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Title: AGR-2 safety test predictions using the PARFUME code

Technical Report ·
DOI:https://doi.org/10.2172/1167547· OSTI ID:1167547
 [1]
  1. Idaho National Lab. (INL), Idaho Falls, ID (United States)

This report documents calculations performed to predict failure probability of TRISO-coated fuel particles and diffusion of fission products through these particles during safety tests following the second irradiation test of the Advanced Gas Reactor program (AGR-2). The calculations include the modeling of the AGR-2 irradiation that occurred from June 2010 to October 2013 in the Advanced Test Reactor (ATR) and the modeling of a safety testing phase to support safety tests planned at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and at Idaho National Laboratory (INL) for a selection of AGR-2 compacts. The heat-up of AGR-2 compacts is a critical component of the AGR-2 fuel performance evaluation, and its objectives are to identify the effect of accident test temperature, burnup, and irradiation temperature on the performance of the fuel at elevated temperature. Safety testing of compacts will be followed by detailed examinations of the fuel particles to further evaluate fission product retention and behavior of the kernel and coatings. The modeling was performed using the particle fuel model computer code PARFUME developed at INL. PARFUME is an advanced gas-cooled reactor fuel performance modeling and analysis code (Miller 2009). It has been developed as an integrated mechanistic code that evaluates the thermal, mechanical, and physico-chemical behavior of fuel particles during irradiation to determine the failure probability of a population of fuel particles given the particle-to-particle statistical variations in physical dimensions and material properties that arise from the fuel fabrication process, accounting for all viable mechanisms that can lead to particle failure. The code also determines the diffusion of fission products from the fuel through the particle coating layers, and through the fuel matrix to the coolant boundary. The subsequent release of fission products is calculated at the compact level (release of fission products from the compact). PARFUME calculates the release fraction as the ratio of the number of atoms released from the compact to the amount produced in the compact fuel kernels and through uranium contamination. These safety test predictions aim at giving guidance for the upcoming safety tests to be conducted at ORNL and INL. The AGR-2 compacts modeled in this study belong to the four U.S. capsules of the AGR-2 irradiation test train. For each capsule, the compacts with the lowest and highest burnups were selected to provide a prediction envelope. The objective of this document is to present results of calculations and analyses made by PARFUME on these selected AGR-2 compacts. These results include: • Fuel failure probability • Palladium penetration • Fractional release of fission products Details associated with completion of these calculations are provided in the remainder of this document: the AGR-2 Safety Testing plan is briefly introduced in Section 2, PARFUME modeling is outlined in Section 3, results are described in Section 4, conclusions are given in Section 5, and references are listed in Section 6.

Research Organization:
Idaho National Lab. (INL), Idaho Falls, ID (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Nuclear Energy (NE)
DOE Contract Number:
AC07-05ID14517
OSTI ID:
1167547
Report Number(s):
INL/EXT-14-33082
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English