In-core nuclear fuel management optimization for pressurized water reactors utilizing simulated annealing

David J. Kropaczek, Paul J. Turinsky

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

189 Scopus citations

Abstract

An in-core nuclear fuel management code for pressurized water reactor reload design has been developed that combines the stochastic optimization technique of simulated annealing with a computationally efficient core physics model based on second-order accurate generalized perturbation theory. The approach identifies the placements of feed fuel, exposed fuel with assembly orientations, and burnable poisons within the core lattice that optimize fuel cycle performance or thermal margin. A comparison of the loading patterns obtained for the same fuel inventory shows that the marginal cost associated with achieving a 6.1% reduction in the maximum radial power peaking is equivalent to a 15.0% increase in fuel cycle costs for the specific core analyzed. Alternatively, an optimum loading pattern was found that increased the region average discharge burnup by 11.4% more than the one that maximizes the EOC keff, with the added expense of an increase in feed enrichment required to offset an otherwise 11.2% decrease in cycle length.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9-32
Number of pages24
JournalNuclear Technology
Volume95
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 1991
Externally publishedYes

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