Serpent seminar by Professor Jaakko Leppanen – inventor of SERPENT code
“Past, present and future challenges of developing the Serpent Monte Carlo code” given by Professor Jaakko Leppanen – inventor of SERPENT code.
The event will take place in the National Centre for Nuclear Research in Otwock-Świerk, ul Andrzeja Sołtana 7 in PNT building – room 208 “Ewa”.
Organizers provide transport from Warsaw to NCBJ and back. Bus departure from Muzeum Techniki (Palace of Culture and Science) at 7:30.
Registration ends 02.10.2019 at 15:00. To register please click here
ABSTRACT:
The Serpent Monte Carlo code started out in 2004 as a simplified lattice physics code intended for generating group constants for deterministic core simulators, but the scope of applications has considerably diversified over the years. Spatial homogenization is still considered one of the main applications, but some considerable effort has also been devoted to topics like multi-physics coupling. The development of a photon transport mode, advanced geometry types and variance reduction techniques has allowed expanding the field of applications beyond fission reactor analysis, and more recent development areas are related to radiation shielding and fusion neutronics. This presentation gives a developer’s insight into the various challenges encountered during the different phases of the work, as well as some lessons learned.
Short biography:
Jaakko Leppänen received his doctorate from Helsinki University of Technology in 2007. He is currently working as a Research Professor for Reactor Safety at VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, Ltd. and he holds the position of Adjunct Professor at Aalto University. His work is related to the development of the Serpent Monte Carlo transport calculation code, which is used in more than 200 universities and research organizations worldwide. Dr. Leppänen has authored/co-authored 100 peer-reviewed journal and conference papers and has presented his work in numerous invited.