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Technical Papers

A Review of the CFD Modeling Progress Triggered by ISP-47 on Containment Thermal Hydraulics

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Pages 63-80 | Received 31 Mar 2018, Accepted 19 Jul 2018, Published online: 05 Sep 2018
 

Abstract

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)/Nuclear Energy Agency International Standard Problem 47 (ISP-47) was aimed at assessing the predictive capabilities of computational fluid dynamics (CFD) and lumped-parameter codes regarding hydrogen mixing under representative thermal-hydraulic conditions of a loss-of-coolant-accident. The benchmark consisted of two systematic steps. The first step was a fundamental model assessment based on quasi-steady-state separate-effects tests in the French TOSQAN facility (7 m3, IRSN, Saclay) and MISTRA facility (100 m3, CEA, Saclay) regarding steam condensation, buoyant turbulent flows, and mixed atmospheric conditions. The second step was based on a more realistic experimental transient in the multicompartmented German Thermal-hydraulics, Hydrogen, Aerosols and Iodine (THAI) facility (60 m3, Becker Technologies, Eschborn). At that time, the blind and open analysis revealed that CFD codes needed further improvement regarding modeling of turbulence in buoyant flows, steam condensation, temperature and species concentration, and stratification buildup as well as their dissolution. This result triggered a comprehensive experimental and analytical effort, e.g., within the German national THAI, the OECD-THAI, and the OECD-SETH-1 and OECD-SETH-2 projects. Now, 10 years later, this paper aims to benchmark the state-of-the-art containment CFD model, developed at Forschungszentrum Juelich and RWTH Aachen University, and to highlight the progress made and the remaining open issues.

Acknowledgments

The development of CFD models for prediction of H2 mixing and mitigation (project number 150 1407) as well as the operation of the SETCOM facility and associated CFD model development (project number 150 1489) is conducted in close cooperation between RWTH Aachen University and Forschungszentrum Juelich. The authors gratefully thank the German Federal Ministry of Economic Affairs and Energy for funding.

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