Analysis of Graphite Dust Deposition in Steam Generator of HTR

Author(s):  
Wei Peng ◽  
Xiao-yong Yang ◽  
Su-yuan Yu ◽  
Jie Wang

The behavior of the graphite dust in the steam generator is important to the safety of High Temperature gas-cooled Reactor (HTR). The present study numerically investigates the effect of steam generator structure on deposition and diffusion of graphite dust particles in HTR, then the effect of helium velocity, tube spacing and graphite dust particle diameter on the deposition and diffusion characteristics of graphite dust are analyzed. The results showed that the flow field around the heat transfer tube is complex and high turbulence intensity; the deposition efficiency of the graphite dust will increase as the tube spacing increases, while the deposition efficiency of the graphite dust will decrease with the inlet velocity increases.

Author(s):  
Wei Peng ◽  
Tian-qi Zhang ◽  
Ya-nan Zhen ◽  
Su-yuan Yu

The behavior of graphite dust is important to the safety analysis of High-Temperature Gas-cooled Reactor (HTGR). The fission products released by fuel elements would enter the primary loop and combine with dust, resulting in that the dust has a high load capacity of cesium, strontium, iodine and tritium. It would bring difficulty and inconvenience to the maintenance and repair of steam generator. Therefore, the behavior of graphite dust in the steam generator is essential to the safety of High Temperature Gas-cooled Reactors. The present study focused on the deposition and resuspension of graphite dust in steam generator of HTR by numerical method. The results show that the graphite dust in steam generator deposits on the surface of heat transfer tube through turbulent deposition, thermophoretic deposition, and other depositional mechanisms, of which thermophoretic deposition is the main mechanism for the particles with the diameter of 2.2μm in the present study. The preliminary calculation result shows that about 6760mg/m2 of graphite dust tends to load on the tube surface.


Author(s):  
Tao Chen ◽  
Jie Wang ◽  
Wei Peng ◽  
Xiaokai Sun

The deposition of graphite dust produced by the collision between graphite components would cause the security issue in HTGR and need to be analyzed. In this paper, a numerical calculation about the graphite dust’s deposition in the pebble bed reactor core of high-temperature gas cooled reactor was conducted. The three-dimensional steady-state solver was employed for the calculation of flow field and temperature field during simulation. The discrete phase model (DPM) and Lagrange method were applied for the simulation of graphite dust. Effects of parameters such as particle diameter, pebble bed layer numbers, inlet velocity and surface temperature of fuel elements on deposition of graphite dust are analyzed. The results indicated that a majority of particles deposit on the first layer pebble because of first layer’s shielding effect on nether layers. Moreover, deposition efficiency of graphite dust increases with increasing particles diameter and increasing inlet velocity due to greater motion inertia of particles. Compared with fewer layers, more layers structure would lead to larger deposition efficiency because of more opportunities for collision between graphite dust and pebbles, but the difference is not obvious. In addition, the higher surface temperature of fuel elements would cause lower deposition efficiency due to larger thermophoretic force which would drive particles to deviate from pebbles.


Processes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 268
Author(s):  
Olga V. Soloveva ◽  
Sergei A. Solovev ◽  
Ruzil R. Yafizov

In this work, a study was carried out to compare the filtering and hydrodynamic properties of granular filters with solid spherical granules and spherical granules with modifications in the form of micropores. We used the discrete element method (DEM) to construct the geometry of the filters. Models of granular filters with spherical granules with diameters of 3, 4, and 5 mm, and with porosity values of 0.439, 0.466, and 0.477, respectively, were created. The results of the numerical simulation are in good agreement with the experimental data of other authors. We created models of granular filters containing micropores with different porosity values (0.158–0.366) in order to study the micropores’ effect on the aerosol motion. The study showed that micropores contribute to a decrease in hydrodynamic resistance and an increase in particle deposition efficiency. There is also a maximum limiting value of the granule microporosity for a given aerosol particle diameter when a further increase in microporosity leads to a decrease in the deposition efficiency.


Atmosphere ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 275 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian A. Álvarez ◽  
José N. Carbajal ◽  
Luis F. Pineda-Martínez ◽  
José Tuxpan ◽  
David E. Flores

Numerical simulations revealed a profound interaction between the severe dust storm of 2007 caused by Santa Ana winds and the Gulf of California. The weather research and forecasting model coupled with a chemistry module (WRF-CHEM) and the hybrid single-particle Lagrangian integrated trajectory model (HYSPLIT) allowed for the estimation of the meteorological and dynamic aspects of the event and the dust deposition on the surface waters of the Gulf of California caused by the erosion and entrainment of dust particles from the surrounding desert regions. The dust emission rates from three chosen areas (Altar desert, Sonora coast, and a region between these two zones) and their contribution to dust deposition over the Gulf of California were analyzed. The Altar Desert had the highest dust emission rates and the highest contribution to dust deposition over the Gulf of California, i.e., it has the most critical influence with 96,879 tons of emission and 43,539 tons of dust deposition in the gulf. An increase of chlorophyll-a concentrations is observed coinciding with areas of high dust deposition in the northern and western coast of the gulf. This kind of event could have a significant positive influence over the mineralization and productivity processes in the Gulf of California, despite the soil loss in the eroded regions.


