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Sökning: WFRF:(Koning Arjan J.) > Konferensbidrag

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1.
  • Rochman, Dimitri, et al. (författare)
  • The TENDL library : Hope, reality and future
  • 2017
  • Ingår i: Nd 2016 Bruges. - Les Ulis : EDP Sciences. - 9782759890200
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The TALYS Evaluated Nuclear Data Library (TENDL) has now 8 releases since 2008. Considerable experience has been acquired for the production of such general-purpose nuclear data library based on the feedback from users, evaluators and processing experts. The backbone of this achievement is simple and robust: completeness, quality and reproducibility. If TENDL is extensively used in many fields of applications, it is necessary to understand its strong points and remaining weaknesses. Alternatively, the essential knowledge is not the TENDL library itself, but rather the necessary method and tools, making the library a side product and focusing the efforts on the evaluation knowledge. The future of such approach will be discussed with the hope of nearby greater success.
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2.
  • Alhassan, E., et al. (författare)
  • In search of the best nuclear data file for proton induced reactions : Varying both models and their parameters
  • 2020
  • Ingår i: ND 2019. - : EDP Sciences. - 9782759891061
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • A lot of research work has been carried out in fine tuning model parameters to reproduce experimental data for neutron induced reactions. This however is not the case for proton induced reactions where large deviations still exist between model calculations and experiments for some cross sections. In this work, we present a method for searching both the model and model parameter space in order to identify the 'best' nuclear reaction models with their parameter sets that reproduces carefully selected experimental data. Three sets of experimental data from EXFOR are used in this work: (1) cross sections of the target nucleus (2) cross sections of the residual nuclei and (3) angular distributions. Selected models and their parameters were varied simultaneously to produce a large set of random nuclear data files. The goodness of fit between our adjustments and experimental data was achieved by computing a global reduced chi square which took into consideration the above listed experimental data. The method has been applied for the adjustment of proton induced reactions on Co-59 between 1 to 100 MeV. The adjusted files obtained are compared with available experimental data and evaluations from other nuclear data libraries.
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3.
  • Alhassan, Erwin, et al. (författare)
  • Reducing A Priori 239Pu Nuclear Data Uncertainty In The Keff Using A Set Of Criticality Benchmarks With Different Nuclear Data Libraries
  • 2015
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • In the Total Monte Carlo (TMC) method [1] developed at the Nuclear Research and Consultancy Group for nuclear data uncertainty propagation, model calculations are compared with differential experimental data and a specific a priori uncertainty is assigned to each model parameter. By varying the model parameters all together within model parameter uncertainties, a full covariance matrix is obtained with its off diagonal elements if desired [1]. In this way, differential experimental data serve as a constraint for the model parameters used in the TALYS nuclear reactions code for the production of random nuclear data files. These files are processed into usable formats and used in transport codes for reactor calculations and for uncertainty propagation to reactor macroscopic parameters of interest. Even though differential experimental data together with their uncertainties are included (implicitly) in the production of these random nuclear data files in the TMC method, wide spreads in parameter distributions have been observed, leading to large uncertainties in reactor parameters for some nuclides for the European Lead cooled Training Reactor [2]. Due to safety concerns and the development of GEN-IV reactors with their challenging technological goals, the present uncertainties should be reduced significantly if the benefits from advances in modelling and simulations are to be utilized fully [3]. In Ref.[4], a binary accept/reject approach and a more rigorous method of assigning file weights based on the likelihood function were proposed and presented for reducing nuclear data uncertainties using a set of integral benchmarks obtained from the International Handbook of Evaluated Criticality Safety Benchmark Experiments (ICSBEP). These methods are depended on the reference nuclear data library used, the combined benchmark uncertainty and the relevance of each benchmark for reducing nuclear data uncertainties for a particular reactor system. Since each nuclear data library normally comes with its own nominal values and covariance matrices, reactor calculations and uncertainties computed with these libraries differ from library to library. In this work, we apply the binary accept/reject approach and the method of assigning file weights based on the likelihood function for reducing a priori 239Pu nuclear data uncertainties for the European Lead Cooled Training Reactor (ELECTRA) using a set of criticality benchmarks. Prior and posterior uncertainties computed for ELECTRA using ENDF/B-VII.1, JEFF-3.2 and JENDL-4.0 are compared after including experimental information from over 10 benchmarks.[1] A.J. Koning and D. Rochman, Modern Nuclear Data Evaluation with the TALYS Code System. Nuclear Data Sheets 113 (2012) 2841-2934. [2] E. Alhassan, H. Sjöstrand, P. Helgesson, A. J. Koning, M. Österlund, S. Pomp, D. Rochman, Uncertainty and correlation analysis of lead nuclear data on reactor parameters for the European Lead Cooled Training reactor (ELECTRA). Annals of Nuclear Energy 75 (2015) 26-37. [3] G. Palmiotti, M. Salvatores, G. Aliberti, H. Hiruta, R. McKnight, P. Oblozinsky, W. Yang, A global approach to the physics validation of simulation codes for future nuclear systems, Annals of Nuclear Energy 36 (3) (2009) 355-361. [4] E. Alhassan, H. Sjöstrand, J. Duan, P. Helgesson, S. Pomp, M. Österlund, D. Rochman, A.J. Koning, Selecting benchmarks for reactor calculations: In proc. PHYSOR 2014 - The Role of Reactor Physics toward a Sustainable Future, kyoto, Japan, Sep. 28 - 3 Oct. (2014).
