patrick19
Nuclear
- Feb 18, 2006
- 1
In normal power operation, PWR light water reactors are apparently usually controlled by varying poison level (boron/boric acid) in the coolant/moderator water - not by moving the control rods, which are only used for startup and shutdown. (The coolant flow rate at power does not change, suggesting that a constant-average-temperature strategy is usually used, so that power demand would lower the primary-coolant inlet temperature, making the core more reactive and increasing power.)
Why is this? I have some guesses as to why this might be (like, preventing step-function reactivity insertions), but are there any references out there which point to how this design choice evolved?
Thanks...
Why is this? I have some guesses as to why this might be (like, preventing step-function reactivity insertions), but are there any references out there which point to how this design choice evolved?
Thanks...