Study on Cooling Process in a Reactor Vessel of Sodium-Cooled Fast Reactor Under Severe Accident: Velocity Measurement Experiments Simulating Operation of Decay Heat Removal Systems

Author(s):  
Mitsuyo Tsuji ◽  
Kosuke Aizawa ◽  
Jun Kobayashi ◽  
Akikazu Kurihara ◽  
Yasuhiro Miyake

Abstract In Sodium-cooled Fast Reactors (SFRs), it is important to optimize the design and operate decay heat removal systems for safety enhancement against severe accidents which could lead to core melting. It is necessary to remove the decay heat from the molten fuel which relocated in the reactor vessel after the severe accident. Thus, the water experiments using a 1/10 scale experimental apparatus (PHEASANT) simulating the reactor vessel of SFR were conducted to investigate the natural circulation phenomena in a reactor vessel. In this paper, the natural circulation flow field in the reactor vessel was measured by the Particle Image Velocimetry (PIV) method. The PIV measurement was carried out under the operation of the dipped-type direct heat exchanger (DHX) installed in the upper plenum when 20% of the core fuel fell to the lower plenum and accumulated on the core catcher. From the results of PIV measurement, it was quantitatively confirmed that the upward flow occurred at the center region of the lower and the upper plenums. In addition, the downward flows were confirmed near the reactor vessel wall in the upper plenum and through outermost layer of the simulated core in the lower plenum. Moreover, the relationship between the temperature field and the velocity field was investigated in order to understand the natural circulation phenomenon in the reactor vessel. From the above results, it was confirmed that the natural circulation cooling path was established under the dipped-type DHX operation.

Author(s):  
Tomohisa Kurita ◽  
Mitsuo Komuro ◽  
Ryo Suzuki ◽  
Masato Yamada ◽  
Mika Tahara ◽  
...  

It is necessary to stabilize high temperature molten core in a severe accident for long time without electrical power. The core-catcher is to be installed at the bottom of the lower drywell in order to settle the molten core flowing down from a reactor vessel. Toshiba’s core-catcher system consists of a round basin made up of inclined cooling channels to get natural circulation of the flooding water. So it can cover all pedestal floor and can work in passive manner. We have been confirming an applicability of the core-catcher to actual plants. We have conducted full scaled tests with a unique cooling channel which has inclined rectangular flow section and changing the section area along flow direction in several conditions to evaluate the influence of the parameters on the natural circulation and heat removal capability. The test results showed good heat removal performance with nucleate boiling. However, we should consider a transformation of the cooling channel, for example, by the falling corium. So we calculate the assumed transformation of the cooling channel and conduct natural circulation tests with obstruction in the cooling channel. We confirm that natural circulation flow is stably continues and the cooling channel can remove prescribed heat, even if a flow area have got narrow locally.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-11
Author(s):  
Jiarun Mao ◽  
Lei Song ◽  
Yuhao Liu ◽  
Jiming Lin ◽  
Shanfang Huang ◽  
...  

This paper presents capacity of the passive decay heat removal system (DHRS) operated under the natural circulation conditions to remove decay heat inside the main vessel of the Lead-bismuth eutectic cooled Fast Reactor (LFR). The motivation of this research is to improve the inherent safety of the LFR based on the China Accelerator Driven System (ADS) engineering project. Usually the plant is damaged due to the failure of the main pumps and the main heat exchangers under the Station Blackout (SBO). To prevent this accident, we proposed the DHRS based on the diathermic oil cooling for the LFR. The behavior of the DHRS and the plant was simulated using the CFD code STAR CCM+ using LFR with DHRS. The purpose of this analysis is to evaluate the heat exchange capacity of the DHRS and is to provide the reference for structural improvement and experimental design. The results show that the stable natural circulations are established in both the main vessel and the DHRS. During the decay process, the heat exchange power is above the core decay heat power. In addition, in-core decay heat and heat storage inside the main vessel are efficiently removed. All the thermal-hydraulics parameters are within a safe range. Moreover, the highest temperature occurs at the upper surface of the core. A swirl occurs at the corner of the lateral core surface and some improvements should be considered. And the natural circulation driving force can be further increased by reducing the loop resistance or increasing the natural circulation height based on the present design scenario to enhance the heat exchange effect.


Author(s):  
Tomohisa Kurita ◽  
Toshimi Tobimatsu ◽  
Mika Tahara ◽  
Masato Yamada ◽  
Yoshihiro Kojima

A mitigation system which can keep core melt stable after a severe accident is necessary to a next generation BWR design. Toshiba has been developing a compact core catcher to be placed at the lower drywell in the containment vessel. The cooling water for the core catcher is supplied from the passive flooder and PCCS drain line. After the core catcher is flooded, the molten core would be cooled by both overflooding water and inclined cooling channels, in which water is boiling and natural circulation is established. So the core catcher can operate in passive manner and has no active component inside the containment. This paper summarizes flow dynamics and heat removal capability in an inclined cooling channel of core catcher when cooling water flows by the natural circulation.


