MCSIMus: Monte Carlo Simulation with Inline Multiphysics

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Title
MCSIMus: Monte Carlo Simulation with Inline Multiphysics

CoPED ID
fb21cb50-156a-4ded-8452-5ae1c0075189

Status
Active


Value
£1,745,025

Start Date
March 31, 2023

End Date
March 31, 2026

Description

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Nuclear reactors in various forms are increasingly prominent in the context of net zero. However, stringent safety standards and advanced reactor designs necessitate ever-greater certainty and understanding in reactor physics and operation. As physical experimentation becomes more expensive, nuclear engineering relies increasingly on high-fidelity simulation of reactors.

Traditionally, resolving different physical phenomena in a reactor (such as neutron transport or thermal-hydraulics) proceeded by assuming only a weak dependence upon other phenomena due to limits on computational power. Such approximations were allowable when additional conservatisms were included in reactor designs. However, more economical or sophisticated reactor designs render such approximations invalid, and reactor designers must be able to resolve the interplay between each physical phenomenon. This poses a challenge to reactor physicists due to vastly increased computational costs of multi-physics calculations, as well as the risks of numerical instabilities - these are essentially non-physical behaviours which are purely an artefact of simulation.

This proposal aims to provide the basis of new computational approaches in nuclear engineering which are both substantially cheaper and more stable than present multi-physics approaches. Traditional methods tend to have one tool fully resolve one phenomenon, pass the information to another tool which resolves a second phenomenon, and then pass this updated information back to the first tool and repeat until (hopefully) the results converge. This proposal hopes to explore a slightly simpler approach, where information is exchanged between different solvers before each has fully resolved its own physics, extending this to many of the phenomena of interest to a reactor designer. Preliminary analysis suggests that this approach should be vastly more stable and computationally efficient than previous methods. The investigations will be carried out using home-grown numerical tools developed at the University of Cambridge which are designed for rapid prototyping of new ideas and algorithms. The final result is anticipated to transform the nuclear industry's approach to multi-physics calculations and greatly accelerate our ability to explore and design more advanced nuclear reactors.

Paul Cosgrove PI_PER
Paul Cosgrove FELLOW_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Reactors
  2. Nuclear reactors
  3. Nuclear physics
  4. Simulation
  5. Physics

Extracted key phrases
  1. Advanced nuclear reactor
  2. Advanced reactor design
  3. Monte Carlo Simulation
  4. Sophisticated reactor design
  5. Reactor physics
  6. Reactor designer
  7. Inline Multiphysics
  8. Nuclear engineering
  9. Nuclear industry
  10. MCSIMus
  11. New computational approach
  12. Physics approach
  13. Physical phenomenon
  14. Different physical phenomena
  15. Physics calculation

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations