Abstract
Griffin, a Multiphysics Object-Oriented Simulation Environment (MOOSE)–based application targeting transient modeling of advanced reactors, has been used recently to model pebble-bed reactors (PBRs). The modeling effort has focused thus far on equilibrium core calculations. A new capability to simulate the running-in phase of PBR operation has been added to Griffin. This work demonstrates the new capability with a coupled multiphysics running-in simulation. Griffin computes power densities in the core at each time step of the running-in simulation and passes these to Pronghorn, which models fluid flow and heat transfer to calculate pebble surface temperatures. These surface temperatures are used along with the power densities in a heat conduction model to compute average fuel and moderator temperatures, which are passed back to Griffin and accounted for with temperature-dependent cross sections. This work also describes a novel methodology for determining appropriate pebble feed rates and control rod positioning during the running-in simulation. The RZ-geometry model used in this work requires minimal computational resources and can be used for optimization and uncertainty studies in future works.
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Hanophy, J., Balestra, P., Wang, Y., Ortensi, J., & Schunert, S. (2025). Multiphysics Running-In Simulations for Pebble-Bed Reactors with Griffin. Nuclear Science and Engineering. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/00295639.2025.2497025
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