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Cardinal: A Lower-Length-Scale Multiphysics Simulator for Pebble-Bed Reactors

Elia Merzari, Haomin Yuan, Misun Min, Dillon Shaver, Ronald Rahaman, Patrick Shriwise, Paul Romano, Alberto Talamo, Yu-Hsiang Lan, Derek Gaston, Richard Martineau, Paul Fischer, Yassin Hassan

Nuclear Technology / Volume 207 / Number 7 / July 2021 / Pages 1118-1141

Technical Paper / dx.doi.org/10.1080/00295450.2020.1824471

Received:July 14, 2020
Accepted:September 12, 2020
Published:July 9, 2021

This paper demonstrates a multiphysics solver for pebble-bed reactors, in particular, for Berkeley’s pebble-bed -fluoride-salt-cooled high-temperature reactor (PB-FHR) (Mark I design). The FHR is a class of advanced nuclear reactors that combines the robust coated particle fuel form from high-temperature gas-cooled reactors, the direct reactor auxiliary cooling system passive decay removal of liquid-metal fast reactors, and the transparent, high-volumetric heat capacitance liquid-fluoride salt working fluids (e.g., FLiBe) from molten salt reactors. This fuel and coolant combination enables FHRs to operate in a high-temperature, low-pressure design space that has beneficial safety and economic implications. The PB-FHR relies on a pebble-bed approach, and pebble-bed reactors are, in a sense, the poster child for multiscale analysis.

Relying heavily on the MultiApp capability of the Multiphysics Object-Oriented Simulation Environment (MOOSE), we have developed Cardinal, a new platform for lower-length-scale simulation of pebble-bed cores. The lower-length-scale simulator comprises three physics: neutronics (OpenMC), thermal fluids (Nek5000/NekRS), and fuel performance (BISON). Cardinal tightly couples all three physics and leverages advances in MOOSE, such as the MultiApp system and the concept of MOOSE-wrapped applications. Moreover, Cardinal can utilize graphics processing units for accelerating solutions. In this paper, we discuss the development of Cardinal and the verification and validation and demonstration simulations.