Abstract

The present study numerically models the process of heat removal from a heat-generating porous bed with cold fluid injection from the bottom of the bed. This type of situation is encountered during post-accident situations in nuclear reactors and involves augmentation of heat removal capacity with forced coolant injection from the bottom. A steady-state analysis is carried out with the assumption of laminar flow regime and without accounting for phase change. Darcy-Brinkmann-Forchheimer approximation and local thermal equilibrium assumption are adopted for modelling the momentum and energy equations in porous media, respectively. It is observed that the fluid flow is determined based on the dominancy of the two co-existing flow mechanisms viz. inertial flow due to forced fluid injection and buoyancy-driven flow due to heat generation within the porous bed. In addition, permeability of the porous media significantly affects the flow mechanism, especially near the fluid inlet. Heat transfer characteristics closely follow the flow mechanism established within the enclosure.

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