Formula used to calculate nuclear chain reaction growth rate
The six-factor formula is used in nuclear engineering to determine the multiplication of a nuclear chain reaction in a non-infinite medium.
Six-factor formula: [1]
Symbol
|
Name
|
Meaning
|
Formula
|
Typical thermal reactor value
|
|
Thermal fission factor (eta)
|
neutrons produced from fission/absorption in fuel isotope
|
|
1.65
|
|
Thermal utilization factor
|
neutrons absorbed by the fuel isotope/neutrons absorbed anywhere
|
|
0.71
|
|
Resonance escape probability
|
fission neutrons slowed to thermal energies without absorption/total fission neutrons
|
|
0.87
|
|
Fast fission factor (epsilon)
|
total number of fission neutrons/number of fission neutrons from just thermal fissions
|
|
1.02
|
|
Fast non-leakage probability
|
number of fast neutrons that do not leak from reactor/number of fast neutrons produced by all fissions
|
|
0.97
|
|
Thermal non-leakage probability
|
number of thermal neutrons that do not leak from reactor/number of thermal neutrons produced by all fissions
|
|
0.99
|
The symbols are defined as:[2]
- , and are the average number of neutrons produced per fission in the medium (2.43 for uranium-235).
- and are the microscopic fission and absorption cross sections for fuel, respectively.
- and are the macroscopic absorption cross sections in fuel and in total, respectively.
- is the macroscopic fission cross-section.
- is the number density of atoms of a specific nuclide.
- is the resonance integral for absorption of a specific nuclide.
- is the average lethargy gain per scattering event.
- Lethargy is defined as decrease in neutron energy.
- (fast utilization) is the probability that a fast neutron is absorbed in fuel.
- is the probability that a fast neutron absorption in fuel causes fission.
- is the probability that a thermal neutron absorption in fuel causes fission.
- is the geometric buckling.
- is the diffusion length of thermal neutrons.
- is the age to thermal.
- is the evaluation of where is the energy of the neutron at birth.
Multiplication
The multiplication factor, k, is defined as (see nuclear chain reaction):
- k = number of neutrons in one generation/number of neutrons in preceding generation
- If k is greater than 1, the chain reaction is supercritical, and the neutron population will grow exponentially.
- If k is less than 1, the chain reaction is subcritical, and the neutron population will exponentially decay.
- If k = 1, the chain reaction is critical and the neutron population will remain constant.
See also
References
- ^ Duderstadt, James; Hamilton, Louis (1976). Nuclear Reactor Analysis. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. ISBN 0-471-22363-8.
- ^ Adams, Marvin L. (2009). Introduction to Nuclear Reactor Theory. Texas A&M University.