Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Lecture Summary ( Monday, 27 September 2010 )


Do you know what the Reactivity is????

After going through today lecture, we have gained knowledge about the reactivity and the important of the reactivity in the reactor of the nuclear power plant. 

Reactivity is a measure of the departure of a reactor from criticality. A nuclear reactor is an engineering device, in which nuclear fuel and structural materials are arranged such that a self-sustained fission chain reaction can occur in a controlled manner.

The reactivity is related to the value of keff . Reactivity is a useful concept to predict how the neutron population of a reactor will change overtime.

A rector is critical when keff = 1.
Figure 1


If keff <1, the reactor is subcritical and the number of neutrons is going down.


Figure 2

 On the other hand, if keff >1, the system is supercritical.


Figure 3

All the figure credit to nuclear_chain_reaction.pdf

For better understanding about reactivity, we look through some example :
·         The amount of reactivity, ρ= (  keff – 1 )/ keff = 1 – 1/ keff = Δ keff/ keff

In practice, keff is very close to 1 or unity. Therefore,

P~ keff – 1= Δ keff

The changes implemented in a functioning reactor as a means of control are always very small and are expressed in %, mk (milik) or pcm ( per 100,000).


Case 1:
Reactor with keff = 1.002
ρ= (  keff – 1 )/ keff = ( 1.002 – 1 )/1.002 = 0.002

Or simply

P~ keff – 1= Δ keff = 1.002- 1= 0.002

Therefore, we can say that the reactor is 2 mk supercritical.




4 comments:

Unknown said...

hai guys...again..nk tanye..what happen if the reactor in subcritical and the number of neutron is going down??

and another silly question..huhu..mk stands for wut?huhu..

Unknown said...

Please respond to Nazatul Shima's comments.

Power Nuclear said...

tq 4 the question.. sory for the late reply, we kinda busy with the thesis for fyp and some other project and preparation for presentation..
we try our best to answer your question.
The effective neutron multiplication factor, k, is the average number of neutrons from one fission that cause another fission. The remaining neutrons either are absorbed in non-fission reactions or leave the system without being absorbed. The value of k determines how a nuclear chain reaction proceeds...
if k < 1 (subcriticality): The system cannot sustain a chain reaction, and any beginning of a chain reaction dies out over time. from the graph, you can see that the nuetron is decreasing. For every fission that is induced in the system, an average total of 1/(1 − k) fissions occur.

mk stand for milik..
: D

Unknown said...

oh.. i see...ermm..thanks again..it's ok..i'm understand guys..:)

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