André Matthieu A, Burns Ross A, Danehy Paul M, Cadell Seth R, Woods Brian G, Bardet Philippe M
Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, The George Washington University, Washington, DC, USA.
National Institute of Aerospace, Hampton, VA 23666, USA.
Exp Fluids. 2017 Dec 6;59. doi: 10.1007/s00348-017-2470-3.
A molecular tagging velocity (MTV) technique is developed to non-intrusively measure velocity in an integral effect test (IET) facility simulating a high temperature helium-cooled nuclear reactor in accident scenarios. In these scenarios, the velocities are expected to be low, on the order of 1 m/s or less, which forces special requirements on the MTV tracer selection. Nitrous oxide (NO) is identified as a suitable seed gas to generate NO tracers capable of probing the flow over a large range of pressure, temperature, and flow velocity. The performance of NO-MTV is assessed in the laboratory at temperature and pressure ranging from 295 to 781 K and 1 to 3 atm. MTV signal improves with a temperature increase, but decreases with a pressure increase. Velocity precision down to 0.004 m/s is achieved with a probe time of 40 ms at ambient pressure and temperature. Measurement precision is limited by tracer diffusion, and absorption of the tag laser beam by the seed gas. Processing by cross-correlation of single shot images with high signal-to-noise ratio reference images improves the precision by about 10% compared to traditional single shot image correlations. The instrument is then deployed to the IET facility. Challenges associated with heat, vibrations, safety, beam delivery, and imaging are addressed in order to successfully operate this sensitive instrument in-situ. Data are presented for an isothermal depressurized conduction cool-down. Velocity profiles from MTV reveal a complex flow transient driven by buoyancy, diffusion, and instability taking place over short (<1 s) and long (>30 min) time-scales at sub-meter per second speed. The precision of the in-situ results is estimated at 0.027, 0.0095, and 0.006 m/s for a probe time of 5, 15, and 35 ms, respectively.
开发了一种分子标记速度(MTV)技术,用于在模拟高温氦冷核反应堆事故场景的整体效应试验(IET)设施中进行非侵入式速度测量。在这些场景中,预期速度较低,约为1 m/s或更低,这对MTV示踪剂的选择提出了特殊要求。一氧化二氮(NO)被确定为一种合适的种子气体,可生成能够在大范围压力、温度和流速下探测流动的NO示踪剂。在实验室中,在温度范围为295至781 K、压力范围为1至3 atm的条件下评估了NO-MTV的性能。MTV信号随温度升高而改善,但随压力升高而降低。在环境压力和温度下,探测时间为40 ms时,速度精度可达0.004 m/s。测量精度受示踪剂扩散和种子气体对标记激光束的吸收限制。与具有高信噪比的参考图像进行单次图像互相关处理,与传统单次图像相关性相比,精度提高了约10%。然后将该仪器部署到IET设施中。为了在现场成功操作这种灵敏的仪器,解决了与热、振动、安全、光束传输和成像相关的挑战。给出了等温降压传导冷却的数据。MTV的速度剖面揭示了一个由浮力、扩散和不稳定性驱动的复杂流动瞬态过程,该过程在亚米每秒的速度下,在短(<1 s)和长(>30 min)时间尺度上发生。对于5、15和35 ms的探测时间,现场测量结果的精度估计分别为0.027、0.0095和0.006 m/s。