Abstract

Evaluation of the two-phase water mixture level in the case of the sudden depressurization of the Reactor Pressure Vessel resulting from an accident scenario is an important aspect in the reactor safety analysis. This paper discusses results of simulations of the water dynamics and heat transfer during the process of an abrupt depressurization of a vessel filled up to a certain level with saturated liquid water and with the rest of the vessel occupied by steam under saturation conditions. During the pressure decrease e.g. due to a break in the steam pipeline, the liquid water evaporates abruptly leading to strong transients in the vessel. These transients and the sudden emergence of void in the area occupied by liquid at the beginning, result in the elevation of the two-phase mixture. This work presents several approaches for modelling of the void fraction, the level swell and the collapse level. The first approach was based on the churn turbulent drift-flux correlation and an explicit analytic equation for the averge void fraction as a function of dimendsionless superficial vapor velocity. The second and the third aproaches were based on dimensionless analysis and purely empirical corelations. The models were verified against independent experimental data. The models represent the Reactor Pressure Vessel of the Integral Test Facility Karlstein (INKA) – a dedicated test facility for experimental investigation of KERENA – a new medium size Boiling Water Reactor design of Framatome. The comparison of the simulations results against the reference data shows a good agreement.

Highlights

  • Prediction of the medium behavior during depressurization of the Reactor Pressure Vessel (RPV) of the Boiling Water Reactor (BWR) is an important aspect during the design of the RPV and involved safety systems

  • An unexpected depressurization may be a result of the Loss of Coolant Accident (LOCA) due to a break in the steam or feedwater pipe

  • This ensures completely passive operation of the Emergency Condenser (EC) according to the fundamental principle of communicating vessels. According to this principle, when the water level in the RPV decreases because of the evaporation of liquid, the cold water column in the EC inlet pipe will go down as well, resulting in injection of cold water into the RPV and saturated steam into the EC

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Summary

Introduction

Prediction of the medium behavior during depressurization of the Reactor Pressure Vessel (RPV) of the Boiling Water Reactor (BWR) is an important aspect during the design of the RPV and involved safety systems. KERENA is a medium-capacity BWR developed by Framatome GmbH [6] It utilizes several innovative passive safety systems that ensure safe depressurization and heat removal in case of an emergency or accidents, including LOCA. The EC according to the fundamental principle of communicating vessels According to this principle, when the water level in the RPV decreases because of the evaporation of liquid (due to the pressure drop or decay heat emitted by the core), the cold water column in the EC inlet pipe will go down as well, resulting in injection of cold water into the RPV and saturated steam into the EC. In order to examine the performance of the passive systems of KERENA, a dedicated test facility was built at the Components Testing Department of Framatome in Karlstein, Germany. The functions may be called from the interface of the vessel object i.e. the dialog box with all parameters can be opened and the specific void fraction model may be chosen from the list of available models

System description and governing equations
Heat transfer
Void fraction
Drift-flux model
Kurbatov correlation
Results
Labuncov correlation
Medium-diameter vessel
Conclusions

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