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FFR_chap02.txt
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CHAPTER 2
NUCLEAR CHARACTERISTICS OF
ONE~ AND TWO-REGION
HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS*
Nuclear characteristics refer to the conditions and material concentra-
tlons under which reactor systems will remain critical, the relative changes
in concentration of materials within the system as a function of reactor
operation, and the time behavior of variables in the reactor system which
occur when deviations from criticality take place. The material concen-
trations are closely connected with fuel costs in power reactors, while
reactor behavior under noneritical conditions is closely related to the safety
and control of the reactor system. These nuclear characteristics are de-
termined from the results obtained from so-called “‘reactor criticality’
and “reactor kinetic”’ calculations. In such studies, certain parameter
values pertaining to nuclei concentrations and reaction probabilities are
used ; for convenience some of these are listed in Section 2-2.
2-1. CriticaLiTY CALCULATIONS
Criticality studies are also termed ‘“‘reactor-statics studies.”” In these
studies the concentration of the various nuclei present can vary with
time, but it is assumed that the condition of criticality will be maintained.
The statics of chain reactions in aqueous-homogeneous reactors are of
interest primarily in connection with the estimation of the inventory of
fuel and fertile material, power density at the wall, the flux distribution
inside the reactor, and the rate of production of fissionable isotopes. These
enter into economic calculations pertaining to fuel costs in power reactors
and also into criteria specifying the design of the system. The most im-
portant factors determining criticality are geometry; nature, concentra-
tion, and enrichment of the fuel; nature and distribution of other com-
ponents in the reactor; and operating temperature and pressure. The
production of fissionable isotopes depends primarily on the neutron economy
of the system and will be a function of the relative competition for neu-
trons between the fertile material and the various other absorbers. The
latter include materials of construction, moderator, fuel components,
fission products, and various nonfissionable nuclei formed by parasitic
neutron capture in the fuel. In designing a reactor for the production of
*By P. R. Kasten, Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
29
30 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS [cHAP. 2
fissionable isotopes, it is therefore important to choose materials (other
than fuel and fertile material) which have low neutron-capture cross
sections. This, in turn, leads to the selection of D20 as the moderator in
nearly all cases.
Although criticality i1s assumed at all times, the concentration of fuel
isotopes can change appreciably with time owing to the relative competi-
tion between isotope formation, decay, and neutron-absorption processes.
In many studies it has been assumed that the reactor has operated for
such times that the steady-state conditions apply with regard to the nuclei
concentrations. This simplifies the isotope equations but may not always
give an adequate picture of the actual concentrations which would be
present in an operating reactor.
2-1.1 Calculation methods. Since both light and heavy water are ex-
cellent moderators, the energy of fission neutrons is rapidly degraded, with
the result that most of the fissions are produced by thermal neutrons.
Under these conditions either the modified one-group or the two-group
diffusion equations are usually applicable for criticality calculations. For
simplicity, this discussion will be limited to spherical reactors.
I'or a bare, spherical reactor the criticality condition (assuming Fermi
age theory) is given by
2} prne” Bren o Zy(')
I=viser ooz ), B
[p(u)e~ B"’T(“')]du']’ (2-1)
where B2 = (w/R)?,
Dy, = thermal diffusion coefficient,
D(u) = diffusion coefficient as a function of lethargy,
P = resonance escape probability to thermal energy,
p(u) = resonance escape probability to lethargy wu,
R =radius of reactor plus extrapolation distance,
u = lethargy of neutrons,
w, = u evaluated at thermal energy,
v = neutrons emitted per fission,
£ = average lethargy increment per neutron collision,
2 = macroscopic cross section; superseript th refers to thermal
value; subseripts f, a, and ¢ refer to fission, absorption,
and total cross sections, respectively; Z(u) refers to Z
evaluated as a function of lethargy,
T+ = Fermi age to thermal energy,
“D(') du’_
EZ(u')
7(u) = Fermi age to lethargy u=
0
2-1] CRITICALITY CALCULATIONS 31
By introducing €, the “fast fission factor,” where
p(u e~ BTy
E}hpthGfiBzm‘ futh Zi(u")
0
c— total fissions Z% 4+ Dy, B2 2 (u')
~ thermal fissions =P e Borth ’
2+ Dy B?