2010 ◽  
Vol 1263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rebecca Ann Cantrell ◽  
Paulette Clancy

AbstractUsing atomic-scale Molecular Dynamics (MD) and energy minimization techniques in conjunction with semi-empirical MM3 potential energy functions, we consider the adsorption of a C60 molecule on a series of hypothetical pentacene structures that vary only in the tilt of the angle that the short axis of the pentacene molecules makes with the underlying surface (the long axis lying essentially flat, as on a metal substrate). Important relationships were discovered between the angle adopted by the short axis of pentacene on the surface, φ1, and the adsorption and diffusion characteristics of C60. Static energy calculations show that there is a transition of the deepest energy minima from between the pentacene rows at low values of φ1 to within the rows at high values of φ1, where φ1 is the angle the pentacene short axis makes with the surface. MD confirms this trend by the predominant residence locations at the extreme φ1 values. Furthermore, MD results suggest that the C60 traverses the pentacene surface in the east-west direction for lower φ1 values (φ1 ≤ 40°) and in the north-south direction for higher φ1 values (φ1 ≥ 70°). Taking both static and dynamic results together, the most favorable tilt angles for mono-directional nanowire growth should occur between 70° and 80° off-normal.


1996 ◽  
Vol 81 (5) ◽  
pp. 2203-2213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chong S. Kim ◽  
S. C. Hu ◽  
P. Dewitt ◽  
T. R. Gerrity

Kim, Chong S., S. C. Hu, P. DeWitt, and T. R. Gerrity.Assessment of regional deposition of inhaled particles in human lungs by serial bolus delivery method. J. Appl. Physiol. 81(5): 2203–2213, 1996.—Detailed regional deposition of inhaled particles was investigated in young adults ( n = 11) by use of a serial bolus aerosol delivery technique. A small bolus (45 ml half-width) of monodisperse aerosols [1-, 3-, and 5-μm particle diameter ( D p)] was delivered sequentially to a specific volumetric depth of the lung (100–500 ml in 50-ml increments), while the subject inhaled clean air via a laser aerosol photometer (25-ml dead volume) with a constant flow rate (Q˙ = 150, 250, and 500 ml/s) and exhaled with the same Q˙ without a pause to the residual volume. Deposition efficiency (LDE) and deposition fraction in 10 local volumetric regions and total deposition fraction of the lung were obtained. LDE increased monotonically with increasing lung depth for all three D p. LDE was greater with smaller Q˙ values in all lung regions. Deposition was distributed fairly evenly throughout the lung regions with a tendency for an enhancement in the distal lung regions for D p = 1 μm. Deposition distribution was highly uneven for D p = 3 and 5 μm, and the region of the peak deposition shifted toward the proximal regions with increasing D p. Surface dose was 1–5 times greater in the small airway regions and 2–17 times greater in the large airway regions than in the alveolar regions. The results suggest that local or regional enhancement of deposition occurs in healthy subjects and that the local enhancement can be an important factor in health risk assessment of inhaled particles.


2013 ◽  
Vol 13 (8) ◽  
pp. 21801-21835
Author(s):  
K. Osada ◽  
S. Ura ◽  
M. Kagawa ◽  
M. Mikami ◽  
T. Y. Tanaka ◽  
...  

Abstract. Data of temporal variations and spatial distributions of mineral dust deposition fluxes are very limited in terms of duration, location, and processes of deposition. To ascertain temporal variations and spatial distributions of mineral dust deposition by wet and dry processes, weekly deposition samples were obtained at Sapporo, Toyama, Nagoya, Tottori, Fukuoka, and Cape Hedo (Okinawa) in Japan during October 2008–December 2010 using automatic wet and dry separating samplers. Mineral dust weights in water-insoluble residue were estimated from Fe contents measured using an X-ray fluorescence analyzer. For wet deposition, highest and lowest annual dust fluxes were found at Toyama (9.6 g m−2 yr−1) and at Cape Hedo (1.7 g m−2 yr−1) as average values in 2009 and 2010. Higher wet deposition fluxes were observed at Toyama and Tottori, where frequent precipitation (>60% days per month) was observed during dusty seasons. For dry deposition among Toyama, Tottori, Fukuoka, and Cape Hedo, the highest and lowest annual dust fluxes were found respectively at Fukuoka (5.2 g m−2 yr−1) and at Cape Hedo (2.0 g m−2 yr−1) as average values in 2009 and 2010. Although the seasonal tendency of the monthly dry deposition amount roughly resembled that of monthly days of Kosa dust events, the monthly amount of dry deposition was not proportional to monthly days of the events. Comparison of dry deposition fluxes with vertical distribution of dust particles deduced from Lidar data and coarse particle concentrations suggested that the maximum dust layer height or thickness is an important factor for controlling the dry deposition amount after long-range transport of dust particles. Size distributions of refractory dust particles were obtained using four-stage filtration: >20, >10, >5, and >1 μm diameter. Weight fractions of the sum of >20 μm and 10–20 μm (giant fraction) were higher than 50% for most of the event samples. Irrespective of the deposition type, the giant dust fractions were decreasing generally with increasing distance from the source area, suggesting the selective depletion of larger giant particles during atmospheric transport. Because giant dust particles are an important mass fraction of dust accumulation, especially in the north Pacific where is known as a high-nutrient, low-chlorophyll (HNLC) region, the transport height of giant dust particles is an important factor for studying dust budgets in the atmosphere and their role in biogeochemical cycles.


