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Coolant Channel Design for Additively Manufactured Reactor Cores

Justin Weinmeister, Casey J. Jesse, Prashant Jain, Brian J. Ade, Danny Schappel

Nuclear Science and Engineering / Volume 196 / Number 12 / December 2022 / Pages 1496-1516

Technical Paper / dx.doi.org/10.1080/00295639.2022.2096999

Received:July 20, 2021
Accepted:June 20, 2022
Published:December 5, 2022

Additive manufacturing (AM) methods are currently being explored for applications in nuclear reactors to make advanced reactors more efficient, safe, and reliable. The Transformational Challenge Reactor (TCR) program has explored AM for nuclear by designing a high-temperature gas reactor (HTGR) using an AM silicon carbide fuel form with uranium nitride–tristructural isotropic fuel. This work details the design process for the TCR fuel form’s coolant channels using computational fluid dynamics models with conjugate heat transfer. Additionally, this work discusses how these models were interfaced with other design teams, project milestones, and the agile design method used to mature the reactor design. The methodology deployed was able to create a channel design with lower maximum fuel temperatures and thermal stresses in the fuel form over traditional channel designs that can be manufactured subtractively. These results were achieved with only small manufacturing penalties. Results are discussed and presented on lessons learned for designing AM components for nuclear reactors. Finally, areas of opportunity are discussed for advanced design tools to further automate design activities and optimize reactors with fewer built-in assumptions.