(2-2)
Eq. (2-1) becomes Joe— BoTth
'=1Trp (2-3)
where &k = n€pwmfin = infinite multiplication constant,
n = neutrons emitted per neutron absorption in fuel,
fw = fraction of thermal neutrons absorbed in fuel,
_ Dy thermal diffusion coefficient
2% T macroscopic thermal absorption cross section
2
Lig,
Replacing the exponential term in Eq. (2-3) by (1/1+ B?ry), the two-
group criticality condition is obtained as
k= (14 B2ra)(1 -+ B2L2). (2-4)
Although Egs. (2-1), (2-3), and (2-4) imply that resonance fissions in
the fuel are considered, in usual practice Eqgs. (2-3) and (2-4) are used on
the basis that (€p)se is equal to unity. Using this assumption, the values
of € and p to be used in evaluating & are those associated with the fertile
material. In the subsequent results and discussion, calculations based on
Egs. (2-3) and (2-4) consider that (ep)sue is equal to unity, while calcula-
tions based on Eq. (2-1) explicitly consider resonance absorptions and
fissions in fuel based on a 1/F resonance-energy flux distribution.
The breeding ratio (BR) is defined as the number of fuel atoms formed
per fuel atom destroyed for the reactor system. For a bare reactor, assum-
ing that the resonance flux is independent of lethargy and that absorptions
in fertile material produce new fuel, the BR 1s given by
i [1 —v [ R du] oz [ Zuote 6~ 77
ertile
0 0
BR= £t £
- “n 20" BT p du o oo (fuel) pe B du’
Tk (fuel [1—1}] th ~L———:| VE“’I el =
MueDlI=v), g, [T, £,
(2-5)
where 22 .. = thermal absorption cross section of fertile material,
Zieile = absorption cross section of fertile material at lethargy u,
2.(fuel) = fuel absorption cross section at lethargy u.
32 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS fcoap. 2
If resonance absorptions in fuel are neglected, the conventional two-group
formula is obtained as
th
_ Ziertile (1 — Prertite)
7
BR=Su tuel) T 1 ¥ B2rg
(2-6)
In the subsequent discussion, reference to one-region, two-group calcula-
tions implies use of Eqs. (2-4) and (2-6) to calculate critical mass and
breeding ratio, respectively.
The two-group diffusion equations were used for two-region reactor
calculations. The effect of a thin shell between the two regions upon
reactor criticality and breeding ratio was taken into account by considering
the shell absorptions by means of a boundary condition; the effect of a
pressure-vessel wall was taken into account by using an “‘effective’” extra-
polation distance in specifying the radius at which the flux was assumed
to be zero. The two-group equations were written as:
Dy Vs — Zyetpse + g—j 2sotpse =0, (2-7)
DoeV2se — ZscPse + PeZrePre = 0, (2-8)
DpVPém — Zpdn + %: 2 =0, (2-9)
DaVida — Zads + pe2pdm = 0. (2-10)
The subscripts f, s, ¢, and b refer, respectively, to the fast flux, slow flux,
core region, and blanket region; D 1s the diffusion coefficient; ¢ is the
neutron flux; 2, refers to the effective cross section for removing neutrons
from the fast group; and Z, refers to the thermal absorption cross section.
Other symbols have the same meaning given previously, with %k calculated
on the basis that (€p)sea = 1.
The boundary conditions used assume that the fast flux has the same
value on the core side of the core-tank wall as on the blanket side; the
same 18 also true of the slow flux. It is also specified that the fast flux and
slow flux become zero at some extrapolated reactor radius. At the core-
tank wall, the net fast-neutron current on the blanket side is assumed equal
to that on the core side, while the net slow-neutron current on the core
side is assumed equal to the flux rate of neutron absorptions in the core
tank plus the net slow-neutron current on the blanket side.
