Abstract
In order to improve the understanding of the phenomena underlying the boiling occurrence, CEA Cadarache (France) is designing a new experimental setup, intended to operate for pressures ranging from atmospheric to PWR conditions. This will allow optical access to the convective boiling flow as well as thermal imaging (infrared thermography) of the heated surface. A two-step methodology for designing the heater (particularly its thickness since it directly influences the boiling mechanisms) was developed. This approach is based on solving the heat conduction problem within the heater, considering realistic time-dependent boundary conditions representative of the boiling process. Since those boundary conditions are measured on the external face of the heater, this heat transfer problem is known as an inverse problem that is difficult to solve because of its ill-posedness and high sensitivity to boundary condition uncertainties. In the first stage, we considered one-dimensional modeling to determine the order of magnitude of the heater’s thickness that guaranteed a correct reconstruction of the wet temperature from the measured dry temperature in terms of uncertainties. This value was confirmed in the second stage using a two-dimensional model that accounted for the presence of multiple bubbles on the wet side.
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