Title: Improvements on FRAPCON3 and FRAPTRAN Mechanical Modelling
1Improvements on FRAPCON3 and FRAPTRAN Mechanical
Modelling
- Arttu Knuutila, Seppo Kelppe
- SAFIR-PUOLIVÄLISEMINAARI 20.-21.1.2005
2Introduction and Contents
- Description of elaborations on fuel mechanical
modelling made under a one-year attachment to
PNNL Laboratory in the US - Contents
- Introduction to requirements of modelling the
mechanical behaviour in a fuel rod - Summary description of the refined FEM approach
- Examples of verification
3Basic construction of a fuel rod
- TYPICALLY
- Cladding material various zirconium alloys
- Diameter 9mm
- Length 2500-3500 mm
- Fill gas Helium to 0.6-1.5 MPa
4Geometry of a Cracked Fuel Pellet
5Pellet-Cladding Mechanical Interaction (PCMI)
6Modes of Axial PCMI
7Pellet-Ciad Interaction (PCI) Failure
8Deformed pellet schematically1-D vs.2-D
Desrciptions
9Generic Example of FEM Applied to Rod Structural
Analysis
10Sequence of events in a LOCA
11Large Clad Deformations in a LOCA test
- a) Säteilytetty sauva
- polttoainemuruja pullistumassa
- b) Tuore suojakuoriputki
- säteilytetystä poikkeava halkeaman muoto
- Muodonmuutokset samankaltaiset -
säteilyvauriot pääosin hehkuttuneet pois (?)
12Reactivity Transient (RIA)(1)
13Reactivity Transient (RIA)(2)
14Different Clad Performance Scenaria in a RIA
Transient
Failure model Ballooning
model Dispersed Fuel to Water
Interaction
15Clad Failure Modes in a RIA
- Competing Mechanisms
- Early PCMI Failure
- DNB - High Temperature - Ballooning and Burst -
Oxidation and Embrittlement
16USNRC steady-state and transient codes
- FRAPCON3
- Steady-state fuel performance code
- Capable of modelling fuel thermal-mechanical
behaviour of and fission gas release in a LWR
fuel rod during normal operations - Validated up to 65 MWd/kgU burnup
- FRAPTRAN
- Transient fuel performance code
- Capable of analysing thermal mechanical behaviour
of a LWR fuel rod in reactivity accidents,
loss-of-coolant accidents, or anticipated
transients without scram - Validated up to 65 MWd/kgU burnup
17FRAPCON3/FRAPTRAN mechanical modelling
- Both codes employ a rather simple stress-strain
modelling for the cladding called FRACAS I that
originates from the development work done in the
70s - FRACAS I uses a 1D thin shell model for the
cladding stress-strain analysys, where the fuel
rod is divided into axial slices and each slice
has its own separate 1D mechanical solution - FRACAS I can model pressure loaded cladding (open
gap) or PCMI loaded cladding (closed gap) with
solid contact, i.e. it does not allow slippage
between the fuel pellet stack and the cladding if
the gap is closed - FRACAS I does not include stress-strain analysis
for the fuel pellet stack
18New mechanical modelling
- a stress-strain analysis option with finite
element model has been implemented in
FRAPCON3/FRAPTRAN codes - 1½D, 2D, and 3D analysis capability
- capability of modelling large strains and
displacements, e.g. localized deformations can be
modelled - Modelled deformation mechanisms
- Elasticity with nonlinear hyperelastic model
- Large strain plasticity with J2 flow theory (von
Mises) and isotropic hardening - Creep, a time dependent extension to the J2 flow
theory - Thermal dilation and irradiation growth
- Dilation of ideal gas
- 1½D and 2D contact with friction (Coulomb
friction model)
191½D, 2D, and 3D elements
- 1½D axisymmetric linear, 2D axisymmetric
bilinear, and 3D trilinear solid elements with
mean dilation formulation - 1½D and 2D contact interface with Coulomb
friction with penalty method - 1½D axisymmetric, 2D axisymmetric, and 3D gas
cavities with ideal gas
20Efficient sparse matrix solver
- Efficient sparse matrix solution by using matrix
reordering to reduce the matrix profile and
direct solution methods, LU and LDLT
factorisations - An example of a stiffness matrix where the memory
space needed for the matrix factorisation is
reduced by 70 by reordering
21LARGE STRAIN MODELLING
- Capability to model localized deformations. For
example ballooning of the cladding during
loss-of-coolant accident
22Pellet cladding contact with Coulomb friction
- Coulomb friction
- t lt ?p ? solid contact
- t ?p ? sliding with friction
- Where t is tangential traction, p is contact
pressure, and ? is friction coefficient
23Verification of FE modelling
- Patch tests to verify the element performance and
correctness even in badly distorted element mesh - Extensive verification for large strain
elasto-plasticity with verification cases that
have an analytical solution or reference solution
in the literature - An example of large strain verification case, a
compressed billet
24FRAPCON3 validation case IFA-525
25(No Transcript)
26FRAPCON3 validation case IFA-585
27(No Transcript)
28Conclusion
- Modelling elaborations to the USNRC fuel
performance codes FRAPCON and FRAPTRAN that
significantly improve provisions of more detailed
analyses of rod mechanical behaviour were
introduced and taken into use - 2-D and 3-D descriptions were made available
through advanced FEM formulation - Bases for covering crucial detail as frictional
pellet-to-clad contact, pellet and clad
creep-plastic deformation, and large-deformation
ballooning were laid - Modularity and flexibility were among the goals -
Results will be readily applicable in other
analytical environments - Verification of formulation confirms robust
numerical performance and improved
representativity to real-life behaviour - Validation and applications now (early 2005) in
progress