A multigroup formulation can be obtained by adding neutron groups
with energies intermediate between the fast and slow groups specified in
Eqgs. (2-7) through (2-10). These intermediate groups would be essentially
of the form
Dwip,— Zipi+ pic12Zi1di-1=0, (2-11)
where ¢ represents the ¢th group of neutrons, and 4 increases with decreas-
2-1] CRITICALITY CALCULATIONS 33
ing neutron energy. Boundary conditions analogous to those specified
above would apply. Such a formulation assumes that neutrons in the sth
group are always slowed down into the ¢+ 1 group, corresponding to a
relatively small number of fast groups. Using about 30 groups or more,
multigroup methods [1] used in homogeneous reactor calculations consider
that fast neutrons are born in the various fast groups in accordance with
the fraction of fission neutrons generated in the particular group; that for
all materials but hydrogen, neutrons are “‘slowed down’ from one energy
group to the group immediately below; and that with hydrogen, the pos-
sibility exists for a neutron to pass from one group to any group below as a
result of one scattering collision. Other multigroup methods [2] of calcu-
lation have been devised which consider that a scattering collision degrades
a neutron into the groups below in accordance with the probability for
degradation into a particular group.
2-1.2 Results obtained for one-region reactors. The majority of critical
caleulations for large one-region reactors have been based on IEqgs. (2-3)
and (2-4), in which all the fissions are effectively assumed to take place in
the thermal group [3]. However, if the effective value of n(fuel) for the
resonance region is less than the value for the thermal region, the above
models may not be adequate. Some multigroup calculations [4] have
been done for uranium-water systems at an average temperature of 260°C;
in I'ig. 2-1 are shown critical-mass requirements for light water-uranium sys-
1000
500 |-
200
100
50 |
U235, kg
, L L L] |
10 20 50 100 200
Radius of Bare Sphere, cm
Fie. 2-1. U285 mass and critical size of uranium light-water mixtures at 260°C.
Assumed densities: U235 = 18.5 g/cm?®, U238 = 18.9 g/cm?, H20 = 0.8 g/cm?.
34 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS [cHAP. 2
3 T
[ 17 i [ T T T 7177 l [T T TTI
2 — _
MolesHZO
(o) O
Moles (H2O + DZO)
100 --(1/40)
ol
8 =
7 L2
61— 5
51 B
=
41— o
o
> 3 °
x 5 g
m‘ ‘é O?
2 2= %’, |
> =
O
o™~
T
10 — @ ]
9 |- 5 —
8 = —
7 _
6 — ]
5 +— ]
4 — —
3 — |
2 — _
Tl 3 L L | [
78910 2 3 4 5 6789100 2 3 4 5 46 78¢9
Radius of Bare Sphere, cm
Fig. 2-2. U235 mass and critical size of bare spherical reactors moderated by
H0—D30 mixtures at 260°C. Assumed densities: U235 =18.5g/cm3, H,0 = 0.8
g/em?3, D20 = 0.89 g/cm?,
tems, while Fig. 2-2 gives the ecritical-mass requirements for U235-D>0-
H:0 systems, Initial conversion ratios for light-water systems are given
in Ref. [4].
Nuclear calculations have also been performed [5] using Egs. (2-1)
and (2-5), with the 1/E component of the flux starting at energies of 6 £7.
The calculations were for single-region reactors containing only ThOg,
U23303, and D20 at 300°C with the value of 9?3 in the resonance region
considered to be a parameter. Critical concentrations thus caleulated are
given in Fig. 2-3 for zero neutron leakage. The value for 23 in the thermal
energy region was taken as 2.25. The value for 9?3 in the resonance region
has not been firmly established; based on available data, 723,92 lies
between 0.9 and 1.
When the neutron leakage is not negligible and 723 /723 is less than 1, a
finite thorium concentration exists for which the breeding ratio is a maxi-
mum. This is indicated in Fig. 24, in which the initial breeding ratio is
2-1] CRITICALITY CALCULATIONS 39
20
Concentration of U233, g/liter
tn
I
| | | | | | } \
] . L L L L
0 200 400 600 800 1000
Concentration of Thorium, g/liter
Fiq. 2-3. Fuel concentration as a function of thorium concentration and value
of M,es/Men fOr an infinite reactor.
