Russian Scientists develop software for next-gen nuclear reactor technology
A new nuclear project launched by Russia's National Research Nuclear University (MEPhI) may strengthen Russia's leading position in the global nuclear technology market, the scientists working on it are saying.
Russian nuclear physics researchers have developed a software package that simulates nuclear fuel handling processes under the Russian nuclear project Proryv (Breakthrough), which could be used to master the technologies needed to develop the nuclear power industry of the future.
The Proryv project aims to streamline breeder reactor closed nuclear fuel cycle technology. MEPhI believes the project will strengthen Russia's leading position on the global nuclear technology market.
Under the Proryv project, the industry is working on a new-generation nuclear power unit with a fast neutron reactor featuring a BN-1200 sodium heat-transfer agent. Russian researchers are also developing a pilot-demonstration energy complex (PDEC) for the BREST-OD-300 fast neutron reactor, that contains a heavy-metal lead heat-transfer agent.
A closed-loop nuclear fuel cycle for these reactors suggests that they will independently generate their own supply of plutonium, a nuclear fuel being reproduced with non-enriched uranium feedstock. Therefore, the reactor's operating modes and its specifications need to be designed in such a way as to make the reactor self-sufficient, to provide it with the required amount of fissionable isotopes and to maintain the reactor during its service life. This emphasizes the need to simulate nuclear fuel-handling processes for reactors of this kind.
In an effort to accomplish this, the National Research Nuclear University MEPhI (NRNU MEPhI) has teamed up with the National Research Center Kurchatov Institute and developed the REPRORYV (Recycle for PRORYV) software package, which simulates nuclear fuel-handling processes outside reactors.
The new code makes it possible to estimate the influence of any nuclear fuel's plutonium content, fuel processing conditions and fuel losses during processing on a reactor's final neutron-physical specifications. A clear understanding of various factors and their influence on these specifications is important in the context of maintaining reliable and safe nuclear reactor operation.
The versatile REPRORYV code can simulate fuel handling processes in current fast neutron reactors and other advanced units of this type, Deputy MEPhI Director Georgy Tikhomirov told RIA Novosti.
The new software package will be able to calculate neutron-physical specifications for any type of nuclear fuel. In addition, REPRORYV helps fast neutron reactors operating under the so-called two-component nuclear power concept to independently produce their own fissionable materials, that is, together with “heat” neutron reactors, the mainstay of the modern nuclear power industry.