Author(s):  
S. V. Tsaun ◽  
V. V. Bezlepkin ◽  
A. E. Kiselev ◽  
I. A. Potapov ◽  
V. F. Strizhov ◽  
...  

The methods and models for the analysis of the radiological consequences of the design basis and severe accidents in a Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) are presented in this paper when using the system code SOCRAT. The system code SOCRAT/V3 was elaborated for a realistic analysis of radiological consequences of severe accidents in a NPP. The following models of the fission products (FP) behavior are included into the code SOCRAT/V3: (i) the condensation and the evaporation of the FP in the gaseous phase and (ii) the sedimentation, the evaporation, and the coagulation of the aerosol-shape FP. The latter processes are governed by gravity, Brownian and turbulent diffusion, thermophoresis, turbophoresis and so forth. The behavior of the FP during the loss-of-coolant accidents (LOCA) is presented to demonstrate the possibilities of the code SOCRAT/V3. The main stages of the accident (the core dryout, the core reflooding, the core degradation, the hydrogen generation, the FP release, etc.) are described. Corresponding estimations of the mass, activity, and decay heat of the suspended, settled and released into containment the FP (Xe, Te, Cs, CsI, Cs2MoO4, and so forth) are represent as well.


Author(s):  
Tomohisa Kurita ◽  
Toshimi Tobimatsu ◽  
Mika Tahara ◽  
Kazuyoshi Aoki ◽  
Yoshihiro Kojima

Toshiba has developed a core-catcher system. It is to be installed at the bottom of the lower drywell in order to stabilize a molten core flowing down from a reactor vessel. It consists of a round basin made up of inclined cooling channels arranged axisymmetrically, and the structure including risers, downcomers and a water chamber to get natural circulation of the flooding water. So it can cover entire pedestal floor and can work in passive manner. In order to confirm the heat removal capability of the core catcher with natural circulation, we have conducted full scaled tests in several conditions. Some important dimensionless numbers obtained from fundamental equations of the natural circulation are used for the tests. Using dimensionless number and to compare with several analysis, we can verify that the experiment is adequate to simulate the actual plant.


Author(s):  
A. K. Nayak ◽  
Mukesh Kumar ◽  
Sumit V. Prasad ◽  
V. Jain ◽  
D. K. Chandraker

Removal of decay heat with nonavailability of active systems is a safety issue especially during station blackout (SBO) in a light water reactor. Passive systems are being incorporated in the new designs of nuclear reactors for this purpose. Some of the advanced reactors such as Indian advanced heavy water reactor (AHWR) have dedicated isolation condensers (ICs) which are submerged in large water pool called gravity driven water pool (GDWP). These ICs remove decay heat from the core by natural circulation cooling and dissipate it to the GDWP by natural convection. There is a concern that cracks may develop in the GDWP if a large seismic event similar to Fukushima type occurs. In that case, the pool water is lost and it can threaten the core coolability because of loss of heat sink. In AHWR, the cracks in the water pool leads to the relocation of the water of the pool to the reactor cavity. Feeders of AHWR are positioned in the reactor cavity. Thus, the water relocated in the cavity, will eventually submerge the feeders and these submerged feeders have the potential to remove the decay heat of the core. However, the feeders are located at a lower elevation as compared to the core, and hence, there is concern on the heat removal capability by the submerged feeders by natural convection. To understand this aspect and to establish the core coolability under the above-mentioned conditions, experiments were performed in a full-scale test facility of AHWR. Experiments showed that the decay heat can be safely removed in natural circulation mode of cooling with heat sink located at lower elevation than the heat source.


Author(s):  
Masanori Naitoh ◽  
Marco Pellegrini ◽  
Hiroaki Suzuki ◽  
Hideo Mizouchi ◽  
Hidetoshi Okada

This paper describes analysis results of the early phase accident progression of the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (NPP) Unit 1 by the severe accident analysis code SAMPSON. The isolation condensers were the only devices for decay heat removal at Unit 1, but they stopped after the loss of AC and DC powers. Since there were no decay heat removal for about 14 hours after their termination until the start of alternative water injection into the core by the fire engine, the core melt and the reactor pressure vessel (RPV) bottom failure occurred resulting in large amount of fission products release into the environment. The original SAMPSON was improved by adding new modellings for the phenomena which have been deemed specific to the Fukushima Daiichi NPP: (1) deterioration of SRV gaskets and (2) buckling of in-core-monitor housings which caused the early steam leakage from the core into the drywell, and (3) melt of the in-core-monitor housings in the lower plenum of the RPV. The analysis results showed that (1) 55.3% of UO2 of the initial loading and 66.1% of the core material including UO2, zircaloy, steel and control materials had melted down into the pedestal of the drywell, (2) the amount of Hydrogen generated by Zr-H2O reaction was 686 kg, (3) amount of Cs element released from fuels was 61 kg which was 72% of the total Cs element which was included in fuels at the initiation of the accident, and (4) 18.3% of the corium which fell into the pedestal was one large lump and the 81.7% was particulate corium.


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