1.3 T T
1.2 —
1.1 —
.0
T 1.0|—
o=
o
&
T 09
o
o
—6 ’ e
£ 08— — —— = ———=— Reactor Diameter Infinite —]
= ~——o—— Reactor Diameter = 14
o7l TTmmmmssss= Reactor Diameter = 10 ft ]
0.6 l | | |
0 200 400 600 800 1000
Thorium Concentration, g/liter
23
Fia. 2-4. Breeding ratio as a function of thorium concentration and nffs/'r] th 10
a one-region reactor. Reactor temperature = 300°C, "qzt‘?, = 2.25.
36 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS [cHAP. 2
given as a function of thorium concentration, reactor diameter, and rela-
tive value of #23. The breeding ratio goes through a maximum owing to
the increase in resonance absorption in fuel as the thorium concentration
1s increased.
If the above reactors were fueled initially with U233, the initial breeding
ratio would have a maximum value of 1.08 rather than 1.25; however, the
curves would have about the same shape as those presented in Fig. 24,
and the value for 72 /92 would be between 0.8 and 0.9.
Comparison of the above results with those obtained using a two-group
model shows that if n.,/7 is equal to 1, the breeding ratio obtained by
the two methods is about the same; however, the critical concentration is
about 309, higher when the two-group model is used. If %% /7% < 1, the
value for the breeding ratio obtained using the two-group model will tend
to be higher than the actual value; however, if the fertile-material con-
centration is low (about 200 g/liter or less) and the reactor size large, little
resonance absorption occurs in fuel. Under these conditions the two-group
model should be adequate for obtaining the breeding ratio and conservative
with respect to estimating the critical concentration.
2-1.3 Results obtained for two-region reactors. Most two-region re-
actors have been calculated on the basis of the two-group model. Results
have also been obtained using multigroup calculations which indicate that
the two-group method is valid so long as the value of n(fuel) is independent
(or nearly so) of energy, or so long as nearly all the fissions are due to ab-
sorption of thermal neutrons.
To compare results obtained by different calculational methods, breed-
ing ratios and critical fuel concentrations were obtained [6] for some two-
region, Ds0-moderated thortum-blanket breeder reactors using a multi-
group, multiregion Univac program (“Eyewash’) [1} and a two-group,
two-region Oracle program [7]. In these calculations operation at 280°C
was assumed ; a 4-in.-thick Zircaloy—2 core tank separated the core from the
blanket; a 6-in.-thick iron pressure vessel contained the reactor; and ab-
sorptions occurred only in U233 and thorium in the core and in thorium in
the blanket. Twenty-seven fast groups, one thermal group, and four
regions (core, Zircaloy—2 core tank, blanket and pressure vessel) were
employed in the multigroup model. The two-group parameters were com-
puted from the multigroup cross sections by numerical integration [8].
In the two-group, two-region calculations a ‘‘thin-shell” approximation [9]
was used to estimate core-tank absorptions, while the effect of the pressure
vessel was simulated by adding an extrapolation distance to the blanket
thickness.
In the multigroup studies, various values for %23 in the resonance region
were considered. In one case the value of 25 was assumed to be constant
2-1] CRITICALITY CALCULATIONS 37
and equal to the thermal value.* In another the variation of 723 in the
resonance region was based on cross sections used by Roberts and Alex-
ander [10], which resulted in an 7% /52 of about 0.95; in the third case the
effective value for 7?3 in the resonance region was assumed to be essen-
tially 0.8 of the thermal value of 2.30.
The initial breeding ratios and U233 critical concentrations obtained from
the Eyewash and two-group, two-region calculations are given in Fig. 2-5
for slurry-core reactors (zero core thorium concentration also corresponds
to a solution-core reactor). With solution-core reactors the effect of the
value of 723 upon breeding ratio was less pronounced than for slurry-core
reactors, since fewer resonance absorptions take place with the lower fuel
concentrations. The blanket thorium concentration had little influence
upon the above effect for blanket thorium concentrations greater than
250 g/liter.
