ANS American Nuclear Society
ANS
ANS HomeAboutMembersJoinContactSearch
Journals

Content

Publications
ANS > Publications > Journals > Nuclear Technology > Volume 129
Suppression of Vapor Explosions in a Water-Molten-Tin System by Augmentation of the Void Fraction

Volume 129 · Number 1 · January 2000 · Pages 69-81
Technical Paper · Thermal Hydraulics

Michael K. Meeks, Michael C. Baker, Riccardo Bonazza

ANS Store:  Purchase Article

Experiments were performed to determine the likelihood of a vapor explosion when injecting an inert gas (nitrogen) and a coolant (water) into a pool of molten metal (tin) in a large-scale chamber (~20 kg fuel). The injection flow rates of the water and nitrogen gas were the principal experimental variables, with average water flow rates up to 0.05 × 10-3 m3/s and gas flow rates ranging from 0.33 × 10-3 to 1.67 × 10-3 m3/s. Of 35 successful experiments, 11 resulted in an explosive interaction, as determined by audible signals, videotape, and accelerometer data. The main objective of the investigation was to determine the existence of a boundary between explosive and nonexplosive regions in the water-gas flow rate plane: Such a boundary was indeed identified and approximated by a straight line. Two experiments in which explosive interactions were obtained in the low water/gas flow regions after a relatively long time of coolant injection (~5 to 10 s) demonstrate the hitherto undervalued importance of the temporal variable.

<< Return to Volume 129
Questions or comments about the American Nuclear Society web site?  Contact the ANS Webmaster.