skip to main content
OSTI.GOV title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: Behavior of an air-cooled thermosiphon during a non-air gas ingress event

Journal Article · · International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer

Here, this study investigates the transient response of an air-cooled thermosiphon subjected to a sudden non-air gas ingress event. Results presented are from experimental testing conducted on a large-scale thermal hydraulic facility that examines heat removal performance of the Reactor Cavity Cooling System (RCCS) concept, a passive safety system for advanced nuclear reactors. Relying on buoyancy driven natural circulation flow, these systems feature a series of riser standpipes and coupled chimney network that provide a pathway for heat rejection to the atmosphere. In this work, the facility was modified to allow a transition of the draft intake from normal ambient air, to draft intake from an open-top volume containing high purity argon. Testing began by establishing normal operation and allowing the facility to reach steady-state thermal hydraulic flow conditions with natural air draft. The transitioned sequence was then initiated which simultaneously changed the inlet boundary from open air to a pathway from the quiescent argon volume. This event caused 1,200 cu-feet of the heavy gas, twice the internal volume of total facility flow path, to be drawn into the inlet plenum and ingress into the heated riser standpipes. With the upper chimney network still containing residual air, there was insufficient density difference to maintain buoyancy driven natural circulation. After a period of only 90 s past the ingress event, the facility experienced complete flow stagnation before entering an extended period of severely degraded system flow. Due to the cessation of bulk fluid movement and subsequent failure of its heat removal function, fluid and structural temperatures began to rise sharply. Re-circulation patterns developed within the multiple parallel riser standpipes, where hot gas near the outlets was observed to travel downward and re-enter the inlet of adjacent channels. After approximately 18-minutes, fluid temperatures and their associated density difference rose to a level sufficient to allow reestablishment of buoyancy driven system flow, and ultimately, recovery of facility operation to normal behavior.

Research Organization:
Argonne National Lab. (ANL), Argonne, IL (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Nuclear Energy (NE)
Grant/Contract Number:
AC02-06CH11357
OSTI ID:
1864283
Journal Information:
International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer, Vol. 175; ISSN 0017-9310
Publisher:
ElsevierCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

References (12)

Stratified flow-induced air-ingress accident assessment of the GAMMA code in HTGRs journal August 2011
Study on air ingress during an early stage of a primary-pipe rupture accident of a high-temperature gas-cooled reactor journal April 1991
Separate effects experiments for air-ingress in helium filled vessel journal September 2013
Multi-component diffusion analysis and assessment of GAMMA code and improved RELAP5 code journal May 2007
Numerical study of air ingress transition to natural circulation in a high temperature helium loop journal January 2018
Air-ingress analysis: Part 2—Computational fluid dynamic models journal January 2011
Performance and Results of the LBNE 35 Ton Membrane Cryostat Prototype journal January 2015
Air-ingress analysis: Part 1. Theoretical approach journal January 2011
Studies on molecular diffusion and natural convection in a multicomponent gas system journal February 1996
Transition from molecular diffusion to natural circulation mode air-ingress in high temperature helium loop journal September 2017
Studies on diffusion and natural convection of two-component gases journal July 1992
Estimation of graphite density and mechanical strength variation of VHTR during air-ingress accident journal April 2008