As indicated in Fig. 2-5, the breeding ratio is rather dependent upon
the value of #23; the loss in breeding ratio due to a reduced value of %3
in the resonance region is most marked for the slurry-core systems. Ior
these reactors, relatively more fissions take place in the resonance-energy
region as the core loading is increased, owing to the “hardening” of the
neutron spectrum. Figure 2-5 also shows that the two-group model gives
breeding ratios which are in good agreement with those obtained from
the multigroup model, so long as 723 does not deviate significantly from
723, Reported measurements [11-13] of #*? as a function of energy ndi-
cate that for the reactors considered here, the value of 5% /7% would be
about 0.95; the results given by curve “‘a’” in Fig. 2-5 are based effectively
on such a value of % /7% and indicate that two-group results are valid.
In general, for the cases studied it was found that for a heavily loaded
blanket (or core), the two-group values of total neutron leakage were
larger than the total leakages obtained from the multigroup calculation
(the multigroup model allowed for competition between fast absorptions
in fuel and fast leakage, while the two-group model assumed that fast
leakage occurred before any resonance absorption occurred). The multi-
group results were also used to calculate the fast effect, €, previously
defined in Eq. (2-2). It was found that resonance fissions accounted for
109, to 409, of the total fissions in those reactors containing from 0 to
300 g Th/liter in the core region. With no thorium in the core region,
changing from a 4-9 reactor (4-ft-diameter core and a 9-ft-diameter pres-
sure vessel) to a 6-10 reactor decreased core resonance fissions from about
149, to 109%,.
If the reactor core size is small, the two-group method does not ade-
quately treat leakage of fast neutrons; for this case two-group results may
*The thermal value for 723 was assumed to be equal to 2.30 instead of 2.25 used
in more recent calculations (the 2.25 value is believed to be more accurate).
38 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS [cHaPp, 2
1.30 .
Two-Group, Two-Region
Breeding Ratio
1.10
o. Estimated from Averaged Cross Sections
“Eyewash” used by Roberts and Alexander (11}
| b, Estimated for 123 independent of Energy
E 10 +—
g Two-Group, Two-Region
™)
m .
o~
=2 , 23
° “Eyewash’” _res
o 423
- th 7/ eff
c
L 5k —
B
T
@
W
&
o
o
T
]
G
x J
0 100 200 300
Core Thorium Concentration, g/liter
Fig. 2-5. Breeding gain and critical concentration for slurry-core reactors vs.
core thorium concentration. Core diameter = 6.0 ft, pressure vessel diameter = 10.0
ft, blanket thorium concentration = 1000 g/liter, blanket U233 concentration = 3.0
g/kg of Th.
not be adequate even though 7, is equal to n,,. This is indicated by the
experimental [ 14] and caleulated results for the HRE-2 given in Fig. 7-15.
Ag illustrated, there is excellent agreement between the experimental
data and the data calculated by a multigroup method and by u “har-
monles” method, but not with the results from the two-group model.
The harmonics caleulation [15] referred to in Fig. 7-15 does not take into
account fast fissions but does treat the slowing-down of neutrons in a more
realistic manner than does the fwo-group caleulation. The multigroup
result [16] indicated that about 139, of the fissions were due to neutrons
having energies above thermal.
A comparison [13] of the U235 critical concentrations predicted by the
2-2] NUCLEAR CONSTANTS USED IN CRITICALITY CALCULATIONS 39
700 1 T T T T T T T T 1
800 |— —
700 (— —
. L |
3
s 600 |— Age
o L |
a8 Age-Yukawa
@“ 500 |— —
= Yukawa
@
2 —_
2 L
¥
400 — _
300 |- —
200 |— —
100 E | | | | | | | | L | |
50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120
Outer Radius of Reflector, cm
Fic. 2-6. Comparison of critical concentrations obtained for various slowing-
down kernels in D20. Core radius = 39 cm, total age =237 cm? for all kernels,
diffusion length of pure moderator, L¢? = 40,200 cm?. Fuel only in core.
use of different slowing-down kernels in D2O-moderated reactors is shown
in Fig. 2-6. In the age-Yukawa kernel [given by (e ™/*"1/(4mwr)3/2) X
(e”/\/g,ffllwrzr)], the “age’” parameters were taken to be 158 em? for 71
and 79 cm? for 72. For both the age kernel (given by e~ /47/(47w7)3/2)
and the Yukawa kernel (given by e~/ ‘/;/ 477 r), T was taken to be 237 cm?2.
