Experimental decay-heat simulation-benchmark for 14 MeV neutrons & complex inventory analysis with FISPACT-II

Experimental decay-heat simulation-benchmark for 14 MeV neutrons & complex inventory analysis with FISPACT-II

Experimental decay-heat simulation-benchmark for 14 MeV neutrons & complex inventory analysis with FISPACT-II 150 150 UKAEA Opendata
UKAEA-CCFE-PR(19)12

Experimental decay-heat simulation-benchmark for 14 MeV neutrons & complex inventory analysis with FISPACT-II

Nuclear inventory simulations have a vital role to play in the planning and execution of future fusion experiments and power plants. They are able to predict the transmutation (burn-up) response of material compositions under neutron irradiation, thus providing information about the build-up of impurities that could impact on material performance.
The inventory evolution also quantifies the radiological response of a material by tracing the production (and decay) rates of radioactive nuclides. This information can be used to plan maintenance schedules at nuclear facilities, satisfy nuclear regulators during reactor planning, and quantify the waste disposal needs during reactor decommissioning.
However, the validity of inventory simulations must be verified to give confidence in the predictions. This paper describes a validation and verification (V&V) benchmark exercise that tests the quality of nuclear code predictions. Such benchmarks are an important part of the development and release of the FISPACT-II inventory code and its associated input nuclear data libraries. This paper describes the latest V&V based on the fusion decay heat measurements performed at the Japanese FNS facility. Rigourous and detailed assessment techniques, focussed on the complex breakdown of decay-heat contributions from individual radionuclides, have been employed to interpret the simulated results, benchmark the data against the experimental measurements, and to compare results from different international nuclear data libraries. Example results are presented and discussed for the nickel, iron, niobium, tungsten, chromium, and osmium, using FISPACT-II simulations performed

Collection:
Journals
Journal:
Nuclear Fusion
Publisher:
IOP (Institute of Physics)
Published date:
07/05/2019