The issue of the temperature measurement in a nuclear reactor is an important element to ensure safe operation of the nuclear power plant. To prevent damages and radioactive releases the fuel in the reactor must be continuously cooled. The coolant temperature field of the VVER-440 reactor. is measured with thermocouples installed at the outlet part of fuel assemblies. Since the power output of the fuel pins is not equal, a non-uniform temperature field at the inlet of the fuel assembly head is formed. Next, the temperature field is subsequently mixed by passing through the assembly head, which contains some constructional elements helping to mixing coolant flow. This mixing is not perfect and due to the effect described above, the signal on the thermocouple can be affected. This phenomenon was introduced in 2009 Atomic Energy Research (AER) Symposium in Bulgaria. 7 international institutions participated with the main goal to explain the mixing character of the coolant and to compare results. For further study of this phenomenon the new detailed computational model of the upper part of the fuel assembly was created and subsequently on the ANSYS FLUENT CFD code verified. The main output of these simulations is study of the coolant temperature distribution on the thermocouple. Computational model, based on the source geometry given by AER symposium, was created in preprocessor GAMBIT 2.4.6. Model contains over 13 million hexahedral cells. Thermohydraulic simulations where performed in ANSYS FLUENT v14.5 and results were compared with data from AER Symposium. There were considered two cases with different pins power outputs. With compare to AER symposium results the achieved resultant temperature on the thermocouple position for both cases indicate comparable accuracy. Furthermore, some flow fluctuations in the assembly head area where found.