The results show that in small reactors the calculated critical concentration
obtained using the two-group method (Yukawa kernel) is substantially
lower than that obtained using either an age-Yukawa or an age kernel to
represent the neutron distribution during the slowing-down process. Since
the age-Yukawa kernel is believed to be the proper one to use for D0,
and the HRT is a “small” reactor (in a nuclear sense), it is not surprising
that the two-group results given in Fig. 7-15 are appreciably different
from the experimental results.
2-2. NucLEAR ConsTanTs UskED IN CrRITICALITY CALCULATIONS
In obtaining the nuclear characteristics of reactors, it is necessary to
know the probabilities with which different events occur. These reaction
40 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS [cHaP. 2
probabilities are usually given on an atomic basis in terms of cross sec-
tions [17]. Because of their diverse applications, it is necessary to present
reaction probabilities in this manner; however, in calculating the nuclear
characteristics of homogeneous reactors, it is convenient to combine funda-
mental data concerning atomic density and reaction probabilities so as to
facilitate critical calculations. This has been done to a limited extent in
this section. Listed here are some nuclear data and physical properties of
uranium isotopes, uranyl sulfate, heavy water, thorium oxide, and Zirca-
loy-2 used in two-group calculations for thorium breeder reactors [18].
TABLE 2-1
TaermalL Microscoric ABsorprTioN CROSS
SECTIONS AT VARIOUS TEMPERATURES
(Corrected for Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution and also non-(1/v) correction)
Element Ne‘;ggg’gi‘;zm 1 20°C 100°C 280°C
g, barns [17]
{233 588 526 460 376
234 92 82 72 59
235 689 595 515 411
236 6 5.3 4.7 3.9
17238 2.93 2.42 2.15 1.76
Pa233* [19] 60 130 130 130
Th232 7.45 6.60 5.85 4 81
Py 1025 975 905 950
Py 2a0* 250 600 700. 1000
Pu24l 1399 1240 1118 952
S 0.49 0.43 0.39 0.32
1i7 (99.989%) [20] 0.23 0.20 0.18 0.15
gy, barns [17]
U233 532 472 412 337
[z23s 582 506 438 350
Py239 748 711 660 693
Py24t 970 860 776 660
*Estimates of the effective cross section in typical homogeneous-reactor neutron
spectrums (except for 2200 m/sec value); these values include contributions due to
resonance absorptions. (Although these values were not used in the calculations
presented, they are believed to be more accurate than the ones employed. Values
used for Pa233 were 133, 118, and 97 barns at 20, 100, and 280°C, respectively.)
2-2] NUCLEAR CONSTANTS USLD IN CRITICALITY CALCULATIONS 41
2-2.1 Nuclear data. Table 2—1 lists thermal microscopic absorption and
fission cross sections for various elements and for various temperatures.
Table 2-2 lists thermal macroscopic absorption cross sections for HzO,
D20, and Zircaloy—2, and the density of H>0 and D20 at the various
TaABLE 2-2
TnerMar Macroscoric ABSORPTION (CROSS SECTIONS
AND DExNsITiES AT VARIOUsS TEMPERATURES [ 18]
(Corrected for Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution on basis of 1/2 cross section)
Ilement 20°C 100°C 280°C
Z(H20) 0.0196 0.0167 0.0107
2,(99.759% D20) 8.02x 1075 (G.85x 1075 4.44 x 1075
Z (Zirealoy-2) 0.00674 0.00598 (0.00491
p(D:0) 1.105 1.062 0.828
p(H20) 1.000 0.962 0.749
temperatures. All cross sections listed under the eolumns headed by °C
have been corrected for a Maxwell-Boltzmann flux distribution.
Values of 7 and v for the various fuels, and the fast and slow diffusion
coeflicients for Zircaloy are given in Table 2-3.
