Identifying Thermodynamic Mechanisms Affecting Reactor Pressure Vessel Integrity During Severe Nuclear Accidents Simulated by Laser Heating at the Laboratory Scale
NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING(2023)
Abstract
In this work, laser heating is used to experimentally investigate the high-temperature behavior of the U-Fe-Zr-O system using arc-melted samples with various nominal compositions. Three-phase transitions are observed in the vicinity of similar to 1100, similar to 1700, and similar to 2200 K Principal component analysis of the phase transition temperatures in the course of laser-heating thermal cycling indicates that the phase transition around similar to 1100 K is driven by the interaction of stainless steel (SS) with metallic U, the phase transition around similar to 1700 K by the melting of stainless steel, and the phase transition above similar to 2000K by the eutectic melting of UO2. The results also reveal two hitherto overlooked interactions in the U-Fe-Zr-O system, which could have severe consequences for the containment of corium inside the reactor pressure vessel (RPV). First, the phase transition temperatures of the samples varied extensively as a result of the laser-driven rapid thermal cycling. Variations of up to 390 K were observed in the phase transition temperatures, suggesting that depending on the initial conditions of corium formation, the corium-driven ablation of the RPV wall could commence significantly earlier than the current state-of-the-art severe accident codes would predict. Additionally, evidence of a large exothermic reaction between zirconium and molten steel was observed upon SS melting. Such phenomenon may also be driven by material segregation during fast heating and cooling. If such a mechanism is activated during a severe nuclear accident, it can have an important impact on the overall thermal balance of the RPV.
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Key words
Nuclear fuel safety, corium, severe nuclear accidents, loss-of-coolant accident, in-vessel retention
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