, Remi; Sanborn, Scott E.; Jones, Chris A.

Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) conducted in the summer of 2017 its third fracture challenge (i.e., the Third Sandia Fracture Challenge or SFC3). The challenge, which was open to the public, asked participants to predict, without foreknowledge of the outcome, the fracture response predictions of an additively manufactured tensile test coupon of moderate geometric complexity when loaded to failure. This paper outlines the approach taken by our team, one of the SNL teams that participated in the challenge, to make a prediction. To do so, we employed a traditional finite element approach coupled with a continuum damage mechanics constitutive model. Constitutive model parameters were determined through a calibration process of the model response with the provided longitudinal and transverse tensile test coupon data. Comparison of model predictions with the challenge coupon test results are presented and general observations gleaned from the exercise are provided.

More Details

STAR-CCM+ (CFD) Calculations and Validation L3:VVI.H2L.P15.02

Gilkey, Lindsay N.

This milestone presents a demonstration of the High-to-Low (Hi2Lo) process in the VVI focus area. Validation and additional calculations with the commercial computational fluid dynamics code, STAR-CCM+, were performed using a 5x5 fuel assembly with non-mixing geometry and spacer grids. This geometry was based on the benchmark experiment provided by Westinghouse. Results from the simulations were compared to existing experimental data and to the subchannel thermal-hydraulics code COBRA-TF (CTF). An uncertainty quantification (UQ) process was developed for the STAR-CCM+ model and results of the STAR UQ were communicated to CTF. Results from STAR-CCM+ simulations were used as experimental design points in CTF to calibrate the mixing parameter β and compared to results obtained using experimental data points. This demonstrated that CTF’s β parameter can be calibrated to match existing experimental data more closely. The Hi2Lo process for the STAR-CCM+/CTF code coupling was documented in this milestone and closely linked L3:VVI.H2LP15.01 milestone report.

More Details

NSRD-11: Computational Capability to Substantiate DOE-HDBK-3010 Data

Louie, David L.; Brown, Alexander B.; Gelbard, Fred G.; Bignell, John B.; Pierce, Flint P.; Voskuilen, Tyler V.; Rodriguez, Salvador B.; Dingreville, Remi P.; Zepper, Ethan T.; Juan, Pierre-Alexandre J.; Le, San L.; Gilkey, Lindsay N.

Safety basis analysts throughout the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) complex rely heavily on the information provided in the DOE Handbook, DOE - HDBK - 3010, Airborne Release Fractions/Rates and Respirable Fractions for Nonreactor Nuclear Facilities, to determine radionuclide source terms. In calculating source terms, analysts tend to use the DOE Handbook's bounding values on airborne release fractions (ARFs) and respirable fractions (RFs) for various categories of insults (representing potential accident release categories). This is typically due to both time constraints and the avoidance of regulatory critique. Unfortunately, these bounding ARFs/RFs represent extremely conservative values. Moreover, they were derived from very limited small-scale bench/laboratory experiments and/or from engineered judgment. Thus, the basis for the data may not be representative of the actual unique accident conditions and configurations being evaluated. The goal of this research is to develop a more accurate and defensible method to determine bounding values for the DOE Handbook using state-of-art multi-physics-based computer codes. This enables us to better understand the fundamental physics and phenomena associated with the types of accidents in the handbook. In this year, this research included improvements of the high-fidelity codes to model particle resuspension and multi-component evaporation for fire scenarios. We also began to model ceramic fragmentation experiments, and to reanalyze the liquid fire and powder release experiments that were done last year. The results show that the added physics better describes the fragmentation phenomena. Thus, this work provides a low-cost method to establish physics-justified safety bounds by taking into account specific geometries and conditions that may not have been previously measured and/or are too costly to perform.

More Details

CASL VMA Milestone Report FY16 (L3:VMA.VUQ.P13.08): Westinghouse Mixing with STAR-CCM+

Gilkey, Lindsay N.

STAR-CCM+ (STAR) is a high-resolution computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code developed by CD-adapco. STAR includes validated physics models and a full suite of turbulence models including ones from the k-ε and k-ω families. STAR is currently being developed to be able to do two phase flows, but the current focus of the software is single phase flow. STAR can use imported meshes or use the built in meshing software to create computation domains for CFD. Since the solvers generally require a fine mesh for good computational results, the meshes used with STAR tend to number in the millions of cells, with that number growing with simulation and geometry complexity. The time required to model the flow of a full 5x5 Mixing Vane Grid Assembly (5x5MVG) in the current STAR configuration is on the order of hours, and can be very computationally expensive. COBRA-TF (CTF) is a low-resolution subchannel code that can be trained using high fidelity data from STAR. CTF does not have turbulence models and instead uses a turbulent mixing coefficient β. With a properly calibrated β, CTF can be used a low-computational cost alternative to expensive full CFD calculations performed with STAR. During the Hi2Lo work with CTF and STAR, STAR-CCM+ will be used to calibrate β and to provide high-resolution results that can be used in the place of and in addition to experimental results to reduce the uncertainty in the CTF results.

More Details
29 Results
29 Results