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Transient Heat Transfer in an Out-of-Pile SCWR Fuel Assembly Test at Near-Critical Pressure
Author(s) -
Thomas S. Schulenberg,
Hongbo Li
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of nuclear engineering and radiation science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.278
H-Index - 10
eISSN - 2332-8983
pISSN - 2332-8975
DOI - 10.1115/1.4038061
Subject(s) - supercritical fluid , heat transfer , boiling , materials science , coolant , nucleate boiling , thermodynamics , leidenfrost effect , cabin pressurization , thermal conduction , critical heat flux , mechanics , nuclear engineering , heat transfer coefficient , composite material , engineering , physics
While supercritical water is a perfect coolant with excellent heat transfer, a temporary decrease of the system pressure to subcritical conditions, either during intended transients or by accident, can easily cause a boiling crisis with significantly higher cladding temperatures of the fuel assemblies. These conditions have been tested in an out-of-pile experiment with a bundle of four heated rods in the supercritical water multipurpose loop (SWAMUP) facility coconstructed by CGNPC and SJTU in China. Some of the transient tests have been simulated at KIT with a one-dimensional (1D) MATLAB code, assuming quasi-steady-state flow conditions, but time dependent temperatures in the fuel rods. Heat transfer at supercritical and at near-critical conditions was modeled with a recent look-up table of Zahlan (2015, “Derivation of a Look-Up Table for Trans-Critical Heat Transfer in Water Cooled Tubes,” Ph.D. dissertation, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.), and subcritical film boiling was modeled with the look-up table of Groeneveld et al. (2003, “A Look-Up Table for Fully Developed Film Boiling Heat Transfer,” Nucl. Eng. Des., 225(1), pp. 83–97.). Moreover, a conduction controlled rewetting process was included in the analyses, which is based on an analytical solution of Schulenberg and Raqu e (2014, “Transient Heat Transfer During Depressurization From Supercritical Pressure,” Int. J. Heat Mass Transfer, 79(12), pp. 233–240.). The method could well reproduce the boiling crisis during depressurization from supercritical to subcritical pressure, including rewetting of the hot zone within some minutes, but the peak temperature was somewhat under-predicted. Tests with a lower heat flux, which did not cause such phenomena, could be predicted as well. In another test with increasing pressure, however, a boiling crisis was also observed at a heat flux, which was significantly lower than the critical heat flux (CHF) predicted by the CHF look-up table of Groeneveld et al. (2007, “The 2006 CHF Look-Up Table,” Nucl. Eng. Des., 237(15–17), pp. 1909–1922.). The paper is summarizing the physical models and the numerical approach. Comparison with experimental data is used to discuss the applicability of the method for the design of supercritical water-cooled reactors (SCWR). [DOI: 10.1115/1.4038061]

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