Analysis of coupled flow and heat transfer in primary and secondary sides of helical coil Once-through steam generator

2021 ◽  
Vol 153 ◽  
pp. 108069
Author(s):  
Fayu Liu ◽  
Xiaoying Zhang ◽  
Jiayue Chen ◽  
Huandong Chen ◽  
Yuan Yuan
Author(s):  
Sooyun Joh

NuScale Power, Inc. is commercializing a 45 Megawatt electric light water nuclear reactor NuScale Power Module (NPM). Each NPM includes a containment vessel, a reactor vessel, a nuclear reactor core, an integral steam generator, and an integral pressurizer. The NuScale Power Module is cooled by natural circulation. The primary coolant in the Reactor Pressure Vessel is heated in the nuclear core, it rises through a central riser, it spills over and encounters the helical coil steam generator, it is cooled as steam is generated inside the steam generator, and it is again heated in the nuclear core. The Steam Generator also must be designed to provide adequate heat transfer, to allow adequate primary reactor coolant flow, and to provide adequate steam flow to produce the required power output. This paper presents the CFD results that describe the transport phenomena on the heat transfer and fluid flow dynamics in helical coil steam generator tubes. The ultimate goal of the CFD modeling is to predict the steam outlet conditions associated with the chosen helical coil tube geometries, solving the primary and secondary flow region together coupled with the helical coil tube. However, current studies are focused on the primary side with the heat flux boundary condition assigned on the outer surface of the helical coil steam generator. In this study, the ANSYS CFX v. 12.1 [1] was used to solve the three-dimensional mass, momentum and energy equations. The helical coil steam generator has complex geometry and modeling entire geometry requires the enormous memory that is beyond our hardware capability and is not practical. Therefore, geometry was limited to 1 degree of the wedge and 5% of the total length in the middle. Only external flow, single phase flow around the helical coils, is simulated using the standard k-ε model and shear stress transport model. From the results of the numerical simulation, the pressure drop and temperature profiles were determined. It is important to understand thermal hydraulic phenomena for the design and performance prediction of the reactor internal.


2014 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nilesh S. Hasabnis ◽  
Vivek V. Ranade

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yunxian Pei ◽  
Xuelan Zhang ◽  
Liancun Zheng ◽  
Xinzi Wang

Abstract In this paper, we study coupled flow and heat transfer of power-law nanofluids on a non-isothermal rough rotating disk subject to a magnetic field. The problem is formulated in terms of specified curvilinear orthogonal coordinate system. An improved BVP4C algorithm is proposed and numerical solutions are obtained. The influence of volume fraction, types and shapes of nanoparticles, magnetic field and power-law index on the flow and heat transfer behavior are discussed.<br/>Results show that the power-law exponents (PLE), nanoparticle volume fraction (NVF) and magnetic field inclination angle (MFIA) are almost no effects on velocities in wave surface direction, but have small or significant effects on azimuth direction. NVF have remarkable influence on local Nusselt number (LNN) and friction coefficients (FC) in radial and azimuth directions (AD). LNN increases with NVF while FC in AD decrease. The types of nanoparticles, magnetic field strength and inclination have small effects on LNN, but they have remarkable effects on the friction coefficients with positively correlated while the inclination is negatively correlated with heat transfer rate. The size of the nanoparticle shape factor is positively correlated with LNN.


2014 ◽  
Vol 3 (01) ◽  
pp. 37-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Laroche ◽  
L. Sun ◽  
J. Pietralik

A new tube degradation mechanism was observed in a recirculating steam generator (SG) with an integral preheater tube at the clearance gap between the tube and the preheater baffle. The general pattern of the damage and material composition in the degraded region suggested that the degradation was cavitation erosion. Cavitation erosion occurs when vapour bubbles exist or form in the flowing liquid and then these bubbles collapse violently in the vicinity of a solid wall. The bubbles collapse when they contact water that is sufficiently subcooled, i.e., below the saturation temperature. In the clearance gap between the tube and the preheater baffle, secondary fluid flow exists due to the pressure difference across the baffle plate. Meanwhile, heat transfer occurs from the primary-side fluid to the secondary-side fluid within this clearance gap, driven by the primary-to-secondary temperature difference. Factors such as the tube position in the baffle hole and fouling may influence the local flow and heat transfer conditions and can cause subcooled boiling that results in cavitation. This paper presents a numerical analysis of flow and heat transfer phenomena to determine the factors contributing to cavitation erosion of tubes in the preheater of a recirculating SG. The analysis used the THIRST code for a 3-dimensional thermalhydraulic simulation of steam generator and the ANSYS Fluent® code for detailed calculations of flow and heat transfer in the clearance gaps. A detailed temperature distribution in the gap was obtained using this analysis to determine the regions where subcooled boiling could occur by comparing the local fluid temperature with its saturation temperature. The susceptibility to cavitation was found to increase with increased inclination (i.e., tilt) and eccentricity (i.e., off-centre) of the tube in the baffle plate gap, and increased fouling on baffle plate surfaces. This methodology could be applied to analyze the cavitation susceptibility for other preheater types with this “tube to baffle plate” gap, as these preheaters might have conditions where boiling followed by the rapid condensation of the steam bubbles are present.


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