Read More
Date: 17-4-2017
2472
Date: 25-4-2017
2922
Date: 3-4-2017
2280
|
Xenon-135 Oscillations
Large thermal reactors with little flux coupling between regions may experience spatial power oscillations because of the non-uniform presence of xenon-135. The mechanism is described in the following four steps.
(1) An initial lack of symmetry in the core power distribution (for example, individual control rod movement or misalignment) causes an imbalance in fission rates within the reactor core, and therefore, in the iodine-135 buildup and the xenon-135 absorption.
(2) In the high-flux region, xenon-135 burnout allows the flux to increase further, while in the low-flux region, the increase in xenon-135 causes a further reduction in flux. The iodine concentration increases where the flux is high and decreases where the flux is low.
(3) As soon as the iodine-135 levels build up sufficiently, decay to xenon reverses the initial situation. Flux decreases in this area, and the former low-flux region increases in power.
(4) Repetition of these patterns can lead to xenon oscillations moving about the core with periods on the order of about 15 hours.
With little change in overall power level, these oscillations can change the local power levels by a factor of three or more. In a reactor system with strongly negative temperature coefficients, the xenon-135 oscillations are damped quite readily. This is one reason for designing reactors to have negative moderator-temperature coefficients.
|
|
لصحة القلب والأمعاء.. 8 أطعمة لا غنى عنها
|
|
|
|
|
حل سحري لخلايا البيروفسكايت الشمسية.. يرفع كفاءتها إلى 26%
|
|
|
|
|
جامعة الكفيل تحتفي بذكرى ولادة الإمام محمد الجواد (عليه السلام)
|
|
|