An experimental investigation of the characteristics of explosive boiling of subcooled water on a hot surface under conditions of change of boiling modes

2009 ◽  
Vol 47 (6) ◽  
pp. 856-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. G. Zhilin ◽  
Yu. A. Zeigarnik ◽  
Yu. P. Ivochkin ◽  
A. A. Oksman ◽  
K. I. Belov
2019 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 253-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Z. Sapozhnikov ◽  
V. Yu. Mityakov ◽  
A. V. Mityakov ◽  
V. V. Subbotina

Author(s):  
Avadhesh K. Sharma ◽  
Mayank Modak ◽  
Santosh K. Sahu

Impinging jet surface cooling is being used in many industrial and engineering applications due to their higher heat removal rate. Jet impingement is one of the methods to cool hot surfaces, especially in textile, metal and electronic industries. Due to high heat removal rate the jet impingement cooling of the hot surfaces is being used in nuclear industries. During the loss of coolant accidents (LOCA) in nuclear power plant, an emergency core cooling system (ECCS) cool the cluster of clad tubes using consisting of fuel rods. The usual water flow within a reactor core is bottom to top, parallel to the fuel rods. When a hot surface quenched at very high temperature using a jet of cold fluid, during the quenching the initial heat transfer is limited by film boiling. The effective cooling takes place only after the surface temperature is below the leidenfrost temperature. In the present work an experimental investigation has been carried out to analyze the rewetting phenomenon of a hot vertical stainless steel foil by circular impinging jets of pure water and Al2O3–water nanofluids. The rewetting time and rewetting velocity in the form of dimensionless number (Peclet number) obtained from the thermal images obtained from infrared thermal imaging camera (A655sc, FLIR System). Experiments are performed for different Reynolds number (Re = 5000, 8000), and Al2O3–water nanofluids concentration (Φ = 0.15%, 0.6%)


Author(s):  
Brian Wolf ◽  
Shripad T. Revankar ◽  
Jovica R. Riznic

In this study an experimental program was developed to measure the choking flow rate of subcooled water through simulated tube crack geometries (L/D<10 L< 5mm) and results are compared with models in literature. A test facility was designed and built to measure leak rates of subcooled water from through-wall simulated tube cracks up to 6.8 MPa. Two types of test specimens were used in the experimental program. One, a round orifice like hole is created to simulate a pitting type flaw. The others are laser cut slits representing axial cracks. Flow discharge tests were carried out with water at room temperature to determine the flow characteristics for each test specimen. Also, subcooled flashing discharge tests with heated water were carried out up to a vessel pressure of 6.8 MPa at various subcoolings. A modified Burnell correlation was developed using upstream saturation and subcooled temperature conditions and the predictions of the correlation agreed well with the present experimental data.


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