Abstract

ABSTRACT The supercritical carbon dioxide Brayton cycle system is being considered for application in the power conversion system of advanced liquid metal fast reactors. One important research topic is the coupled heat transfer characteristics and enhanced heat transfer laws between liquid metals and supercritical fluids. However, the traditional Reynolds analogy hypothesis with a constant turbulent Prandtl number is difficult to satisfy the numerical conjugate heat transfer research of liquid metals and supercritical fluids. Therefore, based on the open-source computational fluid dynamics program OpenFOAM, a numerical method suitable for the coupled heat transfer calculation of liquid metals and supercritical fluids was developed, which can achieve precise conjugate heat transfer solutions by applying different turbulence models and heat flux models to liquid metals and supercritical fluids. Subsequently, based on this method, the coupled heat transfer behavior of liquid metals and supercritical fluids in the straight channel of a typically printed circuit heat exchanger was studied. The focus was investigating the conjugate heat transfer characteristics of liquid heavy metal lead-bismuth eutectic and liquid metal sodium with supercritical carbon dioxide. Some sensitive results, including the inlet temperature and Reynolds number of liquid metals and supercritical fluids, were qualitatively and quantitatively analyzed.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call