Patent Number: 
Section: claims

1. A fuel assembly for a nuclear reactor including:a plurality of elongated nuclear fuel rods having an extended axial length;at least a lowermost grid supporting said fuel rods in an organized array and having unoccupied spaces defined therein to allow a flow of fluid coolant there-through and past said fuel rods when said fuel assembly is installed in the nuclear reactor;a plurality of guide thimbles extending along said fuel rods through and supporting said grid;a bottom nozzle disposed below said grid, below lower ends of said fuel rods and supporting said guide thimbles and permitting the flow of fluid coolant into said fuel assembly, said bottom nozzle comprising a substantially horizontal plate extending transverse to the axis of the fuel rods and having an upper face directed toward said lowermost grid, said upper face of said plate having defined there-through a plurality of flow through holes extending completely through said plate for the passage of the fluid coolant from a lower face of said plate to the upper face of said plate, each of said coolant flow through holes in fluid communication with said unoccupied spaces; andsaid lowermost grid comprising a first, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps extending along a plane substantially orthogonal to the axis of the fuel assembly and a second, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps extending along the plane substantially orthogonal to the axis of the fuel assembly and perpendicular to the first, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps in an egg-crate lattice arrangement that defines a plurality of cells therein through which the fuel rods and guide thimbles pass, each of a first plurality of said cells, through which the fuel rods pass, having walls respectively with a cell height along the axial dimension of the fuel assembly equal to the width of one of the first and second, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps and a cell width along the elongated dimension of the corresponding, elongated strap, and at least one wall of at least some of the first plurality of said cells having at least two distinct protrusions that are arches curved about the vertical axis of the cell and separately extend from the at least one wall inwardly into the at least some of the first plurality of cells on either side of the width near a corner of the at least one wall approximately at the same elevation along the cell height and spaced apart from the nuclear fuel rods at least at the beginning of life of the fuel assembly, a spring extends inwardly into the cell from the at least one wall above the protrusions and a dimple extends inwardly into the at least some of the first plurality of cells substantially centered along the width of the at least one wall at an elevation between the two distinct protrusions and the spring, the spring is sized to contact the fuel rod that passes through a corresponding one of the at least some of the first plurality of cells and the dimple is sized to be spaced apart from the nuclear fuel rod at least at the beginning of life of the fuel assembly. 2. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein the lowermost grid is positioned substantially adjacent the bottom nozzle. 3. The fuel assembly of claim 2 wherein the bottom nozzle is a debris filter. 4. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein at least some of the protrusions on the lowermost grid are located at a height along the cell wall coinciding with an elevation of a lower end plug on a corresponding fuel rod. 5. The fuel assembly of claim 4 wherein all of the lowermost protrusions in the at least one wall of the lower most grid are located at the height along the cell wall coinciding with the elevation of the lower end plug of the fuel rod. 6. The fuel assembly of claim 5 wherein substantially all of the protrusions in the at least one wall of the lower most grid are located at the height along the cell wall coinciding with the elevation of the lower end plug of the fuel rod. 7. The fuel assembly of claim 6 wherein substantially all of the protrusions in the at least one wall of the lower most grid are located at the height along the cell wall coinciding with the elevation of a solid portion of the lower end plug of the fuel rod. 8. The fuel assembly of claim 6 wherein substantially all of the protrusions are located at the height along the cell wall coinciding with an elevation below a cladding wall of the fuel rod. 9. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein the arches are fonned from a stamped portion of the cell wall connected to the cell wall at a base of the arch. 10. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein the arches are elongated with the elongated dimension of the arches extending laterally across a portion of the width of the cell walls of the first plurality of cells in a horizontal direction. 11. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein the protrusions are horizontally oriented. 12. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein the dimple is oriented horizontally and the spring is oriented vertically. 13. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein vertically adjacent each of the protrusions a second protrusion extends from the at least one wall in an opposite direction to the protrusions and into an adjacent one of the at least some of the first plurality of cells. 14. The fuel assembly of claim 13 wherein vertically adjacent the dimple (hereafter the first dimple) a second dimple extends from the at least one wall in the opposite direction to the first dimple into the adjacent one of the at least some of the first plurality of cells, the first dimple extending from the at least one wall into the at least some of the first plurality of cells a distance that is spaced apart from a corresponding one of the fuel rods passing through the cell and the second dimple extending from the at least one wall into the adjacent one of the at least some of the plurality of cells a distance that contacts a corresponding one of the fuel rods passing through the adjacent cell. 15. The fuel assembly of claim 14 wherein a third dimple extends in the opposite direction from the at least one wall at a position vertically above the spring into the adjacent one of the at least some of the first plurality of cells. 16. The fuel assembly of claim 15 wherein the third dimple is oriented vertically and the second dimple is oriented horizontally. 17. The fuel assembly of claim 1 wherein the cell height is approximately 2.025 inches (5.141 cm). 18. A grid for a nuclear fuel assembly comprising:a first, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps extending along a plane substantially orthogonal to the axis of the fuel assembly;a second, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps extending along the plane substantially orthogonal to the axis of the fuel assembly and perpendicular to the first, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps in an egg crate lattice arrangement that defines a plurality of cells therein respectively through which either a fuel rod or a guide thimble passes; andeach of a first plurality of said cells, through which the fuel rods pass, having walls respectively with a cell height along the axial dimension of the fuel assembly equal to the width of one of the first and second, spaced, parallel arrangement of elongated straps and a cell width along the elongated dimension of the corresponding, elongated strap, and at least one wall of at least some of the first plurality of said cells having at least two distinct protrusions that are aches curved about the vertical axis of the cell and separately extend from the at least one wall inwardly into the at least some of the first plurality of cells on either side of the width near a corner of the at least one wall approximately at the same elevation along the cell height and spaced apart from the nuclear fuel rods at least at the beginning of life of the fuel assembly, a spring extends inwardly into the cell from the at least one wall above the protrusions and a dimple extends inwardly into the at least some of the first plurality of cells substantially centered along the width of the at least one wall at an elevation between the two distinct protrusions and the spring, the spring is sized to contact the fuel rod that passes through a corresponding one of the at least some of the first plurality of cells and the dimple is sized to be spaced apart from the nuclear fuel rod at least at the beginning of life of the fuel assembly.