Development of experimental and computational frameworks to pre dict subcoole d flow boiling in the LANL Isotope Production Facility

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Cooling is crucial to maintain the integrity of target systems in isotope production facilities. At Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL)'s Isotope Production Facility (IPF), multiple encapsulated targets are stacked and irradiated in tandem with a 100 MeV, similar to 250 mu A proton beam. To facilitate effective heat removal, these stacked targets are separated and cooled via a series of water channels. At these beam currents, this high-energy proton beam heats the target system, likely initiating subcooled flow boiling in the cool-ing channels. However, in-beam monitoring of the IPF target system is not possible due to the extreme radiation environment, and the necessarily significant shielding. To better understand high-power target performance, we developed ex-situ experimental and computational frameworks to predict the behavior of subcooled flow boiling at IPF. Subcooled flow boiling experiments on Inconel 625 samples under IPF conditions (2 bar pressure, 10 GPM flow rate (i.e., 2249 kg/m2/s), 85 K subcooling) revealed that IPF's av-erage operating power is at the early stage of boiling with a heat transfer coefficient of 48,0 0 0 W/m2/s. The proposed modeling framework enables us to predict a complete boiling curve, i.e., single-phase heat transfer, onset of nucleate boiling, two-phase heat transfer, and critical heat flux (CHF), with specifica-tion of input boiling parameters up to intermediate heat flux levels. The estimated CHF under IPF condi-tions is 5.2 MW/m2. Experimental data under reduced conditions (2 bar pressure, 1.5 GPM flow rate (i.e., 337 kg/m2/s), 45 K subcooling) served as validation cases for the computational modeling. This computa-tional model can be further extended to more complicated systems replicating the real IPF configuration, for instance, to study void distribution as a function of the incident proton beam profile and coolant velocity profile of multiple cooling channels. The proposed experimental and computational frameworks provide a means to better understand cooling systems in the isotope production facilities at different accelerators, where in-beam monitoring of the cooling process is not available.
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Issue Date
2023-04
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HEAT AND MASS TRANSFER, v.203

ISSN
0017-9310
DOI
10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2022.123836
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/313085
Appears in Collection
NE-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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