Abstract

Alkali metal heat pipes are considered as a promising primary cooling system of special-purpose nuclear reactors. For the deployment, it is important to understand the heat pipe’s behaviors under different operation conditions. In this paper, the startup characteristics and operation performance of three sodium heat pipes with 67%, 102% and 172% sodium filling ratios, respectively, were investigated, and the two-phase sodium flow was visualized using high-speed, high-resolution x-ray radiography. The boiling flow regimes in the evaporator region were categorized into stagnant sodium liquid pool, geyser boiling and developed boiling. The effect of key parameters, such as the boundary conditions of the evaporator and condenser, the sodium filling ratio, and the inclination angle were investigated. It was found that the heater power and condenser cooling conditions have a great influence on the operation temperature within the achievable range of heat transfer rate. The filling ratio and inclination angle affect the boiling phenomena and the heat pipe operational range. The experiments can provide valuable data for heat pipe model validation as well as the design of the special-purpose nuclear reactor and other high-temperature heat pipe systems.

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