Assessment of Refuelling Effects in High Power Channel on Fission Product Releases for Following an End-Fitting Failure

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Kang Moon Lee
Ki Man Nho

Abstract

A more realistic fuel bundle power history considering the refuelling effect was used for the assessment of fission product releases during an end-fitting failure accident. The high power channels were selected as a conservatism, based on the instantaneous power/burnup distributions during 0 to 610 Full Power Days (FPDs) in the core, which was calculated from the fuel management study for Wolsong 2/3/4 plants. For each fuel bundle, the volume-average temperature in the UO2 pellet and fission product inventory distribution in the fuel element were calculated by ELESTRES code.

When compared with the case using the current overpower envelope based on the time-average physics simulations, higher fuel temperature and more fission product inventory were predicted for the low power bundles located at bundle positions 1, 2, 11 and 12. However, the results for high power bundles at bundle positions 4 to 9, where the most fission products are released following an end-fitting failure event, confirmed the conservatism made in the current analysis methodology since they showed a very high fission product inventory.

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