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Buoyancy‐driven Mixing Studies of Natural Circulation Flows using Rossendorf Coolant Mixing Model Experiments and CFD
Author(s) -
Höhne Thomas,
Kliem Sören,
Rohde Ulrich
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
chemie ingenieur technik
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.365
H-Index - 36
eISSN - 1522-2640
pISSN - 0009-286X
DOI - 10.1002/cite.201100035
Subject(s) - coolant , mechanics , turbulence , mixing (physics) , natural circulation , materials science , computational fluid dynamics , buoyancy , pressurized water reactor , plenum space , reynolds number , complete mixing , thermodynamics , nuclear engineering , mass transfer , physics , engineering , quantum mechanics
Coolant mixing in the cold leg, downcomer and the lower plenum of pressurized water reactors is an important phenomenon mitigating the reactivity insertion into the core. Therefore, mixing of the deborated slugs with the ambient coolant in the reactor pressure vessel was investigated at the four loop 1:5‐scaled Rossendorf Coolant Mixing Model (ROCOM) mixing test facility. Thermalhydraulics analyses showed that weakly borated condensate can accumulate in particular in the pump loop seal of those loops, which do not receive safety injection. After refilling of the primary circuit, natural circulation in the stagnant loops can re‐establish simultaneously and the deborated slugs are shifted towards the reactor pressure vessel. In the ROCOM experiments, the length of the flow ramp and the initial density difference between the slugs and the ambient coolant was varied. From the test matrix experiments with 0 and 2 % density differences between the deborated slugs and the ambient coolant were used to validate the CFD software ANSYS CFX. To model the effects of turbulence on the mean flow a higher order Reynolds stress turbulence model was employed and a mesh consisting of 6.4 million hybrid elements was utilized. Only the experiments and CFD calculations with modeled density differences show stratification in the downcomer. Depending on the degree of density differences the less dense slugs flow around the core barrel at the top of the downcomer. At the opposite side the lower borated coolant is entrained by the colder safety injection water and transported to the core. The validation proves that ANSYS CFX is able to simulate appropriately the flow field and mixing effects of coolant with different densities.