Abstract

In the high-temperature gas-cooled reactor pebble-bed module, the helium bypass flow among graphite blocks cannot be ignored due to its effect on the temperature distribution as well as the maximum temperature in the reactor core. Bypass flow was previously analyzed in the discharging tube, in vertical gaps between graphite reflectors, and in control rod channels. The focus of this study is on the bypass flow that connects the small absorber sphere channels. Different from bypass flow connecting the control rod channels, there was no evident inlet or outlet flow paths into or out of the small absorber sphere channels at the top or bottom of the reactor core. Therefore, the bypass flow connecting the pebble bed with the small absorber sphere channels was mainly caused by the horizontal gaps, in which those gaps would also be irregular due to installation, thermal expansion, or irradiation of the graphite reflectors. After clarifying the resistant coefficients of those gaps by computational fluid dynamic tools, the bypass flow distribution was calculated by the flow network model including the flow in the reactor core, small absorber sphere channels, as well as horizontal gaps. Cases with various size combinations of gaps were adopted into the flow network model to test the sensitivity of bypass flow distribution to those parameters. Finally, the bypass flow in the small absorber sphere channels was concluded to be not significant in the reactor core.

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