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JAEA Reports

Development of Phased Mission Analysis Program with Monte Carlo Method - Improvement of the variance reduction technique with biasing towards top event -

Yang Jin An*;

JNC TN9400 99-013, 89 Pages, 1998/12

JNC-TN9400-99-013.pdf:2.0MB

This report presents a variance reduction technique to estimate the reliability and availability of highly complex systems during phased mission time using the Monte Carlo simulation. In this study, we introduced the variance reduction technique with a concept of distance between the present system state and the cut set configurations. Using this technique, it becomes possible to bias the tansition from the operating states to the failed states of components towards the closest cut set. Therefore a component failure can drive the system towards a cut set configuration more effectively. JNC developed the PHAMMON (Phased Mission Analysis Program with Monte Carlo Method) code which involved the two kinds of variance reduction techniques : (1) forced transition, and (2)failure biasing. However, these techniques did not guarantee an effective reduction in variance. For further improvement, a variance reduction technique incorporating the distance concept was introduced to the PHAMMON code and the numerical calculation was carried out for the different design cases of decay heat removal system in a large fast breeder reactor. Our results indicate that the technique addition of this incorporating distance concept is an effective means of further reducing the variance.

JAEA Reports

Design study of key technology for large LMFBR (II); Sodium fire analysis

Morii, Tadashi*; Himeno, Yoshiaki

PNC TN9410 86-066, 27 Pages, 1986/06

PNC-TN9410-86-066.pdf:3.68MB

Sodium fire analysis has been performed for a large FBR to evaluate pressure and temperature transients and mass of burned sodium in case of a primary sodium leak accident. The major analytical conditions are as follows: [Position of sodium leak : Hot leg of primary coolant system] [Cross-sectional area of a leak hole : 1 cm$$^{2}$$] [Concrete cooling system : operated (just before failure), shut down (after sodium leak)] The most representative results gained through the present study are as follows: [Maximum Gas Pressure : 0.029 kg/cm$$^{2}$$2 -g (0.5 hr after a leak)] [Total Mass of Burned Sodium : 1.5 ton (3% of total leak sodium)] [Maximum Concrete Temperature (beneath sodium pool) : 140$$^{circ}$$C (100 hr after a leak) These results indicate that a concrete cooling system to present abnormal temperature rise that may occure due to heat transfer from the hot primary coolant system was shown to be effective even in the accident conditions. However, further study will be needed to evaluate water release rate from the heated concrete.

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