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Lesson 5 Objectives

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We now turn to the ENERGY numeric approximation solutions. ... (and many Monte Carlo) represent energy variable using multigroup formalism ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lesson 5 Objectives


1
Lesson 5 Objectives
  • Review of multigroup equations
  • Matrix formulation
  • Definition of outer (energy) iteration
  • General eigenvalues
  • Solution of k-effective eigenvalue equation

2
Energy treatment
  • We now turn to the ENERGY numeric approximation
    solutions .
  • The idea is to convert the continuous dimensions
    to discretized form.
  • Calculus gt Algebra
  • Steps we will follow
  • Derivation of multigroup form
  • Reduction of group coupling to outer iteration in
    matrix form
  • Solution strategies that avoid matrix
    manipulation

3
Definition of Multigroup
  • All of the deterministic methods (and many Monte
    Carlo) represent energy variable using multigroup
    formalism
  • Basic idea is that the energy variable is divided
    into contiguous regions (called groups)
  • Note that it is traditional to number groups from
    high energy to low.

4
Derivation of multigroup equations
  • Divide and conquer technique common to many
    numerical methods Discretization
  • Differs from other numerical methods by having an
    assumed UNDERLYING shape
  • The solution to the multigroup equations gives a
    shape to a guide function that corrects the
    assumed underlying shape
  • Must keep this in mind when plotting the spectrum

5
Derivation of MG equations (2)
  • From original energy balance equation
  • Assume an underlying shapean assumption of the
    RELATIVE spectrum shape,
  • Superimpose a guide function made up of linear
    combinations of basis functions

6
Derivation of MG equations (3)
  • Substitute the guide function
  • into the balance condition and operate on it
    with to get the Generalized group
    g

    equation

7
Derivation of MG equations (4)
  • Most common basis functions Multigroup
    membership functions
  • Using this, we have the simplification

8
Derivation of MG equations (5)
  • With proper definition of group cross sections
    (see Eqn. 4.39 in text) we can put this equation
    into the standard multigroup form
  • Strong balance condition (at each E) has become a
    weak balance (only total balance within a group)

9
MG cross section definitions
10
Important points to make
  • The assumed shapes f(E) take the mathematical
    role of weight functions in formation of group
    cross sections
  • Because the group flux definition does NOT
    involve the division by the group width it is NOT
    a density in energy.
  • The numerical value goes up and down with group
    SIZE.
  • Therefore, if you GRAPH group fluxes, you should
    divide by the group width before comparing to
    continuous spectra

11
Important points to make (2)
  • An even better comparison to continue spectra
    would be fg,calc f(E) / fg
  • We do not have to predict a spectral shape f(E)
    that is good for ALL energies, but just accurate
    over the limited range of each group.
  • Therefore, as groups get smaller, the selection
    of an accurate f(E) gets less important
  • Results in a histogram guide function

12
Finding the group spectra
  • There are two common ways to find the f(E) for
    neutrons
  • Assuming a shape Use general physical
    understanding to deduce the expected spectral
    shapes fission, 1/E, Maxwellian
  • Calculating a shape Use a simplified problem
    that can be approximately solved to get a shape
    resonance processing techniques, finegroup to
    multigroup

13
MG cross section definitions (2)
  • Be sure to be able to perform these integrals if
    I provide you with energy-dependent cross
    sections and fluxes
  • Hardest Scattering (elastic) because of the
    limited energy range of neutron after scatter
  • The final integral involves the intersection of
    the destination group range (Eg,Eg-1) and the
    range that can physically be reached (aE,E)

14
Finegroup to multigroup
  • Bootstrap technique whereby
  • Assumed spectrum shapes are used to form
    finegroup cross sections (Ggt200)
  • Simplified-geometry calculations are done with
    these large datasets.
  • The resulting finegroup spectra are used to
    collapse fine-group XSs to multigroup

Multi-group structure (Group 3)
E2
E3
Energy
E20
E21
E22
E23
E24
E25
E26
E27
Fine-group structure
15
Finegroup to multigroup (2)
  • Energy collapsing equation
  • Using the calculated finegroup fluxes, we
    conserve reaction rates to get new cross
    sections
  • Assumes multigroup flux will be

16
Preparation of MG cross-sections
  • Basic information is in ENDF/B files system
    containing
  • Tabulated pointwise cross-sections for
    non-resonance cross sections
  • Resolved resonance parameters
  • Unresolved resonance statistical parameters
  • Scattering transfer functions pointwise in
    energy and pointwise OR Legendre in angle

17
Preparation of MG XSs (2)
  • As described in the text, there are a number of
    computer code collections that will prepare cross
    sections from ENDF/B files
  • NJOY (LANL)
  • AMPX (ORNL)
  • The job is in 2 parts
  • Non-resonance cross sections using assumed
    spectrum shapes (non-problem-dependent)
  • Resonance processing (problem dependent)

18
Energy solution strategies Fixed source
  • The resulting energy group equations are coupled
    through scattering and fission
  • We will first deal with non-fission situation,
    where the group equation is

