Need help with solving nuclear power plant problem

AI Thread Summary
To calculate key metrics for a nuclear power plant, important factors include thermal efficiency, load factor, availability factor, and core power density. Gross electrical output is preferred for thermodynamic efficiency calculations, while net electrical output is better for economic efficiency. If EFPD (effective full power days) is not provided, it can be derived from the cycle length and total energy produced based on core discharge burn-up. Essential data for these calculations includes rated thermal power, electrical outputs, and core specifications. Understanding these parameters is crucial for accurate performance assessment of nuclear power plants.
zaibi113113
Messages
6
Reaction score
0
How to calculate for any nuclear power plant

1. Thermal efficiency
2. power plant load factor
3. availability factor
4. capacity factor
5. core power density
6. specific power
7. linear power density
8. fissile loading
9. fuel enrichment
10. fuel burn-up
11. fuel residence time
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
zaibi113113 said:
How to calculate for any nuclear power plant

1. Thermal efficiency
2. power plant load factor
3. availability factor
4. capacity factor
5. core power density
6. specific power
7. linear power density
8. fissile loading
9. fuel enrichment
10. fuel burn-up
11. fuel residence time

1. Gross electrical output / thermal rating
2. EFPD/cycle length
3. EFPD/365
4. same as 2
5. thermal rating / core volume
6. depends on context, could be same as 5 or 7.
7. thermal rating * percent of heat generated in fuel / (number of rods * core height)
8. u235 enrichment percent * total u mass
9. u235 mass / total u mass
10. thermal power * efpd / total u mass
11. number of cycles assembly is used, depends on cycle specific core design.
 
Last edited:
QuantumPion said:
1. Gross electrical output / thermal rating
2. EFPD/cycle length
3. EFPD/365
4. same as 2
5. thermal rating / core volume
6. depends on context, could be same as 5 or 7.
7. thermal rating / (number of rods * core height)
8. u235 enrichment percent * total u mass
9. u235 mass / total u mass
10. thermal power * efpd / total u mass
11. number of cycles assembly is used, depends on cycle specific core design.

Some queries:

1. Should I be using Gross electrical output for thermal efficiency or net electrical output? Which one is better option to be used here?

2. What if I am not given EFPD? How to find it?

I have this data available:

Rated thermal power
Gross and net electrical output
average linear power
maximm linear power
core power density
equilibrium discharge burn-up
operating pressure
core height
core equivalent dia
fuel weight
no. of fuel assemblies
rod pitch
 
zaibi113113 said:
Some queries:

1. Should I be using Gross electrical output for thermal efficiency or net electrical output? Which one is better option to be used here?

2. What if I am not given EFPD? How to find it?

I have this data available:

Rated thermal power
Gross and net electrical output
average linear power
maximm linear power
core power density
equilibrium discharge burn-up
operating pressure
core height
core equivalent dia
fuel weight
no. of fuel assemblies
rod pitch

1) If you want thermodynamic efficiency use gross electrical. If you want economic efficiency use net. The difference between gross electrical and net electrical is the power consumed by the station that does not go out to the grid (i.e. the power to run the pumps, lighting, etc).

2) The EFPD (effective full power days) is the cycle length (i.e., average energy produced per day times number of days operating, or alternatively total energy produced / thermal rating). Since you know the core discharge burnup and core loading, you can calculate the total energy produced over the cycle. To determine the load factor, you need to know how many calendar days the cycle is.
 
Hello everyone, I am currently working on a burnup calculation for a fuel assembly with repeated geometric structures using MCNP6. I have defined two materials (Material 1 and Material 2) which are actually the same material but located in different positions. However, after running the calculation with the BURN card, I am encountering an issue where all burnup information(power fraction(Initial input is 1,but output file is 0), burnup, mass, etc.) for Material 2 is zero, while Material 1...
Hi everyone, I'm a complete beginner with MCNP and trying to learn how to perform burnup calculations. Right now, I'm feeling a bit lost and not sure where to start. I found the OECD-NEA Burnup Credit Calculational Criticality Benchmark (Phase I-B) and was wondering if anyone has worked through this specific benchmark using MCNP6? If so, would you be willing to share your MCNP input file for it? Seeing an actual working example would be incredibly helpful for my learning. I'd be really...
Back
Top