2014 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 425-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Guieu ◽  
F. Dulac ◽  
C. Ridame ◽  
P. Pondaven

Abstract. The main goal of project DUNE was to estimate the impact of atmospheric deposition on an oligotrophic ecosystem based on mesocosm experiments simulating strong atmospheric inputs of eolian mineral dust. Our mesocosm experiments aimed at being representative of real atmospheric deposition events onto the surface of oligotrophic marine waters and were an original attempt to consider the vertical dimension after atmospheric deposition at the sea surface. This introductory paper describes the objectives of DUNE and the implementation plan of a series of mesocosm experiments conducted in the Mediterranean Sea in 2008 and 2010 during which either wet or dry and a succession of two wet deposition fluxes of 10 g m−2 of Saharan dust have been simulated based on the production of dust analogs from erodible soils of a source region. After the presentation of the main biogeochemical initial conditions of the site at the time of each experiment, a general overview of the papers published in this special issue is presented. From laboratory results on the solubility of trace elements in dust to biogeochemical results from the mesocosm experiments and associated modeling, these papers describe how the strong simulated dust deposition events impacted the marine biogeochemistry. Those multidisciplinary results are bringing new insights into the role of atmospheric deposition on oligotrophic ecosystems and its impact on the carbon budget. The dissolved trace metals with crustal origin – Mn, Al and Fe – showed different behaviors as a function of time after the seeding. The increase in dissolved Mn and Al concentrations was attributed to dissolution processes. The observed decrease in dissolved Fe was due to scavenging on sinking dust particles and aggregates. When a second dust seeding followed, a dissolution of Fe from the dust particles was then observed due to the excess Fe binding ligand concentrations present at that time. Calcium nitrate and sulfate were formed in the dust analog for wet deposition following evapocondensation with acids for simulating cloud processing by polluted air masses under anthropogenic influence. Using a number of particulate tracers that were followed in the water column and in the sediment traps, it was shown that the dust composition evolves after seeding by total dissolution of these salts. This provided a large source of new dissolved inorganic nitrogen (DIN) in the surface waters. In spite of this dissolution, the typical inter-elemental ratios in the particulate matter, such as Ti / Al or Ba / Al, are not affected during the dust settling, confirming their values as proxies of lithogenic fluxes or of productivity in sediment traps. DUNE experiments have clearly shown the potential for Saharan wet deposition to modify the in situ concentrations of dissolved elements of biogeochemical interest such as Fe and also P and N. Indeed, wet deposition yielded a transient increase in dissolved inorganic phosphorus (DIP) followed by a very rapid return to initial conditions or no return to initial conditions when a second dust seeding followed. By transiently increasing DIP and DIN concentrations in P- and N-starved surface waters of the Mediterranean Sea, wet deposition of Saharan dust can likely relieve the potential P and/or N limitation of biological activity; this has been directly quantified in terms of biological response. Wet deposition of dust strongly stimulated primary production and phytoplanktonic biomass during several days. Small phytoplankton (< 3 μm) was more stimulated after the first dust addition, whereas the larger size class (> 3 μm) significantly increased after the second one, indicating that larger-sized cells need further nutrient supply in order to be able to adjust their physiology and compete for resource acquisition and biomass increase. Among the microorganisms responding to the atmospheric inputs, diazotrophs were stimulated by both wet and dry atmospheric deposition, although N2 fixation was shown to be only responsible for a few percent of the induced new production. Dust deposition modified the bacterial community structure by selectively stimulating and inhibiting certain members of the bacterial community. The microbial food web dynamics were strongly impacted by dust deposition. The carbon budget indicates that the net heterotrophic character (i.e., ratio of net primary production to bacteria respiration < 1) of the tested waters remained (or was even increased) after simulated wet or dry deposition despite the significant stimulation of autotrophs after wet events. This indicates that the oligotrophic tested waters submitted to dust deposition are a net CO2 source. Nonetheless, the system was able to export organic material, half of it being associated with lithogenic particles through aggregation processes between lithogenic particles and organic matter. These observations support the "ballast" hypothesis and suggest that this "lithogenic carbon pump" could represent a major contribution of the global carbon export to deep waters in areas receiving high rates of atmospheric deposition. Furthermore, a theoretical microbial food web model showed that, all other things being equal, carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus stoichiometric mismatch along the food chain can have a substantial impact on the ecosystem response to nutrient inputs from dusts, with changes in the biomass of all biological compartments by a factor of ~ 2–4, and shifts from net autotrophy to net heterotrophy. Although the model was kept simple, it highlights the importance of stoichiometric constrains on the dynamics of microbial food webs.


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