Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1728656 Annals of Nuclear Energy 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

The paper presents the first results of a systematic methodology aimed at assessing the feasibility of analyses by CFD codes of flow instabilities in heated channels containing supercritical fluids. The research makes use of features presently available in CFD models, in the aim to move step-by-step from simple channel cases towards the analysis of more realistic fuel bundle subchannels.In the present step, basing on previous experience, the STAR-CCM+ code is adopted to solve flow stability problems in circular channels and fuel bundle slices without heating structures, in the aim to characterise the response of CFD models in the analysis of purely thermal–hydraulic instability phenomena. Some of the effects related to numerical discretisation, flow direction with respect to gravity and fluid properties are studied, comparing the stability thresholds identified by transient calculations with maps set up by in-house 1D codes developed and adopted in previous work. Both static and dynamic instabilities are observed, clearly showing the contiguity of these two kinds of phenomena as a function of inlet fluid subcooling.Conclusions are finally drawn about the promising features of CFD codes for such applications, sketching the lines of the work already going on in order to address more realistic reactor scale conditions.

► The first results of a methodology for applying CFD codes in the analysis of stability of heated channels with supercritical fluids are presented. ► The results for different fluids in the case of the pure thermal–hydraulic flow instability are compared with stability maps. ► Additional first results for rod bundle slices are also presented.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
Authors
, ,