M. Yoda, S. I. AbdelKhalik, - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 17
About This Presentation
Title:

M. Yoda, S. I. AbdelKhalik,

Description:

Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering ... Leading divertor designs rely on jet impingement cooling to achieve desired performance. Accommodate heat fluxes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:63
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 18
Provided by: lorenzoc5
Learn more at: http://aries.ucsd.edu
Category:
Tags: abdelkhalik | yoda

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: M. Yoda, S. I. AbdelKhalik,


1
Update on Thermal Performance of the Gas-Cooled
Plate-Type Divertor
  • M. Yoda, S. I. Abdel-Khalik,
  • D. L. Sadowski and M. D. Hageman
  • Woodruff School of Mechanical Engineering

2
Objective / Motivation
  • Objective
  • Experimentally evaluate and validate thermal
    performance of gas-cooled divertor designs in
    support of the ARIES team
  • Motivation
  • Leading divertor designs rely on jet impingement
    cooling to achieve desired performance
  • Accommodate heat fluxes up to 10 MW/m2
  • Performance is robust with respect to
    manufacturing tolerances and variations in flow
    distribution
  • Extremely high heat transfer coefficients (50
    kW/(m2?K)) predicted by commercial CFD codes used
    for the design
  • Experimentally validate such numerical
    predictions

3
Approach
  • Design and instrument test modules that closely
    match divertor geometries
  • Conduct experiments at conditions matching and
    spanning expected non-dimensional parameters for
    prototypical operating conditions
  • Reynolds number Re
  • Use air instead of He
  • Measure temperature distributions and pressure
    drop
  • Compare experimental data with predictions from
    CFD software for test geometry and conditions
  • Nu(Re), ?P(Re)

4
Some History
  • Investigated leading gas-cooled divertor designs
  • FZK Helium-Cooled Multi-Jet (HEMJ) Finger
  • Norajitra et al. 2005
  • Ihli et al. 2007 Crosatti et al. 2009
  • ARIES-CS T-Tube Ihli et al. 2007 Raffray et
    al. 2008
  • Crosatti et al. 2007 Abdel-Khalik et al. 2008
    Crosatti et al. 2009
  • ARIES-Pathways Plate-Type Design
  • Malang Wang et al. 2009
  • Variant with metal open-cell foam Gayton et al.
    2009 Sharafat et al. 2007
  • Variant with pin-fin array In progress

5
Outcomes
  • Enhanced confidence in predicted performance by
    commercial CFD codes at prototypical and
    off-normal operating conditions
  • FLUENT
  • Use validated CFD codes to optimize/modify
    divertor designs
  • Predict sensitivity to changes in geometry and
    operating conditions to define and establish
    manufacturing tolerances

6
Plate-Type Divertor Design
  • Covers large area (2000 cm2 0.2 m2) divertor
    area O(100 m2)
  • HEMJ, T-tube
  • cool 2.5, 13 cm2
  • Accommodates
  • up to 10 MW/m2
  • without exceeding
  • Tmax ? 1300 C, ?max ? 400 MPa

20
100 cm
Castellated W armor 0.5 cm thick
  • 9 individual manifold units with 3 mm thick
    W-alloy side walls brazed together

7
GT Test Module
Heated brass shell
  • Jet issues from 0.5 mm slot, then impinges on and
    cools underside of W-alloy pressure boundary
  • Coolant flows along 2 mm gap, exits via outlet
    manifold
  • Original design Malang 2007
  • Use air as coolant
  • Reynolds number Re 1.1?104 6.8?104 (vs.
    3.3?104 at nominal operating conditions)
  • Nominal heat flux q?nom 0.2 0.75 MW/m2

Al inner cartridge
8
Modified Manifold Design
  • To reduce thermal stress, current modified design
    adds Wang et al. 2009
  • 2 mm stagnant He region outside outlet manifold
  • 8 mm thick W-alloy base

9
Al Inner Cartridge
  • Inlet, outlet manifolds embedded inside Al
    cartridge
  • Manifolds 19 mm ? 15 mm ? 76.2 mm
  • 2 mm ? 76.2 mm slot
  • Coolant enters outlet
  • manifold via holes
  • Side wall bolted on

In
Out
10
Brass Outer Shell
  • Models pressure boundary
  • 5 TC in shell to measure cooled surface
    temperature distribution 2 in center (1,5) and
    (3,4) at same depth 0.5 mm from surface
  • Brass shell heated
  • by heater block
  • k for brass
  • similar to
  • that of W-alloy

11
Pin-Fin Array
  • Can thermal performance of leading divertor
    designs be further improved?
  • Mo open-cell foam in 2 mm gap increased HTC by
    4050, but also increased ?P by similar
    fraction Gayton et al. 2009
  • In HEMP, a variant of HEMJ, coolant impinges on
    pin-fin array Diegele et al. 2003
  • Combine plate with pin-fin array
  • 808 ?1.0 mm ? 2.0 mm pin fins (nearly) contacting
    Al cartridge on 1.2 mm pitch
  • 2 mm clear area for impinging jet
  • Pin fins EDMed into inside of brass shell

12
Heated Test Section
Copper heater block
Graphite shim
Brass outer shell
Gasket
Aluminum cartridge
13
GT Air Flow Loop
Outlet P, T measurement
Inlet P, T measurement
  • Cu heater block
  • 3 cartridge heaters
  • 6 TC in neck measure q?
  • 2 TC at top monitor max. Cu temperature

14
Effect of Pin Fins
  • Nu from TC data
  • Nearly uniform T along slot
  • Nu based on gap width, k at 300K and effective
    HTC (for pin fins)
  • q?nom 0.20.75 MW/m2

Pin fins Bare surface
Nu
Nominal operating condition
  • ? TC 1 ? TC 4
  • ? TC 2 ? TC 5
  • ? TC 3

Re (/104)
15
Comparison Pins vs. Bare
Mass flow rate g/s
  • Ratio of Nu and ?P for cooled surface with,
    without pin-fins
  • Pin-fins with 260 more surface area improve
    cooling performance by 150200 while
    increasing pressure drop by 4070

?Pp / ?P
Nup / Nu
Nominal operating condition
Re (/104)
16
Summary
  • Designed and studied experimental test modules
    modeling leading He-cooled divertor designs
  • T-tube, HEMJ finger, plate
  • Conducted dynamically similar thermal-hydraulics
    experiments matching and spanning expected
    prototypical operating conditions
  • Used commercial CFD software to predict
    performance of experimental test modules
  • Good agreement between experimental data and
    model predictions (including those from other
    groups)
  • Use validated codes to predict performance of
    gas-cooled components with complex geometries

17
Conclusions
  • Plate-type divertor pin-fin array promising
    design
  • Smaller number of divertor modules required ?
    reduced cost, complexity
  • Two- to three-fold enhancement by pin fins ? can
    accommodate heat fluxes much higher than 10 MW/m2
  • Initial results for un-optimized configuration
    use CFD to suggest improvements to current
    experimental design
  • Effect of pin pitch, diameter
  • Effect of slot width

18
Next Steps
  • To complete ARIES-Pathways study
  • Validate CFD codes (e.g. FLUENT) and plate models
    with experimental data
  • Model pin-fin array
  • Use validated CFD codes to optimize/modify
    pin-fin layout
  • Predict maximum heat flux that can be
    accommodated by optimized pin-fin/plate-type
    divertor
  • Predict pressure drop across optimized pin-fin
    array
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com