EXPERIMENTAL INVESTIGATION OF THE INFLUENCE OF THE DISTANCE BETWEEN SPACER GRIDS ON THE CRITICAL HEAT FLUX WITH THE SIMULATORS OF A FUEL ASSEMBLY OF A VVER REACTOR

Author(s):  
Oleksyuk Dmitry ◽  
Kireeva Daniya ◽  
Kobzar Leonid
1997 ◽  
Vol 119 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. A. Watwe ◽  
A. Bar-Cohen ◽  
A. McNeil

This study presents a detailed experimental investigation of the combined effects of pressure and subcooling on nucleate pool boiling and critical heat flux (CHF) for degassed fluorocarbon FC-72 boiling on a plastic pin-grid-array (PPGA) chip package. In these experiments pressure was varied between 101.3 and 303.9 kPa and the subcooling ranged from 0 to 65°C. As expected, lower wall superheats resulted from increases in pressure, while subcooling had a minimal effect on fully developed pool boiling. However, the superheat reductions and CHF enhancements were found to be smaller than those predicted by existing models. The CHF for saturated liquid conditions increased by nearly 17 percent for an increase in pressure from 101.3 to 202.7 kPa. In experiments with both FC-72 and FC-87 further increases in pressure did not produce any significant increase in CHF. At a pressure of 101.3 kPa a subcooling of 30°C increased CHF on horizontal upward-facing chips by approximately 50 percent, as compared to 70 percent on vertically oriented packages. The enhancement in CHF due to subcooling decreased rapidly with increasing pressure, and the data showed that the influence of pressure and subcooling on CHF is not additive. A correlation to predict pool boiling CHF under the combined effects of pressure and subcooling is proposed.


Author(s):  
Ali Kos¸ar ◽  
Yoav Peles ◽  
Arthur E. Bergles ◽  
Gregory S. Cole

Critical heat flux (CHF) of water in circular stainless steel microchannels with inner diameters ranging from ∼127μm to ∼254 μm was investigated. Forty-five CHF data points were acquired over mass velocities ranging from 1,200 kg/m2s to 53,000 kg/m2s, heated lengths from 2 cm to 8 cm, and exit qualities from −0.2 to 0.15. Most of the exit qualities fell below 0.1. It was found that CHF conditions were more dependent on mass velocity and heated length than on exit thermal condition. The results were also compared to six CHF correlations, with a mean average error ranging from 22% to 261.8%. A new correlation was proposed to better predict the critical heat flux data under the thermal-hydraulic conditions studied in this investigation. In developing the correlation, 319 data points were added from two previous studies.


Author(s):  
Ruwan K. Ratnayake ◽  
L. E. Hochreiter ◽  
K. N. Ivanov ◽  
J. M. Cimbala

Performance of best estimate codes used in the nuclear industry can be significantly improved by reducing the empiricism embedded in their constitutive models. Spacer grids have been found to have an important impact on the maximum allowable Critical Heat Flux within the fuel assembly of a nuclear reactor core. Therefore, incorporation of suitable spacer grids models can improve the critical heat flux prediction capability of best estimate codes. Realistic modeling of entrainment behavior of spacer grids requires understanding the different mechanisms that are involved. Since visual information pertaining to the entrainment behavior of spacer grids cannot possibly be obtained from operating nuclear reactors, experiments have to be designed and conducted for this specific purpose. Most of the spacer grid experiments available in literature have been designed in view of obtaining quantitative data for the purpose of developing or modifying empirical formulations for heat transfer, critical heat flux or pressure drop. Very few experiments have been designed to provide fundamental information which can be used to understand spacer grid effects and phenomena involved in two phase flow. Air-water experiments were conducted to obtain visual information on the two-phase flow behavior both upstream and downstream of Boiling Water Reactor (BWR) spacer grids. The test section was designed and constructed using prototypic dimensions such as the channel cross-section, rod diameter and other spacer grid configurations of a typical BWR fuel assembly. The test section models the flow behavior in two adjacent sub channels in the BWR core. A portion of a prototypic BWR spacer grid accounting for two adjacent channels was used with industrial mild steel rods for the purpose of representing the channel internals. Symmetry was preserved in this practice, so that the channel walls could effectively be considered as the channel boundaries. Thin films were established on the rod surfaces by injecting water through a set of perforations at the bottom ends of the rods, ensuring that the flow upstream of the bottom-most spacer grid is predominantly annular. The flow conditions were regulated such that they represent typical BWR operating conditions. Photographs taken during experiments show that the film entrainment increases significantly at the spacer grids, since the points of contact between the rods and the grids result in a peeling off of large portions of the liquid film from the rod surfaces. Decreasing the water flow resulted in eventual drying out, beginning at positions immediately upstream of the spacer grids.


1995 ◽  
Vol 117 (4) ◽  
pp. 998-1002 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Dowlati ◽  
M. Kawaji ◽  
I. D. Sardjono ◽  
S. T. Revankar

An experimental investigation has been conducted on critical heat flux (CHF) on a horizontal tube in crossflow boiling R-113 at near atmospheric pressures. Data were obtained over a range of fluid velocities (up to 0.52 m/s), heater diameters (8 to 12.7 mm), and flow blockage factors (D/H = 0.31 to 0.5). The effect of the flow blockage on CHF was examined in detail and compared with other data and existing correlations. No significant effect of flow blockage was observed for D/H up to 0.5. An analytical modification of the Katto-Haramura CHF correlation is proposed to take into account the effect of flow blockage over a wide range of D/H.


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