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4.
  • Alhassan, Erwin, et al. (författare)
  • Selecting benchmarks for reactor calculations
  • 2014
  • Ingår i: PHYSOR 2014 - The Role of Reactor Physics toward a Sustainable Future.
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Criticality, reactor physics, fusion and shielding benchmarks are expected to play important roles in GENIV design, safety analysis and in the validation of analytical tools used to design these reactors. For existing reactor technology, benchmarks are used to validate computer codes and test nuclear data libraries. However the selection of these benchmarks are usually done by visual inspection which is dependent on the expertise and the experience of the user and there by resulting in a user bias in the process. In this paper we present a method for the selection of these benchmarks for reactor applications based on Total Monte Carlo (TMC). Similarities betweenan application case and one or several benchmarks are quantified using the correlation coefficient. Based on the method, we also propose an approach for reducing nuclear data uncertainty using integral benchmark experiments as an additional constrain on nuclear reaction models: a binary accept/reject criterion. Finally, the method was applied to a full Lead Fast Reactor core and a set of criticality benchmarks.
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5.
  • Alhassan, Erwin, et al. (författare)
  • Uncertainty analysis of Lead cross sections on reactor safety for ELECTRA
  • 2016
  • Ingår i: SNA + MC 2013 - Joint International Conference on Supercomputing in Nuclear Applications + Monte Carlo. - Les Ulis, France : EDP Sciences.
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The Total Monte Carlo (TMC) method was used in this study to assess the impact of Pb-206, 207 and 208 nucleardata uncertainties on k-eff , beta-eff, coolant temperature coefficient, the coolant void worth for the ELECTRA reactor. Relatively large uncertainties were observed in the k-eff and the coolant void worth for all the isotopes with significant contribution coming from Pb-208 nuclear data. The large Pb-208 nuclear data uncertainty observed was further investigated by studying the impact of partial channels on the k-eff and beta-eff. Various sections of ENDF file: elasticscattering (n,el), inelastic scattering (n,inl), neutron capture (n,gamma), (n,2n), resonance parameters and the angular distribution were varied randomly and distributions in k-eff and beta-eff obtained. The dominant contributions to the uncertainty in the k-eff from Pb-208 came from uncertainties in the resonance parameters; however, elastic scattering cross section and the angular distribution also had significant impact. The impact of nuclear data uncertainties on the beta-eff was observed to be small.
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6.
  • Helgesson, Petter, 1986-, et al. (författare)
  • New 59Ni data including uncertainties and consequences for gas production in steel in LWR spectraNew 59Ni data including uncertainties and consequences for gas production in steel in LWR spectra
  • 2015
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Abstract: With ageing reactor fleets, the importance of estimating material damage parameters in structural materials is increasing. 59Ni is not naturally abundant, but as noted in, e.g., Ref. [1], the two-step reaction 58Ni(n,γ)59Ni(n,α)56Fe gives a very important contribution to the helium production and damage energy in stainless steel in thermal spectra, because of the extraordinarily large thermal (n,α) cross section for 59Ni (for most other nuclides, the (n,α) reaction has a threshold). None of the evaluated data libraries contain uncertainty information for (n,α) and (n,p) for 59Ni for thermal energies and the resonance region. Therefore, new such data is produced in this work, including random data to be used with the Total Monte Carlo methodology [2] for nuclear data uncertainty propagation.                  The limited R-matrix format (“LRF = 7”) of ENDF-6 is used, with the Reich-Moore approximation (“LRF = 3” is just a subset of Reich-Moore). The neutron and gamma widths are obtained from TARES [2], with uncertainties, and are translated into LRF = 7. The α and proton widths are obtained from the little information available in EXFOR [3] (assuming large uncertainties because of lacking documentation) or from sampling from unresolved resonance parameters from TALYS [2], and they are split into different channels (different excited states of the recoiling nuclide, etc.). Finally, the cross sections are adjusted to match the experiments at thermal energies, with uncertainties.                  The data is used to estimate the gas production rates for different systems, including the propagated nuclear data uncertainty. Preliminary results for SS304 in a typical thermal spectrum, show that including 59Ni at its peak concentration increases the helium production rate by a factor of 4.93 ± 0.28 including a 5.7 ± 0.2 % uncertainty due to the 59Ni data. It is however likely that the uncertainty will increase substantially from including the uncertainty of other nuclides and from re-evaluating the experimental thermal cross sections.
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7.
