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Critical Reviews

A Review of Void Drift Models in Subchannel Analysis

, ORCID Icon &
Pages 33-45 | Received 19 Apr 2018, Accepted 17 Sep 2018, Published online: 03 Dec 2018
 

Abstract

Subchannel analysis is widely used in nuclear reactor core thermal-hydraulic calculation and safety analysis. In subchannel analysis, the axial flow is usually treated as the dominant one-dimensional flow, and the lateral flow is simplified as the intersubchannel interactions and is modeled by introduction of semiempirical source terms or separate models. The accuracy of the subchannel analysis is strongly dependent on the modeling of intersubchannel interactions between adjacent subchannels. The intersubchannel interaction can be decomposed into three components: diversion cross flow that occurs due to imposed transverse pressure gradients, turbulent mixing that occurs due to stochastic pressure and flow fluctuations, and void drift that results from lateral migration of the gaseous phase (void) due to a strong tendency of the two-phase system approaching the equilibrium state of phase distribution. This critical review focuses on void drift research. Both experimental observation of the void drift phenomenon and the proposed void drift models are reviewed. The improvements and corresponding assessments of the void drift models are summarized. Following that, further improvements on the void drift model are proposed.

Nomenclature

DHave ==

average equivalent diameter of subchannels i and j

DHi ==

equivalent diameter of subchannel i

DHj ==

equivalent diameter of subchannel j

DVD ==

void diffusion coefficient

G ==

average mass flux of subchannels i and j

l ==

effective mixing length

P ==

local pressure

PC ==

critical pressure of the flow regime transition from bubbly-slug flow to annular flow

Pe ==

Peclet number

Pr ==

Prandtl number

Pr ==

reduced pressure (system pressure divided by critical pressure)

Rel ==

dimensionless liquid phase Reynolds number

Sij ==

gap clearance between subchannels i and j

U ==

average axial velocity of the two interacting subchannels

Ul ==

average liquid phase velocity

Vl ==

velocity of liquid phase

Vr ==

phasic relative velocity

Vv ==

velocity of vapor phase

xM ==

quality at the slug-annular transition point

y ==

lateral difference operator

Greek

αeq ==

equilibrium void fraction

α ==

average void fraction of subchannels i and j

βVD ==

void drift coefficient

ΔDh,rel ==

relative hydraulic diameter difference

ε ==

eddy diffusivity

ε/lTP ==

void diffusion coefficient

θ ==

two-phase multiplier

θM ==

two-phase multiplier at the slug-annular transition point

μ ==

dynamic viscosity

μl ==

dynamic viscosity of the single liquid phase

ρl ==

density of the single liquid phase

χ ==

local quality

χC ==

critical quality of the flow regime transition from bubbly-slug flow to annular flow

χOSV ==

quality at the onset of significant void

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