TaBLE 2-3
SoME NUCLEAR CONSTANTS FOR
UraNIUM, PLUTONIUM, AND ZIRCALOY 2
Values of 7 and » for U and Pu [21]
Itlement ’ N 1 v
233 2.25 2.50
U235 2.08 2.46
Pu?3? 1.93 3.08
Pu??! 2.23 3.21
Diffusion coefficients for Zircaloy—2: [22]
Dy = Do=0.98 for all temperatures,
where Dy = fast diffusion coefhicient,
Do = slow diffusion coeflicient.
42 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS [cHap. 2
Data for two-group calculations are summarized in Table 2—1 for 7, Dy,
Do, and p as functions of fertile-material concentration in mixtures of
TABLE 2-4
Two-Grour NucLeEar ConNsTaNTs® Fonr 1),0-MoODERATED
SysTEMs AT 280° C [18]
I'ertile-material concentration, T, Dy, D2,
g /liter em? ¢m em P
Th (in ThQz-D20)
() 212 1.64 1.24 1.000
100 212 1.62 1.23 0509
250 213 1.60 122 | 0.825
500 215 1.56 1.20 0.718
1000 215 1.50 116 0.554
U2 (in U02804-1:20) |
0 212 1.64 1.24 1.000
100 200 1.57 1.20 0.875
250 189 1.49 1.15 (0. 801
n00 179 1.40 1.10 0.720
1000 173 1.28 1.04 0.595
U238 (in U02504-LioS04-D20)
0 212 1.64 1.24 1.000
100 198 1.55 1.19 0.873
250 185 1.45 113 0.797
500 173 1.33 1.07 0.705
1000 165 1.18 0.99 0.525
*r = Fermi age; Dy = fast diffusion coefficient; D = slow diffusion coeflicient;
p = resonance escape probability.
TLi2S0 4 molar concentration equal to U080 molar concentration.
fertile material and heavy water (99.755; D20) at 280°C. Materials con-
sidered are ThOs-12.0, TO80,-D20, and U080 4-LieS0,-1:0 where
the molar concentration of LieSOy is the same as the UOoSO 4 molar con-
centration. Reference [18] gives corresponding data at other temperatures
and also gives some values for the case of 1120 ax the moderator,
The diffusion coefficients and ages were calculated by a numerieal inte-
aration procedure [8]. The fast diffusion constant, Dy, and the IFermi
age, 7, are based on a 1/ flux distribution, and the slow diffusion con-
stant, Do, 1s based on a Maxwellian flux distribution.
<1
2-3] STEADY-STATE FUEL CONCENTRATIONS 43
2-2.2 Resonance integrals. Formulas used in calculating resonance in-
tegrals (RI) are given below.
For U238;
3, \0-471 s, \
In RI = 5.64 — (_2'/11\?2% 7578 > 1% 107, (2-13)
RI{> )= 280 barns. (2-14)
For Th232:;
3, \0-253 >, _ L
RI=8.33 ( NO2> ;0= = 4500, (2-15)
RI = 70 barns, J\?OSQ > 4500, (2-16)
RI(>}= 70 barns. (2-17)
2-3. I'veEL CONCENTRATIONS AND BREEDING RATios UNDER INITIAL
AND STEADY-STATE CONDITIONS
The relationships between breeding ratio and reactor-system inventory
determine the fuel costs in homogeneous reactors. The breeding ratio
depends on neutron leakage as well as relative absorptions in fuel fertile
material and other materials present, while material inventory is a funetion
of reactor size and fuel and fertile-material concentrations; thus a range
of parameter values must be considered to aid in understanding the above
relationships. DBased on results given in Section 1-1.3, it appears that the
two-group method gives satisfactory results for critical concentration and
breeding ratio for most of the aqueous-homogeneous systems of interest.
This permits survey-type calculations to be performed in a relatively short
time interval., The results given below are based on the conventional two-
group model.
In steady-state operation, the concentration of the various nuclides
within the reactor system does not change with time. During the initial
period of reactor operation this situation is not true, but 18 approached
after some time interval if ncutron poisons are removed by fuel processing.
