Difference between revisions of "Coupled multi-physics calculations"

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Serpent 2 has been written with multi-physics applications in mind. The capability to model arbitrarily detailed density and temperature distributions means that most temperature and density distributions given by e.g. thermal hydraulics or CFD solvers can be brought into Serpent using one of the [[multi-physics interface]] file formats without loss of detail.
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== External coupling ==
 
== External coupling ==
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== Internal solvers ==
  
 
== Iteration ==
 
== Iteration ==

Revision as of 13:35, 24 February 2016

Serpent 2 has been written with multi-physics applications in mind. The capability to model arbitrarily detailed density and temperature distributions means that most temperature and density distributions given by e.g. thermal hydraulics or CFD solvers can be brought into Serpent using one of the multi-physics interface file formats without loss of detail.

External coupling

Internal solvers

Iteration

Multi-physics interface

See multi-physics interface.

Power relaxation

Serpent relaxes the power distribution calculated in the iterations using the stochastic approximation based method[1], where the power distribution at iteration n is calculated by

P_{\mathrm{rel}}^{n} = P_{\mathrm{rel}}^{n-1} - \frac{s_{n}}{\sum_{i = 1}^{n} s_{n}} d \left(P_{\mathrm{rel}}^{n-1} - P^{n}\right),

where P^{n} is the unrelaxed power distribution tallied on iteration n, P_{\mathrm{rel}}^{n-1} is the relaxed power distribution after the previous iteration, s_{i} is the active neutron population simulated on iteration i and d is an underrelaxation factor that can be defined by the set relfactor option.

Output

  1. ^ Dufek, J. and Gudowski, W. "Stochastic Approximation for Monte Carlo Calculation of Steady-State Conditions in Thermal Reactors", Nucl. Sci. Eng, 152 (2006) 274-283