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Cooling of streams of hydrogen and deuterium in relation to units for receiving cryogenic monodisperse targets
Author(s) -
A. Boukharov,
A. F. Ginevsky,
E. V. Vishnevsky,
Georgy A. Romanov
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of physics. conference series
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.21
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1742-6596
pISSN - 1742-6588
DOI - 10.1088/1742-6596/1370/1/012030
Subject(s) - liquid hydrogen , dispersity , deuterium , jet (fluid) , hydrogen , cryogenics , radius , mechanics , materials science , evaporation , thermodynamics , chemistry , nuclear physics , physics , computer security , organic chemistry , computer science , polymer chemistry
The purpose of work is development of the model and carrying out numerical calculations of cooling of thin jets from hydrogen and deuterium as applicable to installations for receiving cryogenic monodisperse targets. For this purpose the model of the expiration of a cryogenic jet to the low pressure area is created, the change of surface temperature and an internal jet part at different external parameters with respect to time is investigated through numerical solutions in PHOENICS software. Dependences of temperature change of liquid jets from hydrogen and deuterium along jet surface and on radius depending on jet diameter, speed, initial jet temperature and pressure in the working chamber of installations for receiving cryogenic monodisperse targets are carried out. The basic possibility of creation of high-speed cryogenic monodisperse targets is shown. According to calculations, at input of thin liquid jets of hydrogen or deuterium with a speed up to 100 m/s in the working chamber with low pressure, jets at distance up to 1 mm do not manage to freeze and can be broken into monodisperse drops. Drops are cooled and become granules due to evaporation. The developed model, the program for determination of parameters of steady monodisperse disintegration of liquid cryogenic jets and results of numerical calculations can be used during creation of installations for receiving high-speed cryogenic monodisperse targets.

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