DocumentCode
2547481
Title
Simple aerosol modelling for fusion power plant containments
Author
Han, W.E.
Author_Institution
Gov. Div., UKAEA, Abingdon, UK
Volume
2
fYear
1995
fDate
30 Sep-5 Oct 1995
Firstpage
1170
Abstract
The modelling of the transport and depletion of aerosols in fusion power plant containment volumes is an important part of the analysis of postulated accidents. This has hitherto been performed either by very over-simplified and over-conservative calculations or by the use of large codes which are time-consuming and inflexible to use, and do not readily lead to understanding. These large codes make quite heavy demands on computer resources because they have to calculate agglomeration and removal rates, as well as number densities of aerosol particles with a distribution of sizes. This paper describes a method of taking these particle growth and mass depletion effects into account by transforming the problem into one of calculating the behaviour of a monodisperse aerosol of constant size which is defined by the geometry of the containment system and the total mass of aerosol present initially. Results were obtained for a number of test cases and compared with calculations for the same cases carried out using ITHACA. The agreement between the two methods was found to be excellent. Further calculations for a more comprehensive range of conditions were also carried out with the proposed model and the results presented. These extended calculations illustrate the fact that even significantly damaged containments (signified by a high leak rate) can, depending on the conditions, bring about retention of nearly all the aerosol by gravitational settling
Keywords
accidents; aerosols; fusion reactor design; fusion reactor safety; fusion reactors; nuclear engineering computing; ITHACA; aerosol modelling; aerosol particles; aerosols depletion; aerosols transport; agglomeration rates; computer resources; constant size; fusion power plant containments; gravitational settling; monodisperse aerosol; postulated accidents; removal rates; Accidents; Aerosols; Computer industry; Geometry; Government; Performance evaluation; Power generation; Safety; Surface treatment; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Fusion Engineering, 1995. SOFE '95. Seeking a New Energy Era., 16th IEEE/NPSS Symposium
Conference_Location
Champaign, IL
Print_ISBN
0-7803-2969-4
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FUSION.1995.534434
Filename
534434
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