Gathering expertise On Vibration ImpaKt In Nuclear power Generation

Acronym

GO-VIKING

Description of the granted funding

The Gathering expertise On Vibration ImpaKt In Nuclear power Generation (GO-VIKING) project takes over from the VIKING initiative that started in 2020 as an in-kind collaborative effort of European vendors, utilities, technical safety organizations, universities, and research organizations to improve the understanding and the prediction of flow-induced vibration (FIV) phenomena, relevant to nuclear power reactors. Preventive measures against FIV should be taken in the component design and during the operation of the nuclear steam supply system (NSSS) to avoid structural wear, damage or even incidental or accidental scenarios with potential radioactivity release to the environment. The overall objective of GO-VIKING is to increase the expertise and improve the tools and skills of the European nuclear stakeholders for the analysis of complex FIV phenomena in order to maintain and enhance nuclear plant safety. This will be accomplished by: - Generation of high-resolution numerical and experimental data of FIV in single and multiphase flows. - Development and validation of high- and medium-resolution, as well as fast-running practical tools for the FIV analysis - Implementation of efficient methods for uncertainty propagation in the FIV results - Synthesis of best practice guidelines for FIV analysis in accordance with the needs of the stakeholders - Targeted training of graduates and young experts as well as practitioners from stakeholders in FIV-related phenomena and modelling techniques The GO-VIKING project will improve the safety of contemporary reactors and the design evaluation of new concepts by making available new experimental results and improved numerical approaches for the evaluation of FIV. These will allow the nuclear operators to enhance the prediction of FIV phenomena in key NSSS components, and the vendors to improve the design of the relevant equipment, thus leading to increased reliability, availability, and safety of the European NPPs.
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Starting year

2022

End year

2026

Granted funding

Virginia Commonwealth University (US)
Participant
EUROPEAN NUCLEAR EDUCATION NETWORK (BE)
76 250 €
Participant
FRAMATOME GMBH (DE)
217 500 €
Participant
EDF ENERGY R&D UK CENTRE LIMITED (UK)
Participant
IPP CENTRE LLC (UA)
95 250 €
Participant
The Pennsylvania State University (US)
Participant
GESELLSCHAFT FUR ANLAGEN UND REAKTORSICHERHEIT (GRS) gGmbH (DE)
357 750 €
Coordinator
INSTITUT DE RADIOPROTECTION ET DE SURETE NUCLEAIRE (FR)
298 718 €
Participant
NUCLEAR RESEARCH AND CONSULTANCY GROUP (NL)
273 000 €
Participant
LGI CONSULTING (FR)
178 125 €
Participant
INSTITUT VON KARMAN DE DYNAMIQUE DES FLUIDES (BE)
368 625 €
Participant
FORSMARKS KRAFTGRUPP AB (SE)
21 000 €
Participant
THE UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER (UK)
Participant
ELECTRICITE DE FRANCE (FR)
336 205 €
Participant
TECHNISCHE UNIVERSITEIT DELFT (NL)
199 443.75 €
Participant
UNIVERSITEIT GENT (BE)
126 875 €
Participant
COMMISSARIAT A L ENERGIE ATOMIQUE ET AUX ENERGIES ALTERNATIVES (FR)
191 381 €
Participant

Amount granted

2 816 265 €

Funder

European Union

Funding instrument

EURATOM Research and Innovation Actions

Framework programme

Horizon Europe (HORIZON)

Call

Programme part
Euratom Research and Training Programme (EURATOM) (11773)
Improve and support nuclear safety, security, safeguards, radiation protection, safe spent fuel and radioactive waste management and decommissioning, including the safe and secure use of nuclear power and of non-power applications of ionizing radiation (11776)
Nuclear safety (11777)
Topic
Safety of operating nuclear power plants and research reactors (HORIZON-EURATOM-2021-NRT-01-01)
Call ID
HORIZON-EURATOM-2021-NRT-01

Other information

Funding decision number

101060826

Identified topics

nuclear safety, nuclear reactors