Frontiers in Energy Research (Oct 2024)

Numerical investigation on the core thermal hydraulic behavior of pool-type sodium-cooled fast reactor (SFR)

  • X. A. Wang,
  • Ximei Liang,
  • RongShuan Xu,
  • DongYu He,
  • Ting Wang,
  • Dalin Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenrg.2024.1439022
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

A thorough understanding of the reactor core thermal hydraulic behavior is essential for the design and safety analysis of Sodium-cooled Fast Reactors (SFR). Due to the application of hexagonal subassembly, the core thermal hydraulic behavior is significantly affected by the flow field within the subassemblies, the inter-wrapper region and the hot pool. Analysis of the core thermal hydraulic behavior requires a model coupling the three regions mentioned above, which has been identified as one of the thermal hydraulic challenges in SFR. In the present study, a 3D model that covers the three regions was developed for the core of the China Experimental Fast Reactor (CEFR) with the Computational Fluid Dynamic (CFD) code, Fluent. The inter-wrapper region and the hot pool were modeled in detail, while the subassemblies were modeled with a special porous medium model. The core thermal hydraulics behavior under steady state was studied, more specifically, information for the flow field distribution at the core outlet, the inter-wrapper flow and the duct wall temperature distribution was obtained. Under steady state, liquid sodium in the inter-wrapper region is supplied by the inner region of the hot pool. And it enters the inter-wrapper region from the core outer region and returns back to the hot pool inner region from the core central region. The inter-wrapper flow is cooled by non-fuel subassemblies and heated up by fuel subassemblies. For non-fuel subassembly, the ratio of the total heat transfer rate between the inter-wrapper flow and the subassemblies to the heat generated within subassemblies could reaches 96%; for fuel subassemblies, the maximum ratio of the total heat transfer rate between the inter-wrapper flow and the subassemblies to the heat generated within subassemblies is 2.45%. Significant temperature gradients have been observed on the duct wall, with maximum values of 156.69 K/m in the vertical direction and 2,196.00 K/m in the circumferential direction. The largest temperature gradient appears on the duct of subassemblies adjacent to the transition region of fuel subassemblies and non-fuel subassemblies.

Keywords