April 3-4, 2007/ARR 1 Engineering Input to System Code and Trade-Off Studies to Assess Sensitivities...
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Transcript of April 3-4, 2007/ARR 1 Engineering Input to System Code and Trade-Off Studies to Assess Sensitivities...
April 3-4, 2007/ARR1
Engineering Input to System Code and Trade-Off Studies to Assess Sensitivities of
Major Functions to Engineering Parameters
Presented by A. René Raffray
University of California, San Diego
With contribution from S. Malang
ARIES MeetingUCSD, La Jolla, CA
April 3-4, 2007
April 3-4, 2007/ARR2
Schematic of ARIES Next Step Study as I Understand It(TBD)
Design Requirements for Next
Step
Input from Utility
Advisory Committee on
Top-Level Requirements
for a Power Plant and on
How to Demonstrate
Those
System Code Development
and Integration
(ARIES-AT as starting point)
Translating Input to:
Pre-Conceptual Design of Next Step
Engineering Trade-Off
Studies and Component
Characterization
System Level Trade-Off Studies:
Path to power plant
Physics Input
April 3-4, 2007/ARR3
Outline
• Engineering Input to System Code- Components
• Trade-off studies at the function level in conjunction with providing input to system code- Assessing high-leverage engineering parameters to guide
integrated trade-off studies to be performed by the system code in the future- Help provide info on R&D direction
April 3-4, 2007/ARR4
Engineering Input to System Code• Blanket definitions for different concepts
- Materials- Radial Build- Algorithm for performance parameters (nuclear analysis, thermal-
hydraulic, stress, coupling to power cycle, etc…)
• Input configurations already developed as part of ARIES (recent studies)- Self-cooled Pb-17Li + SiCf/SiC (ARIES-AT)- DCLL (ARIES-CS)- He-Cooled Ceramic Breeder (ARIES-CS)- Flibe?
• This would help trade-off runs in system code, with the understanding that the input parameters would have to be refined once a configuration is chosen for more detailed design studies.
(UCSD/UW?)
April 3-4, 2007/ARR5
Divertor Input to System Code and Trade-Off Studies at the Function Level
• Impact of heat flux accommodation on choice of materials and grade level of heat extraction
Heat flux (MW/m2): 5 10 15 20
Divertor Pb-17Li+ He-cooled Water-cooledconfiguration: SiCf/SiC W-alloy Cu alloy
(or refractory)
Coolant temperature and power cycle efficiency
(UCSD/GIT?)
April 3-4, 2007/ARR6
Impact of Heat Flux Requirements on Choice of Divertor Configuration
• q’’ < 5 MW/m2
(a) Pb-17Li + SiCf/SiC - Negligible pumping power- W-tiles with sacrificial layer ~5 mm- Advanced design, needs substantial R&D
- SiCf/SiC temperature < ~1000°C- High-grade heat extraction
(b) He-cooled ODS-FS- “low” pumping power- robust and relatively simple plate design- W-tiles with sacrificial layer ~ 10 mm - conservative design, modest R&D- ODS FS temperature < ~ 700°C- Medium-to-high-grade heat extraction
April 3-4, 2007/ARR7
Impact of Heat Flux Requirements on Choice of Divertor Configuration (II)
• q’’ ~ 5-10 MW/m2
• He-cooled W-alloy (or other refractory, e.g. Ta)- “high” pumping power
- more complex plate design, e.g ~100,000 T-tubes or ~400,000 finger-like units- W temperature ~ 700°C (embrittlement) -1300°C (recrystallization) - reliability of plates impacted by limited material choice and large number of difficult joints
(impact on availability also)- W-tiles with sacrificial layer ~ 5 mm - Medium-to-high-grade heat extraction- Substantial R&D
• q’’ > ~10 MW/m2
• He-cooling and liquid metal cooling increasingly difficult as q’’ is increased past 10 MW/m2 and not feasible at or just above this heat flux level• Low-temperature water with sub-cooled boiling (ITER-like)
- heat sink material with high thermal conductivity and large ductility required (e.g. Cu-alloy) - sufficient lifetime under neutron irradiation questionable- activation of heat sink material- W-tiles with sacrificial layer ~ 5 mm - Low-grade heat extraction (divertor power not usable for power conversion system)
- modest R&D
April 3-4, 2007/ARR8
Changes in Physics and Engineering Parameters Can Substantially Affect Divertor Configuration, Material Choices, Performance,
Reliability and R&D Requirements
• For example: - Impact of increasing radiation fractions from the core and from the edge
- Impact of reducing fusion power for given electric power by utilizing advanced power core design with high power cycle efficiency
April 3-4, 2007/ARR9
Power Conversion Trade-Off Studies and Input to System Code
• Impact of coolant temperature on choice of materials and grade level of heat extraction
Coolant Exit temperature (°C): 420 500 620 800 1000
Power Cycle Low-Perf. High- Perf. Braytonconfiguration: Rankine Rankine W-alloy
Possibility of H2
production
Cycle Efficiency: 35% 40% 45% 50% 60%
(UCSD/Others?)