19
Matrix formulation
  • Write this in matrix operator form by defining
    operators
  • Combine them into a single matrix operator

20
Matrix formulation (2)
  • The resulting matrix relationship is

21
Matrix solution strategies (3)
  • Although we generally do NOT form a matrix in our
    computer codes (too large and sparse), our
    numerical multigroup treatments can be formally
    considered in matrix terms.
  • If we subdivided the H matrix into lower,
    diagonal, and upper parts, i.e.,

22
Matrix solution strategies (4)
  • The same two basic iterative approaches we saw in
    the DT solution are used here as well Jacobi and
    Gauss-Seidel
  • Jacobi (simultaneous update) uses
  • Gauss-Seidel (successive update) uses
  • where is the iteration counter

23
Matrix solution strategies (5)
  • In practice, the groups are solved one at a time
    (group 1, then group 2, etc.) A single sweep
    through all groups is called an OUTER ITERATION.
    (The solution of the spatial flux for each group
    is the INNER iteration we studied before.)
  • The G-S approach takes advantage of the fact
    that, for groups of LOWER number, the current
    iteration has already been done.
  • For many problems (esp. photon and fast group
    structures) one outer iteration is all that is
    required (no up-scatter)
  • Bottom Line We can worry about space and
    direction for ONE group at a time

24
Eigenvalue Calculations
  • Returning to the multigroup balance equation
  • Without external sources, we get the homogeneous
    equation
  • Two characteristics of the solution
  • Any constant times a solution is a solution.
  • There probably isnt a meaningful solution

25
Eigenvalue solution normalization
  • For the first point, we generally either
    normalize to 1 fission neutron
  • or to a desired power level
  • where k is a conversion constant (e.g., 200
    MeV/fission)

26
Eigenvalue approach
  • For the second problem (i.e., no meaningful
    solution), we deal with it by adding a term with
    a constant that we can adjust to achieve balance
    in the equation.
  • We will discuss four different eigenvalue
    formulations
  • Lambda (k-effective) eigenvalue
  • Alpha (time-absorption) eigenvalue
  • B2 (buckling) eigenvalue
  • Material search eigenvalue

27
Lambda (k-effective) eigenvalue
  • The first (and most common) eigenvalue form
    involves dividing n, the number of neutrons
    emitted per fission
  • Keep largest of multiple eigenvalues

28
Lambda eigenvalue (2)
  • The criticality state is given by
  • Advantages
  • Everybody uses it
  • Guaranteed real solution
  • Fairly intuitive
  • Good measure of distance from criticality for
    reactors
  • Disadvantages
  • No physical basis
  • Not a good measure of distance from criticality
    for CS

29
Alpha (time-absorption) eigenvalue
  • The second eigenvalue form involves adding a term
    to the removal term
  • Keep largest of multiple eigenvalues

30
Alpha eigenvalue (3)
  • The criticality state is given by
  • Advantages
  • Physical basis
  • Intuitive for kinetics work
  • Disadvantages
  • No guaranteed real solution
  • Not intuitive for reactor design or CS work

31
B2 (buckling) eigenvalue
  • The third eigenvalue form also involves adding a
    term to the removal term
  • Physical basis is the diffusion theory
    approximation of leakage by

32
B2 eigenvalue (3)
  • The criticality state is given by
  • Advantages
  • Physical basis
  • Good measure of distance from criticality
  • Disadvantages
  • No guaranteed real solution
  • Not intuitive for kinetics or CS work

33
Material search eigenvalue
  • The last eigenvalue is a number density of a
    key nuclide, Nj
  • Advantages
  • Physical basis
  • Great for design
  • Guaranteed real solution (fuel isotopes)
  • Disadvantages
  • No guaranteed real solution (non-fuel isotopes)

34
K-effective solutions
  • For k-effective calculations, the cross sections
    are the same, but the matrix changes subtly
  • which looks more complicated but is actually the
    same thing

35
K-effective solutions (2)
  • Recognizing that the term in parenthesis is just
    a renormalization constant, we set it to 1 and
    break it out to give us a fixed source matrix
  • with the eigenvalue becoming

36
K-effective solutions (2)
  • This comes down to
  • Solve for the flux produced by the fission
    neutron energy distribution
  • See what k-effective supports a unit source
    with the resulting group fluxes
  • (If you want something OTHER than
    k-effectivee.g., Boron content or B2--change
    that something by trial and error until
    k-effective1)

37
HW5
  • For group spanning 1 keV-4 keV, find the group
    total and scattering to the next lower group
    (which goes down to 0.5 keV), if
  • Assume flux is 1/E and use A6

38
HW5
  • Using the 3 group assembly macroscopic cross
    sections in PUBLIC area file HW5.DAT
  • Find k-infinity for the exposures provided
    (MWD/assembly)
  • For the 0 exposure cross sections, find the
    buckling eigenvalue and translate into a critical
    reactor size (with H/D1)
  • Find the 0 exposure B-10 concentration for
    criticality, assuming group 3 absorption cross
    section of 2000 b
  • For the k-infinity problem for 0 exposure,
    collapse the cross sections to 1 group
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