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Sato, Ikken
Nuclear Engineering and Design, 383, p.111426_1 - 111426_19, 2021/11
Times Cited Count:7 Percentile:65.06(Nuclear Science & Technology)Takada, Shoji; Shimizu, Atsushi; Kondo, Makoto; Shimazaki, Yosuke; Shinohara, Masanori; Seki, Tomokazu; Tochio, Daisuke; Iigaki, Kazuhiko; Nakagawa, Shigeaki; Sawa, Kazuhiro
Proceedings of 23rd International Conference on Nuclear Engineering (ICONE-23) (DVD-ROM), 5 Pages, 2015/05
In the loss of forced core cooling test using High Temperature engineering Test Reactor (HTTR), the forced cooling of reactor core is stopped without inserting control rods into the core and cooling by Vessel Cooling System (VCS) to demonstrate the inherent safety of HTGR be secured by natural phenomena to make it possible to design a severe accident free reactor. In the test, the local temperature was supposed to exceed the limit from the viewpoint of long-term use at the uncovered water cooling tube by thermal reflectors in the VCS, although the safety of reactor is kept. The local higher temperature position was specified although the temperature was sufficiently lower than the maximum allowable working temperature, and natural circulation of water had insufficient cooling effect on the temperature of water cooling tube below 1C. Then, a new safe and secured procedure for the loss of forced core cooling test was established, which will be carried out soon after the restart of HTTR.
Nakamura, Hirofumi; Nishi, Masataka
Journal of Nuclear Materials, 329-333(Part1), p.183 - 187, 2004/08
Times Cited Count:26 Percentile:82.13(Materials Science, Multidisciplinary)no abstracts in English
Hori, Junichi; Sato, Satoshi; Yamauchi, Michinori*; Ochiai, Kentaro; Nishitani, Takeo
JAERI-Research 2003-002, 50 Pages, 2003/03
D-T neutron irradiation experiments have been performed with F82H and ODS ferritic steels and the effective cross sections for Co productions in those materials via the sequential reactions were measured. The effective cross sections for F82H and ODS ferritic steels were about 1.5 times larger than that for iron. The distributions of effective cross sections were measured for 6 materials (iron, copper, vanadium, titanium, tungsten and lead) and F82H. The sequential reaction rates in the region close to hydrogen compound became over 20 times larger than that in material itself. In the case of F82H, the increase ratio was about 50. It was indicated that the activity for the sequential reaction product
Co will reach to 3-10
of that for primary neutron reaction product
Mn aound the surface of a cooling pipe in a fusion reactor. The effective cross sections were estimated by using (n,xp), (p,n) reaction cross sections, proton emission spectra, proton stopping power in the material. The estimated values were compared with experimental results.
; ;
JAERI-Tech 98-052, 69 Pages, 1998/11
no abstracts in English
Takada, Shoji; Suzuki, Kunihiro; Inagaki, Yoshiyuki; Sudo, Yukio
Heat Transfer-Jpn. Res., 26(3), p.159 - 175, 1997/00
no abstracts in English
Murao, Yoshio; Araya, Fumimasa; Iwamura, Takamichi; Watanabe, Hironori
Transactions of the American Nuclear Society, 69, p.539 - 540, 1993/00
no abstracts in English
; ; ;
Proc.2nd Int.Topical Meeting on Nuclear Power Plant Thermal Hydraulics and Operations, p.2 - 129, 1986/00
no abstracts in English
; ; ; Wadachi, Yoshiki; ;
Nihon Genshiryoku Gakkai-Shi, 20(1), p.42 - 45, 1978/01
Times Cited Count:0no abstracts in English