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Coupled Multiphysics Simulations of Heat Pipe Microreactors Using DireWolf

Christopher Matthews, Vincent Laboure, Mark DeHart, Joshua Hansel, David Andrs, Yaqi Wang, Javier Ortensi, Richard C. Martineau

Nuclear Technology / Volume 207 / Number 7 / July 2021 / Pages 1142-1162

Technical Paper / dx.doi.org/10.1080/00295450.2021.1906474

Received:September 17, 2020
Accepted:March 9, 2021
Published:July 9, 2021

DireWolf is a multiphysics software driver application designed to simulate heat pipe–cooled nuclear microreactors. Developed under the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Nuclear Energy Nuclear Energy Advanced Modeling and Simulation (NEAMS) program, the DireWolf software application’s objective is to provide the nuclear community with a design and safety analysis simulation capability. Based upon the NEAMS program Multiphysics Object-Oriented Simulation Environment (MOOSE) computational framework, DireWolf tightly couples nuclear microreactor physics, reactor physics, radiation transport, nuclear fuel performance, heat pipe thermal hydraulics, power generation, and structural mechanics to resolve the interdependent nonlinearities. DireWolf is capable of simulating both steady and transient normal reactor operation and several postulated failure scenarios. We will present the fundamental physics of heat pipe–cooled nuclear microreactors and the MOOSE-based software employed in DireWolf. Both steady and transient results for coupled reactor physics, radiation transport, and nuclear fuel performance are demonstrated.