DocumentCode
844252
Title
Pulsed Neutron Measurement of Single and Two-Phase Liquid Flow
Author
Kehler, Paul
Author_Institution
Argonne National Laboraotory Argonne, Illinois 60439
Volume
26
Issue
1
fYear
1979
Firstpage
1627
Lastpage
1631
Abstract
Use of radioactive tracers for flow velocity measurements is well developed and documented. Measurement techniques involving pulsed sources of fast (14 MeV) neutrons for in-situ production of tracers can be considered as extensions of the old methods. Improvements offered by these Pulsed Neutron Activation (PNA) techniques over conventional radioisotope techniques are (1) non-intrusion into the system, (2) easier introduction and better mixing of the tracer, and (3) no requirement to handle large amounts of relatively long lived radioactive materials. Just as in conventional tracer techniques, flow velocity measurements by PNA methods can be based on the transit-time or the total-count method. A very significant difference of the PNA technique from conventional methods is that the induced activity is proportional to the density of the fluid, and that PNA techniques can be used for density measurements (of two-phase flows) in addition to flow velocity measurement. Original equations were derived that relate experimental data to the mass flow velocity and the average density. The accuracy of these equations is not effected by the flow regime. Experimental results are presented for tests performed on liquid sodium loops, on air-water loops, on the EBR-II reactor and on the LOFT reactor. Current instrumentation development programs (detectors, pulsed neutron sources) are discussed.
Keywords
Equations; Fluid flow; Fluid flow measurement; Inductors; Measurement techniques; Neutrons; Presence network agents; Pulse measurements; Radioactive materials; Velocity measurement;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNS.1979.4330453
Filename
4330453
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