Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
298673 Nuclear Engineering and Design 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

A supercritical water heat transfer test section has been built at Xi’an Jiaotong University to study the heat transfer from a 10 mm rod inside a square vertical channel with a wire-wrapped helically around it as a spacer. The test section is 1.5 m long and the wire pitch 200 mm. Experimental conditions included pressures of 23–25 MPa, mass fluxes of 500–1200 kg/m2 s, heat fluxes of 200–800 kW/m2, and inlet temperatures of 300–400 °C. Wall temperatures were measured with thermocouples at various positions near the rod surface. The experimental Nusselt numbers were compared with those calculated by empirical correlations for smooth tubes. The Jackson correlation showed better agreement with the test data compared with the Dittus-Boelter correlation but overpredicted the Nusselt numbers almost within the whole range of experimental conditions. Both correlations cannot predict the heat transfer accurately when deterioration occurred at low mass flux and relatively high heat flux in the pseudocritical region. Comparison of experimental data at two different supercritical pressures showed that the heat transfer was more enhanced at the lower supercritical pressure but the deterioration was more likely to occur at the higher pressure, meaning increased safety. Based on a comparison with an identical channel without the helical wrapped wire, it was found that the wire spacer does not enhance the heat transfer significantly under normal heat transfer conditions, but it contributes to the improvement of the heat transfer in the pseudocritical region and to a downstream shift of the onset of the deterioration. The Jackson buoyancy criterion is found to be valid and works well in predicting the onset of heat transfer deterioration occurring in the experiments without wire.

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