Patent Number: 053234340
Section: description

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS In FIGS. 1-3, 1 designates a fuel channel of substantially square cross section. The fuel channel surrounds with no mentionable play an upper, square portion of a bottom part 2 with a circular, downwardly facing inlet opening 3 for cooling water and moderator water. The bottom part 2 supports, in addition to the fuel channel 1, a supporting plate 4. At its lowest part the fuel channel 1 has a relatively thick wall portion which is fixed to the bottom part 2 and the supporting plate 4 by means of a plurality of horizontal bolts, indicated by means of dash-dotted lines 5. The fuel channel 1 is divided, by means of a hollow support member 7 of cruciform cross section, into four vertical tubular parts 6 with at least substantially square cross section. The support member 7 is welded to the four walls 1a, 1b, 1c and 1d of the fuel channel and has four hollow wings 8. The cruciform channel formed from the support member is designated 32 and is connected at its lowest part to an inlet tube 9 for moderator water. Each tubular part 6 comprises a bundle 25 containing twenty-five fuel rods 10. The rods are arranged in a symmetrical lattice in five rows each containing five rods. Each rod is included in two rows perpendicular to each other. Each bundle is arranged with a bottom-tie plate 11, a top-tie plate 12 and a plurality of spacers 13. A fuel rod bundle 25 with a bottom-tie plate 11, a top-tie plate 12, a spacer 13 and a casing part 6 forms a unit which in this application is referred to as fuel assembly, whereas the device illustrated in FIGS. 1-3 comprising four such fuel assemblies is referred to as a composed fuel assembly. The four bottom-tie plates 11 are supported in the composed fuel assembly by the supporting plate 4 and are each partially inserted into a respective square hole 14 in this plate. In each fuel assembly at least one of the fuel rods is designed with relatively long, threaded end plugs 33 and 34 of solid cladding material, the lower end plug 33 being passed through the bottom-tie plate 11 and provided with a nut 15, the upper end plug 34 being passed through the top-tie plate 12 and provided with a nut 16. In the embodiment shown, the centre rod 26 is designed in this way. This rod also serves as a spacer holder rod. An upper end portion of the fuel channel 1 surrounds a cruciform lifting plate 17 with four horizontal arms 18, 19, 20 and 21, which extend from a common central portion. At the outer end each arm has an arrow-head-like portion 22 which, in respective corners of the fuel channel 1, makes contact with the inner wall surface of the fuel channel 1. A lifting handle 23 is fixed to the arms 20 and 21. The lifting plate 17 and the handle 23 together form a lifting member of steel cast in one piece. The lifting plate 17 is fixed to the support member 7 by inserting each of four vertical bars 28 into a respective wing 8 of the support member 7 and welding them thereto. At the top each bar 28 has a vertical, bolt-like portion 29 which is passed with a play through a corresponding hole in the mid-portion of the lifting plate 17 and provided with a nut 30. As will be clear from the figures, the fuel channel 1 is provided with indentations 31, intermittently arranged in the longitudinal direction, to which the support member 7 is welded. As is clear from FIGS. 4 and 5, each fuel rod 10 includes a cladding tube 41 which is of a zirconium alloy, such as Zircaloy 2. The cladding tube has a length of about 4 m, and in it about 300 circular-cylindrical pellets 42 are stacked one above the other in the axial direction of the tube. The pellets have a height of 11 mm and a diameter of 8.0 mm. Except those pellets located nearest to each end of the fuel rods, which pellets consist of oxide of natural uranium, and except those pellets located immediately below the uppermost spacers, the pellets conventionally consist of uranium dioxide enriched with respect to U 235. The lowermost pellet rests rigidly on an end plug 43 welded to the lower end of the rod and the uppermost pellet is pressed downwards by a spiral spring 44 which is tensioned against an end plug 45 welded to the upper end of the tube. The pellets are ground such that a play 46 arises between the envelope surface of the pellet and the inner wall of the cladding tube. The fuel rod is filled with helium under pressure. In the embodiment shown, the center rod 26, instead of constituting a supporting fuel rod and spacer holder rod, may be designed as a water-filled supporting rod and/or spacer holder rod. Also occasional other rods in each sub-bundle may be formed as water-filled rods instead of as fuel rods. The fuel assembly schematically shown in FIG. 6 has, in the exemplified case, six spacers 13a-f. In accordance with the present invention, each one of at least a majority of the fuel rods 10, and preferably of all the fuel rods is adapted to give off a considerably lower power in those parts 10a and 10b which are located immediately below the spacers 13a and 13b in the uppermost one-third of the active length of the fuel rod than in the remaining parts of the active length of the fuel rod. In the exemplified case, the parts 10a and 10b have a length of 6 cm and are adapted to give off a power of about 4 kW/m. The power given off by the remaining parts of the active length of the fuel rod amounts, on average, to around 20 kW/m. Whereas the pellets 42 (FIG. 4) in the fuel rod, except in parts 10a and 10b in the exemplified case, consist of uranium dioxide with a medium enrichment of 3.5% U 235 of the initial weight uranium in the fuel, the nuclear fuel material in parts 10a and 10b consists of uranium dioxide with an enrichment of 0.35% U 235. Instead of using, in parts 10a and 10b, a mixture of a fissile material and burnable absorber, it is possible to use a material with a low neutron absorption, for example Zircaloy. However, it is advantageous to use a mixture of the kind mentioned, whereby the content of burnable absorber is preferably adapted such that it is consumed after the first cycles with intermediate partial recharging of the reactor core. The fissile material can then be utilized in full during the operating period that remains until the fuel assembly is removed from the core, since there is no risk of dryout after the first cycles mentioned. Under certain conditions it may be advantageous to arrange, also in the part 10c below the spacer 13c, a material of the same kind as in the parts 10a and 10b. The part 10c is arranged in the upper half of the active length of the fuel rod. If the parts 10a, 10b and the parts 10a, 10b and 10c, respectively, are adapted to give off no, or very low, power, it may be suitable to arrange the nuclear fuel material immediately outside these parts, on both sides, to give off a somewhat lower power than the rest of the nuclear fuel material outside these parts. In this way it can be ensured that no power peak occurs when changing from a nuclear fuel material with no or low power to a nuclear fuel material with considerably higher power.