OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA), US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC),
Penn State University (PSU), Japan Nuclear Safety Organisation (JNES)

NEA Nuclear Science Committee (NSC), NEA Committee on Safety of Nuclear Installations (CSNI)

NEA/NRC Benchmark based on
NUPEC BWR Full-size Fine-mesh Bundle Tests
(BFBT)

In the past decade, a large amount of effort has been made toward the direct simulation of the boiling transition (BT) for BWR fuel bundles. The most advanced sub-channel codes explicitly take into account droplet along with liquid and vapor. They predict the dry-out process as disappearance of the liquid film on the fuel rod surface without employing any semi-empirical correlations. Through a series of benchmark comparisons with full length/scale bundle data, it was verified that the codes are reliable in predicting the critical power of the conventional BWR fuel types. However, these sub-channel codes are not yet utilized in new fuel design. Adequacy of fuel lattice geometries, spacer configurations, etc., is still confirmed mainly by costly experiments using partial- and full-scale mock ups. The main reason for this situation is a shortage of high resolution and full-scale experimental databases under actual operating conditions.

The detailed void distribution inside the fuel bundle has been regarded as one of the important factors in the boiling transition in BWRs. With regard to the sub-channel wise void distribution, it is clear that the cross flow across the sub-channel gap dominates void distributions. Most of the well known sub-channel codes still employ the classical Lahey's Void Drift Model or its modified models. Although there have been substantial efforts to establish a sound theoretical background of detailed void distributions, the numerical models that are verified in a wide range of geometrical and thermal hydraulic conditions are not yet available. In this sense, this subject still remains the major unsolved problem in the two-phase flow of BWR fuel bundles. The main reason for this lack of resolution is the lack of reliable full bundle databases under operating conditions. Up to now, only partial bundle (3   3 or 4   4) test data under relatively low pressure (1 MPa) conditions have been made available.

It was during the Fourth OECD/NRC BWR TT Benchmark Workshop on 6 October 2002 in Seoul, Korea, that the need to refine models for best-estimate calculations based on good-quality experimental data was discussed. The needs arising in this respect should not be limited to currently available macroscopic approaches but should be extended to next-generation approaches that focus on more microscopic processes. It is suggested that this international benchmark be based on data made available from the NUPEC (Nuclear Power Engineering Corporation) database.  From 1987 to 1995, NUPEC performed a series of void measurement tests using full-size mock-up tests for both BWRs and PWRs. Based on state-of-the-art computer tomography (CT) technology, the void distribution was visualised at the mesh size smaller than the sub-channel under actual plant conditions. NUPEC also performed steady-state and transient critical power test series based on the equivalent full size mock-ups. Considering the reliability not only of the measured data, but also other relevant parameters such as the system pressure, inlet sub-cooling and rod surface temperature, these test series supplied the first substantial database for the development of truly mechanistic and consistent models for void distribution and boiling transition.

This international benchmark, based on the NUPEC database, encourages advancement in this uninvestigated field of two-phase flow theory with very important relevance to the nuclear reactor's safety margins evaluation. Considering the immaturity of the theoretical approach, the benchmark specification is being designed so that it systematically assesses and compares the participants' numerical models on the prediction of detailed void distributions and critical powers. Furthermore, the following points are kept in mind while the benchmark specification is being established:

  • As concerns the numerical model of void distributions, no sound theoretical approach that can be applied to a wide range of geometrical and operating conditions has been developed.
  • In the past decade, experimental and computational technologies have improved tremendously through the study of the two-phase flow structure. Over the next decade, it can be expected that mechanistic approaches will be more widely applied to the complicated two phase fluid phenomena inside fuel bundles.
  • The development of truly mechanistic models for critical power prediction is currently underway. These models must include elementary processes such as void distributions, droplet deposit, liquid film entrainment, etc.
The BFBT benchmark consists of two parts (phases), each part consisting of different exercises:
  • Phase I - Void Distribution Benchmark
- Exercise I-1 - Steady-state sub-channel grade benchmark
- Exercise I-2 - Steady-state microscopic grade benchmark
- Exercise I-3 - Transient macroscopic grade benchmark
- Exercise I-4 - Uncertainty analysis of the steady state sub-channel benchmark
  • Phase II - Critical Power Benchmark
- Exercise II-0 - Pressure drop benchmark
- Exercise II-1 - Steady-state benchmark
- Exercise II-2 - Transient benchmark
- Exercise II-3 - Uncertainty analysis of the steady critical power benchmark.

It should be recognised that the purpose of this benchmark is not only the comparison of currently available macroscopic approaches but above all the encouragement to develop novel next-generation approaches that focus on more microscopic processes. Thus, the benchmark problem includes both macroscopic and microscopic measurement data. In this context, the sub-channel grade void fraction data are regarded as the macroscopic data and the digitized computer graphic images are the microscopic data.



Conditions for releasing BFBT data

Reports
Planned reports
  • NUPEC BWR Full Size Bundle Tests (BFBT) Volume II : Benchmark Results for Void Distribution
  • NUPEC BWR Full Size Bundle Tests (BFBT) Volume III :  Benchmark Results for Critical Power

BFBT Forum

PSBT Conditions for Release 

Conditions for releasing PSBT data



Related expert groups

NSC
CSNI

Contacts

For more information, please contact .

For more information on activities managed/supported by the NSC, please contact .

Last reviewed: 13 November 2017

Top