LGApr 23, 2025

Node Assigned physics-informed neural networks for thermal-hydraulic system simulation: CVH/FL module

arXiv:2504.16447v11 citationsh-index: 10
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the problem of inaccurate multi-physics simulations in nuclear safety analysis, though it is incremental as it builds on existing PINN methods for a specific domain.

The study tackled the limitations of existing thermal-hydraulic system codes in nuclear power plant severe accident analysis by developing a node-assigned physics-informed neural network (NA-PINN) method, which reduced the maximum absolute error to 0.007 in a 6 water tank simulation compared to 1.678 for a standard PINN.

Severe accidents (SAs) in nuclear power plants have been analyzed using thermal-hydraulic (TH) system codes such as MELCOR and MAAP. These codes efficiently simulate the progression of SAs, while they still have inherent limitations due to their inconsistent finite difference schemes. The use of empirical schemes incorporating both implicit and explicit formulations inherently induces unidirectional coupling in multi-physics analyses. The objective of this study is to develop a novel numerical method for TH system codes using physics-informed neural network (PINN). They have shown strength in solving multi-physics due to the innate feature of neural networks-automatic differentiation. We propose a node-assigned PINN (NA-PINN) that is suitable for the control volume approach-based system codes. NA-PINN addresses the issue of spatial governing equation variation by assigning an individual network to each nodalization of the system code, such that spatial information is excluded from both the input and output domains, and each subnetwork learns to approximate a purely temporal solution. In this phase, we evaluated the accuracy of the PINN methods for the hydrodynamic module. In the 6 water tank simulation, PINN and NA-PINN showed maximum absolute errors of 1.678 and 0.007, respectively. It should be noted that only NA-PINN demonstrated acceptable accuracy. To the best of the authors' knowledge, this is the first study to successfully implement a system code using PINN. Our future work involves extending NA-PINN to a multi-physics solver and developing it in a surrogate manner.

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