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El-Genk, M.S.; Croucher, D.W.
Idaho National Engineering Lab., Idaho Falls (USA)1979
Idaho National Engineering Lab., Idaho Falls (USA)1979
AbstractAbstract
[en] The primary concern in nuclear reactor safety is to ensure that no conceivable accident, whether initiated by a failure of the reactor system or by incorrect operation, will lead to a dangerous release of radiation to the environment. A number of hypothesized off-normal power or cooling conditions, generally termed as power-cooling-mismatch (PCM) accidents, are considered in the safety analysis of light water reactors (LWRs). During a PCM accident, film boiling may occur at the cladding surface and cause a rapid temperature increase in the fuel and the cladding, perhaps producing embrittlement of the zircaloy cladding by oxidation. Molten fuel may be produced at the center of the pellets, extrude radially through open cracks in the outer, unmelted portion of the pellet and relocate in the fuel-cladding gap. If the amount of extruded molten fuel is sufficient to establish contact with the cladding, which is at a high temperature during film boiling, the zircaloy cladding may melt. The present work assesses the potential for central fuel melting and thermal failure of the zircaloy cladding due to melting upon being contacted by extruded molten UO2-fuel during a PCM event
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1979; 5 p; American Nuclear Society meeting; San Francisco, CA, USA; 12 - 16 Nov 1979; Available from NTIS., PC A02/MF A01
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Conference
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