Under steady-state operation 1t is necessary to consider the equilibrium
isotope relationships. In thorium breeder reactors this involves rate ma-
terial balances on Th, Pa?33 U233 234 1235 1236 fission-product polsons,
and corrosion products. (The uranium isotope chain is normally cut off at
U236 gince this Is a low-cross-section isotope, and neutrons lost to the suc-
cessors of U?36 would tend to be compensated for by fission neutrons gen-
44 ONE- AND TWO-REGION HOMOGENEOUS REACTORS [cHAP. 2
erated by some succeeding members of the chain.) In uranium-plutonium
reactors, steady-state rate material balances were made on U235 17236
U238 Pu23® Pu?4 and Pu®*'; all other higher isotopes were assumed either
to be removed 1n the fuel-processing step or to have a negligible effect
upon the nuelear characteristics of the reactor.
Although equilibrium results give the isotope ratios which would be
approached in a reactor system, much of the desired nuclear information
can be obtained by considering “‘clean” reactors, i.e., reactors in which
zero poisons exist, corresponding to initial conditions, or to criticality con-
ditions at reactor startup. This is a result of the rather simple relationships
which exist between breeding ratio, critical concentration, and fraction
poisons, and the ability to represent the higher isotopes by their fraction-
polson equivalent.
2-3.1 Two-region reactors. In order to estimate the minimum fuel costs
in a two-region thorium breeder reactor, it i1s important to determine the
relation between breeding ratio and the concentrations of fuel (U233) and
fertile material (Th?32) in the core and blanket. Similar considerations
apply to uranium-phitonium converter reactors. The breeding or con-
version ratio will depend on neutron leakage as well as relative neutron
absorptions in fuel, fertile material, and the core-tank wall; therefore a
range of core and pressure-vessel sizes must be considered.
Since fabrication problems and the associated cost of pressure vessels
capable of operating at 2000 psi increase rapidly for diameters above 12 ft,
and since the effect of larger diameters on the nuclear characteristics of the
two-region reactors is relatively small, 12 ft has been taken as the limiting
diameter value. Actually, in most of the calculations discussed here, the
inside diameter of the pressure vessel has been held at 10 ft and the core
diameter allowed to vary over the range of 3 to 9 ft.
In addition to the limitation on the maximum diameter of the pressure
vessel, there will also be a limitation, for a given total power output, on
the minimum diameter of the core vessel. This minimum diameter is de-
termined by the power density at the core wall, since high power densities
at the wall will lead to intolerable corrosion of the wall material (Zircaloy—2).
In order to take this factor into consideration, the power densities, as well
as critical concentrations and breeding ratios, were calculated for the
various reactors.
2-3.2 Two-region thorium breeder reactors evaluated under initial con-
ditions. The results given here are for reactors at startup; although the
trends indicated apply to reactors in steady-state operation, the values
given here for the breeding ratio and fuel concentration would be some-
what different than those for steady-state conditions.
2-3] STEADY-STATE FUEL CONCENTRATIONS 45
Calculations of breeding ratio, the power density at the inside core
wall, and the maximum power density were carried out for some spherical
reactors with 200 g Th/liter in the core. The blanket materials considered
were heavy water (99.759%; D20), beryllium, and ThOs-heavy water sus-
pensions. The inside diameter of the pressure vessel was fixed at 10 ft for
one set of calculations and at 12 ft for a second set; core diameters ranged
from 6 to 9 ft in the first set and from 6 to 11 ft in the second set. The
average temperature of all systems was taken as 280°C, and for the purpose
of caleulating power densities at the core wall, the total thermal power
was taken as 100 Mw. A i-in-thick Zircaloy—2 core tank was assumed to
separate the core and blanket in all reactors, and the value of %23 was
taken as 2.32. (A more accurate value of 923 is presently considered to be
n=2.25.) No account was taken of fission-product-poison buildup, pro-
tactinium losses, or fuel buildup in the blanket. The results obtained [23]
indicate that the breeding ratio increases for any core diameter by re-
placing either a D20 or Be blanket with one containing ThOg; no sig-
nificant increase in breeding ratio is obtained by increasing the blanket
thorium concentration above 2 kg Th/liter; for reactors with fertile ma-
terial in the blanket, the breeding ratio and wall power density increase
with decreasing core diameter.