Abstract

An accurate prediction of the hydrogen behaviors in the accident and management process is a crucial topic for both the hydrogen safety assessment and safety analysis in the confined enclosure like the containment of the nuclear power plant (NPP). Hence, the hydrogen behaviors including the transient light gas release, stratification and dissolution in the TH22 test facility for the NPP containment are analyzed and compared using the 3-D CFD code GASFLOW-MPI in this study. In this paper, the light gas helium is adopted as a substitute for the hydrogen in the calculations in accordance with the experiment. Firstly, the detached eddy simulation (DES) turbulence model, 3-D numerical model and experiment setup are introduced. Then, the hydrogen behaviors with the GASFLOW-MPI including the light gas release, stratification and dissolution are analyzed and validated with the experiment data. In addition, the velocity profiles, light gas concentrations, dimensionless numbers and temperature distributions are evaluated for the characteristics of the hydrogen behaviors. The results indicate that the calculation results agree well with the experiment data. Foremostly, the relative errors between the calculation results and experiment data during the phase of the dissolution of the light gas cloud are within 11.9%. Meanwhile, the relative errors of the time for the complete dissolution during the phase of the dissolution of the light gas cloud are within 5.0%. For the light gas release and stratification phase, the jet flow dominates as the Froude (Fr) number exceeds 10 during the time t = 600 s–800 s. Additionally, the time averaged centerline velocity and light gas concentration after the potential core region decay with a slop of 1/z which coincide with the theoretical jet limit. Lastly, the light gas concentrations and temperature distributions in all three phases are captured clearly with the GAFLOW-MPI. It demonstrates that the GASFLOW-MPI can accurately described the details of the related hydrogen behaviors in the accident and management process in the confined enclosure like the NPP. This paper can provide guidance for the numerical computation of the hydrogen safety issues in the confined space.

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