April 3-4, 2007/ARR10
Choice of Power Conversion System and Impact of High-Temperature Coolant in Advanced Power Core Design Configurations
• Coolant exit temperature 420°C-500°C - Low performance Rankine cycle
- low or no steam superheating, - potential for chemical reactions between water and LM or Be- Cycle efficiency ~32-40%
• Coolant exit temperature 500°C-620°C - High performance Rankine cycle
- high steam superheating- 2 or 3 stage steam re-heating, requiring large HX’s (tritium permeation issue)- water/steam pressure > comparable He pressure: high potential for chemical
reactions between water and LM or Be- Cycle efficiency ~42-46%
• Coolant exit temperature >620°C - Brayton cycle
- 2-3 compression stages- highly effective recuperator needed for high perfromance - Cycle efficiency ~45-60%
• Coolant exit temperature >~800-900°C
- H2 production
April 3-4, 2007/ARR11
Example Rankine Cycle with a Steam Generator
• Superheat, single reheat and regeneration (not optimized)
• For example calculations, set:
- Turbine isentropic efficiency = 0.9
- Compressor isentropic efficiency = 0.8
- Min.(Tcool–Tsteam,cycle)> 10°C
- Pmin = 0.15 barS
T
2
3
4
56
8'
7
reheat
superheat
Pmax
Pint
4'
8
9
Pmin
2'
10
10'
1
m
1-m
Tcool,in
Tcool,out
April 3-4, 2007/ARR12
Example Brayton Cycle Considered
Set parameters for example calculations:- Blanket He coolant used to
drive power cycle- Minimum He temperature
in cycle (heat sink) = 35°C - 3-stage compression - Optimize cycle compression
ratio (but < 3.5; not limiting for cases considered)
- Cycle fractional P ~ 0.07- Turbine efficiency = 0.93- Compressor eff. = 0.89- Recuperator effectiv.= 0.95
IP LPHP
Pout
Compressors
RecuperatorIntercoolers
Pre-Cooler
Generator
CompressorTurbine
To/from In-ReactorComponents or Intermediate
Heat Exchanger
1
2
3
4
5 6 7 8
9 10
1BPin
TinTout
η ,C ad η ,T ad
εrec
5'
1
22'
38
9
4
7'9'
10
6
T
S
1B'
1B
April 3-4, 2007/ARR13
Comparison of Brayton and Rankine Cycle Efficiencies as a Function of Blanket Coolant Temperature (for example cases)
B
B B B B BJ
J
JJ J
J
H
HH
HH
H
F
FF
FF
F
11
1 1 1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
1000
1100
1200
300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000110012001300
Blanket Coolant Outlet Temperature (°C)
B
J
H
F
1
Brayton
Brayton
Blanket Cool. Inlet Temp.for Rankine Cycle:
200°C
250°C
300°C
350°C
400°C
• For this example, ~650°C is the temperature level where it becomes advantageous to choose the Brayton cycle over the Rankine cycle based on cycle efficiency
• The choice of cycle needs to be made based on the specific design and including other considerations:- materials- reliabilty- safety- partial power production?- others?
April 3-4, 2007/ARR14
IP LPHP
Pout
Compressors
RecuperatorIntercoolers
Pre-Cooler
Generator
CompressorTurbine
To/from In-ReactorComponents or Intermediate
Heat Exchanger
1
2
3
4
5 6 7 8
9 10
1BPin
TinTout
η ,C ad η ,T ad
εrec
For Combination of Power Core Coolant(s) and Cycle, Provide Input to System Code on Efficiency and Pumping Power as a
Function of Fusion Power Density
E.g., from ARIES-CS study, for DCLL blanket and Brayton cycle:
April 3-4, 2007/ARR15
For a Given Power Core Configuration, Increasing the Neutron Wall Load has an Impact on Different Functions
• Higher NWL -> shorter life time -> relatively longer replacement time -> lower availability
• Higher NWL -> lower coolant exit temperature -> lower gross efficiency in the power conversion system
• Higher NWL -> higher pumping power -> lower net efficiency in the power conversion system
• Higher NWL -> thicker shielding -> larger radial build in inboard -> larger machine
These trade-offs to be done for each power core configuration choice and use as input in system code
(UW?)
April 3-4, 2007/ARR16
Implications of Waste Treatment on Power Plant Design Requirements
• Blanket modules have to be replaced every 3 to 5 years, depending on the maximum NWL
• Potential waste treatment methods for the different materials used in the blankets are :
- re-use (typical example: liquid metal breeder)- re-cycling (typical example: ceramic breeder, beryllium multiplier)- shallow land burial (typical example: steel structure)
• Waste treatments of the different materials requires separating them. Were should this separation be performed, and, for re-cycling, where will the
ceramic breeder or the beryllium pebbles be transferred for re-processing?- on the power plant site?
- a number of small reprocessing plants would be required. At what cost?
- at a central location for a number of power plants?- frequent and difficult shipments of highly activated components with possibly high tritium
inventories would be required.
(UW?)
April 3-4, 2007/ARR17
Implications of Magnetic Field Level on Coil System
• Choice of superconducting material - Nb3Sn (<~16 T)- NbTi (< ~8-9 T)- HTS (higher temperature)
• Cooling requirements
• Coil design
• Coil fabrication and assembly
• Mechanical support
• Nuclear shielding
Need input from MIT to include in system code
April 3-4, 2007/ARR18
Impact of Power Core Component Design Choice on Reliability and Availability
• Number of design units
• Number of parts in each unit
• Number of welds and joints
• Length of welds
• Coolant pressure
• Maximum stresses compared to allowable limits
Can we use a semi-quantitative method as metric for this function when evaluating different design choices?
(Boeing/INL?)
April 3-4, 2007/ARR19
Impact of Design Choices on Maintenance
• Number of cuts and rewelding
• Possibility of avoiding cutting/rewelding of coolant lines
• Implication on replacement time and power plant availability
Can we use a semi-quantitative method as metric for this function when evaluating different design choices?
(Boeing?)
April 3-4, 2007/ARR20
Impact of Tritium Breeding and Recovery on Fuel Management, Safety and Cost
• Tritium breeding- Importance of being able to adjust TBR to meet any operation or
uncertainties in design predictions (active knob)- How practical is proposed method (e.g. adjusting 6Li)
• Tritium recovery- Maximizing efficiency of the tritium extraction system from the breeder- Implication on tritium inventory- Implication on cost savings in the tritium control system
(INL/UW?)