Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
296886 | Nuclear Engineering and Design | 2012 | 8 Pages |
Significant uncertainty exists about the effects of bypass flow in a prismatic gas-cooled very high temperature reactor (VHTR). Bypass flow is the flow in the gaps between prismatic graphite blocks in the core. The gaps are present because of variations in graphite block construction, imperfect installation and expansion and shrinkage from thermal heating and neutron fluence. Calculations are performed using computational fluid dynamics (CFD) for flow of the helium coolant in the gap and coolant channels along with conjugate heat generation and heat transfer in the fuel compacts and core graphite. A commercial CFD code is used for all of the computations. A one-twelfth sector of a standard hexagonal block column is used for the CFD model because of its symmetry. Various scenarios are investigated including varying the gap width, varying the total heat generation between average and peak rates and varying the graphite block geometry to account for the effects of shrinkage caused by irradiation. The calculations are for a 350 MWth prismatic reactor. It is shown that the effect of increasing gap width, while maintaining the same total mass flow rate, causes increased maximum fuel temperature while providing significant cooling to the near-gap region. The maximum outlet coolant temperature variation is increased by the presence of gap flow and also by an increase in total heat generation. The effect of block shrinkage is actually to decrease maximum fuel temperature compared to a similar reference case.
► CFD calculations are made of bypass flow between graphite blocks in VHTR. ► Parameters varied include bypass gap width, heat generation and geometry. ► Bypass flow causes lateral temperature gradients in graphite block. ► Bypass flow causes increases in max fuel and coolant temperatures. ► Bypass flow causes large increase in outlet coolant temperature variation