Justin Thomas
Argonne National Laboratory
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Archive | 2011
Juan J. Carbajo; Hae-Yong Jeong; Roald Wigeland; Michael L. Corradini; Rodney Cannon Schmidt; Justin Thomas; Tom Wei; Tanju Sofu; Hans Ludewig; Yoshiharu Tobita; Hiroyuki Ohshima; Frederic Serre
This report summarizes the results of an expert-opinion elicitation activity designed to qualitatively assess the status and capabilities of currently available computer codes and models for accident analysis and reactor safety calculations of advanced sodium fast reactors, and identify important gaps. The twelve-member panel consisted of representatives from five U.S. National Laboratories (SNL, ANL, INL, ORNL, and BNL), the University of Wisconsin, the KAERI, the JAEA, and the CEA. The major portion of this elicitation activity occurred during a two-day meeting held on Aug. 10-11, 2010 at Argonne National Laboratory. There were two primary objectives of this work: (1) Identify computer codes currently available for SFR accident analysis and reactor safety calculations; and (2) Assess the status and capability of current US computer codes to adequately model the required accident scenarios and associated phenomena, and identify important gaps. During the review, panel members identified over 60 computer codes that are currently available in the international community to perform different aspects of SFR safety analysis for various event scenarios and accident categories. A brief description of each of these codes together with references (when available) is provided. An adaptation of the Predictive Capability Maturity Model (PCMM) for computational modeling and simulation is described for use in this work. The panels assessment of the available US codes is presented in the form of nine tables, organized into groups of three for each of three risk categories considered: anticipated operational occurrences (AOOs), design basis accidents (DBA), and beyond design basis accidents (BDBA). A set of summary conclusions are drawn from the results obtained. At the highest level, the panel judged that current US code capabilities are adequate for licensing given reasonable margins, but expressed concern that US code development activities had stagnated and that the experienced user-base and the experimental validation base was decaying away quickly.
Archive | 2012
Hans Ludewig; Dana Auburn Powers; John C. Hewson; Jeffrey L. LaChance; Art Wright; Jesse Phillips; R. Zeyen; B. Clement; Frank Garner; Leon Walters; Steve Wright; Larry J. Ott; Ahti Jorma Suo-Anttila; Richard Denning; Hiroyuki Ohshima; Shuji Ohno; S. Miyhara; Abdellatif M. Yacout; M. T. Farmer; D. Wade; C. Grandy; R. Schmidt; J. Cahalen; Tara Jean Olivier; Robert J. Budnitz; Yoshiharu Tobita; Frederic Serre; Ken Natesan; Juan J. Carbajo; Hae-Yong Jeong
Expert panels comprised of subject matter experts identified at the U.S. National Laboratories (SNL, ANL, INL, ORNL, LBL, and BNL), universities (University of Wisconsin and Ohio State University), international agencies (IRSN, CEA, JAEA, KAERI, and JRC-IE) and private consultation companies (Radiation Effects Consulting) were assembled to perform a gap analysis for sodium fast reactor licensing. Expert-opinion elicitation was performed to qualitatively assess the current state of sodium fast reactor technologies. Five independent gap analyses were performed resulting in the following topical reports: (1) Accident Initiators and Sequences (i.e., Initiators/Sequences Technology Gap Analysis), (2) Sodium Technology Phenomena (i.e., Advanced Burner Reactor Sodium Technology Gap Analysis), (3) Fuels and Materials (i.e., Sodium Fast Reactor Fuels and Materials: Research Needs), (4) Source Term Characterization (i.e., Advanced Sodium Fast Reactor Accident Source Terms: Research Needs), and (5) Computer Codes and Models (i.e., Sodium Fast Reactor Gaps Analysis of Computer Codes and Models for Accident Analysis and Reactor Safety). Volume II of the Sodium Research Plan consolidates the five gap analysis reports produced by each expert panel, wherein the importance of the identified phenomena and necessities of further experimental research and code development were addressed. The findings from these five reports comprised the basis for the analysis in Sodium Fast Reactor Research Plan Volume I.
International Conference on Mathematics, Computational Methods and Reactor Physics 2009, M and C 2009 | 2009
W. David Pointer; Justin Thomas; Tom Fanning; Paul F. Fischer; Andrew R. Siegel; Jeffrey Smith; Akira Tokuhiro
Nuclear Engineering and Design | 2013
D. Tenchine; D. Pialla; Thomas H. Fanning; Justin Thomas; P. Chellapandi; Y. Shvetsov; L. Maas; H.-Y. Jeong; K. Mikityuk; A. Chenu; Hiroyasu Mochizuki; S. Monti
Joint International Topical Meeting on Mathematics and Computations and Supercomputing in Nuclear Applications, M and C + SNA 2007 | 2007
Volkan Seker; Justin Thomas; Thomas J. Downar
International Conference on the Physics of Reactors 2008, PHYSOR 08 | 2008
Mathieu Hursin; Thomas J. Downar; Justin Thomas
Archive | 2007
George F. Vandegrift; Allen J. Bakel; Justin Thomas
Nuclear Engineering and Design | 2015
Yiqi Yu; Elia Merzari; Aleksandr Obabko; Justin Thomas
Joint International Topical Meeting on Mathematics and Computations and Supercomputing in Nuclear Applications, M and C + SNA 2007 | 2007
Tanju Sofu; Justin Thomas; D. P. Weber; W. D. Pointer; Thomas J. Downar
Nuclear Engineering and Design | 2017
Yiqi Yu; Elia Merzari; Justin Thomas; Aleksandr Obabko; S.M. Aithal