  • Helgesson, Petter, 1986-, et al. (författare)
  • Towards Transparent, Reproducible And Justified Nuclear Data Uncertainty Propagation For Lwr Applications
  • 2015
  • Konferensbidrag (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Any calculated quantity is practically meaningless without estimates on the uncertainty of theobtained results, not the least when it comes to, e.g., safety parameters in a nuclear reactor. Oneof the sources of uncertainty in reactor physics computations or simulations are the uncertaintiesof the so called nuclear data, i.e., cross sections, angular distributions, fission yields, etc. Thecurrently dominating method for propagating nuclear data uncertainties (using covariance dataand sensitivity analysis) suffers from several limitations, not the least in how the the covariancedata is produced – the production relies to a large extent on personal judgment of nuclear dataevaluators, leading to results which are difficult to reproduce from fundamental principles.Further, such a method assumes linearity, it in practice limits both input and output to bemodeled as Gaussian distributions, and the covariance data in the established nuclear datalibraries is incomplete.“Total Monte Carlo” (TMC) is a nuclear data uncertainty propagation method based on randomsampling of nuclear reaction model parameters which aims to resolve these issues. The methodhas been applied to various applications, ranging from pin cells and criticality safety benchmarksto full core neutronics as well as models including thermo-hydraulics and transients. However,TMC has been subject to some critique since the distributions of the nuclear model parameters,and hence of the nuclear data, has not been deduced from really rigorous statistical theory. Thispresentation briefly discusses the ongoing work on how to use experimental data to approachjustified results from TMC, including the effects of correlations between experimental datapoints and the assessment of such correlations. In this study, the random nuclear data libraries areprovided with likelihood weights based on their agreement to the experimental data, as a meansto implement Bayes' theorem.Further, it is presented how TMC is applied to an MCNP-6 model of shielding fuel assemblies(SFA) at Ringhals 3 and 4. Since the damage from the fast neutron flux may limit the lifetimes ofthese reactors, parts of the fuel adjacent to the pressure vessel is replaced by steel (the SFA) toprotect the vessel, in particular the four points along the belt-line weld which have been exposedto the largest fluence over time. The 56Fe data uncertainties are considered, and the estimatedrelative uncertainty at a quarter of the pressure vessel is viewed in Figure 1 (right) as well as theflux pattern itself (left). The uncertainty in the flux reduction at a selected sensitive point is 2.5± 0.2 % (one standard deviation). Applying the likelihood weights does not have muchimpact for this case, which could indicate that the prior distribution for the 56Fe data is too“narrow” (the used libraries are not really intended to describe a prior distribution), and that thetrue uncertainty is substantially greater. Another explanation could be that the dominating sourceof uncertainty is the high-energy resonances which are treated inefficiently by such weights.In either case, the efforts to approach justified, transparent, reproducible and highly automatizednuclear data uncertainties shall continue. On top of using libraries that are intended to describeprior distributions and treating the resonance region appropriately, the experimental correlationsshould be better motivated and the treatment of outliers shall be improved. Finally, it is probablynecessary to use experimental data in a more direct sense where a lot of experimental data isavailable, since the nuclear models are imperfect.Figure 1. The high energy neutron flux at the reactor pressure vessel in the SFA model, and thecorresponding propagated 56Fe data uncertainty.
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8.
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9.
  • Sjöstrand, Henrik, 1978-, et al. (författare)
  • Propagation Of Nuclear Data Uncertainties For Fusion Power Measurements
  • 2016
  • Konferensbidrag (refereegranskat)abstract
    • Fusion plasmas produce neutrons and by measuring the neutron emission the fusion power can be inferred. Accurate neutron yield measurements are paramount for the safe and efficient operation of fusion experiments and, eventually, fusion power plants.Neutron measurements are an essential part of the diagnostic system at large fusion machines such as JET and ITER. At JET, a system of activation foils provides the absolute calibration for the neutron yield determination.  The activation system uses the property of certain nuclei to emit radiation after being excited by neutron reactions. A sample of suitable nuclei is placed in the neutron flux close to the plasma and after irradiation the induced radiation is measured.  Knowing the neutron activation cross section one can calculate the time-integrated neutron flux at the sample position. To relate the local flux to the total neutron yield, the spatial flux response has to be identified. This describes how the local neutron emission affects the flux at the detector.  The required spatial flux response is commonly determined using neutron transport codes, e.g., MCNP.Nuclear data is used as input both in the calculation of the spatial flux response and when the flux at the irradiation site is inferred. Consequently, high quality nuclear data is essential for the proper determination of the neutron yield and fusion power.  However, uncertainties due to nuclear data are generally not fully taken into account in today’s uncertainty analysis for neutron yield calibrations using activation foils.  In this paper, the neutron yield uncertainty due to nuclear data is investigated using the so-called Total Monte Carlo Method. The work is performed using a detailed MCNP model of JET fusion machine.  In this work the uncertainties due to the cross sections and angular distributions in JET structural materials, as well as the activation cross sections, are analyzed. It is shown that a significant contribution to the neutron yield uncertainty can come from uncertainties in the nuclear data.
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