Dr. D. R. Novog
Dr. D. R. Novog
Associate Professor
Department of Engineering Physics
McMaster University
1280 Main Street West, Hamilton
Ontario, Canada L8S 4L7
office: NRB/119
email: novog@mcmaster.ca
voice: (905) 525-9140 x 24904
fax: (905) 528-5406
B.Sc.(Eng.) (Manitoba), M.Eng. (McMaster), Ph.D. (McMaster), P. Eng
Research Interests
Nuclear Safety Analysis Methodology
Historically, Nuclear Safety Analysis has been performed using
a large number of conservative simplifying assumptions with respect
to operating conditions and modelling methodologies. Due to the
varying degree of the conservatisms applied, most of which are
often not quantifiable, it is impossible to determine the exact
margins to safety limits. Safety Analysis and Risk Informed Decision
(RID) making practices rely on accurate quantification of the impact
of upgrades/refurbishment on safety margins.
With the advent of more realistic computational tools and detailed
plant modelling, best estimate predictions of plant response are
now possible. However, the accuracy of the tools and models becomes
increasingly important since operating safety limits will be defined
on these new methods. Advanced statistical analysis techniques
(e.g., Best Estimate and Uncertainty, Extreme Value Behavior, Maximum
Likelihood Estimation, Multi-variate Response Surface Modelling)
are focus research areas as they provide accurate and sufficiently
safe estimates of the margin to safety. Furthermore, the application
of large-scale parallel processing in Safety Analysis and uncertainty
assessments will also be pioneered as part of this research program.
Nuclear Safety Thermalhydraulics and Modelling
The most probable accident sequences that may lead to potential fuel failures due to overheating are:
- loss of power to the main heat transport system and the subsequent reduction in forced convective cooling of the fuel,
- changes in coolant conditions due to depressurization transients as a result of pipe breaks in the pressurized systems,
- increases in fission power due to failure of the control programs/equipment.
For these scenarios, as cooling degrades, vapour formation
around the fuel may limit heat transfer (i.e., post-dryout
heat
transfer regime). If the heat removal process degrades sufficiently, the
associated fuel temperature increase may result in
failure of the fuel (due to fuel or sheath melting), failure
of the fuel bundle
structure (at weld or brazing locations), or failure
of the bundle due to excessive thermo-mechanically induced stresses. The
focus areas of this research program involve both theoretical
and experimental
programs aimed at improved predictions in Safety Analysis.
Predictions of fuel temperatures and potential fuel
failures rely on accurate understanding of the boiling
phenomena
which take place
at the fuel-liquid interface. Due to the complexity
of the phenomena, empirical correlations of experimental
data are often employed
directly in accident analysis. The application of these
correlations to reactor conditions beyond those in
the
experimental program
(either due to long term systematic effects like materials
aging, or acute affects such as those arising from
the accident) leads
to increased uncertainty in these predictions. A focus
of this research program will be to develop mechanistically
based methodologies
that can provide more accurate predictions of margin
for aged reactor cores, and allow for the quantification
of
uncertainties.
In support of the above, experimental studies are required
to identify and quantify the interaction of the key
phenomena which
dictate
fuel to coolant heat transfer. These include macroscopic
effects such as two-phase flow regime, liquid entrainment
and turbulent
sub-channel interactions as well as microscopic effects
including bubble nucleation, liquid evaporation and
thin liquid film behavior.
Experimental measurements are planned which cover flow
regime transitions, vapour formation and fuel geometry
effects in order
to improve
the understanding of these phenomena and how they relate
to modeling of heat transfer during accident scenarios.
