cfd analysis for iter fw/shield designs

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CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs Alice Ying, Ryan Hunt, Hongjie Zhang (UCLA) Dennis Youchison James Bullock, Mike Ulrickson (SNL) July 8, 2009 MIT, Boston

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CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs. Alice Ying, Ryan Hunt, Hongjie Zhang (UCLA) Dennis Youchison James Bullock, Mike Ulrickson (SNL). July 8, 2009 MIT, Boston. First wall / shield -- Geometric Complexity BLKT_04_FW_2009_DESIGN #2PTYX7. Count the pieces: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Alice Ying, Ryan Hunt, Hongjie Zhang (UCLA)Dennis Youchison James Bullock,

Mike Ulrickson (SNL)

July 8, 2009MIT, Boston

Page 2: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Count the pieces: 560 Be tiles/40 pieces of CuCrZr heat sinks/20 pieces of SS bodies/80 SS tubes inside Cu heat sinks/52 plugs40 welding pieces/Manifold, connectors, etc.

First wall / shield -- Geometric Complexity BLKT_04_FW_2009_DESIGN #2PTYX7

Page 3: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Total: 8 kg/s mass flow rate20 circuits each half module 0.2 kg/s per finger

80 circuits fed from a single inlet pipe

Velocity plot in water volume for FW Panel for BM_04 Design Issues:

• Flow non-uniformity and manifold design

• Hot spots and accommodation of local high heat flux

• Pressure drop optimization

• Structure thermomechanical optimization

CFD Challenges

• Large problem sizes

• Multiple materials

• Geometric complexity

• Temperature depended properties

• Incorporation of complex thermal loading conditions for other codes

Page 4: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Contact!!

It may be interesting to do CFD in one finger.

Preparation of CFD meshes and removal of all interferences and errors - (there are many details- Impact on fabrication/cost )

Page 5: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

In some cases, analysis can be done for a smaller compartment (here a SS panel of the FW) to reveal local design feature.

at outlet

at turn-around

Each SS panel houses 2 fingers

Inlet mass flow rate: 0.4 kg/s

CFD Analysis for SS Panel 1 (BLKT_04_FW_2009_DESIGN #2PTYX7)

Flow around the turn around and near the outlet collector show interesting recirculation flow.

Page 6: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Velocity magnitudes at different pipe mid-planes show slightly higher values for the top two pipes

1.7741.356 m/s

Uniformity of pipe velocity?

Page 7: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Be surface temperatures under 5 MW/m2

Cu wall temperature (at Cu/H2O interface)

Max. Cu surface temperature Max. Be surface temperature

SC/Tetra result*

1-D empirical correlation

SC/Tetra result (2 grooves)

1-D (with Cu k) 3 mm thick

SC/Tetra result

0.2 kg/s (3 grooves) 253-273 2631 313 (323) 303.76 (368 W/m2K)

793

0.4 kg/s (3 grooves) 240-270 2601 308 (310) 300.76 (368) 787

0.2 kg/s (toothless) 287-312 2902 350 330.92 (366.5) 839

0.4 kg/s (toothless) 278-286 2802 322 320.87 (367) 804

1.P. Chen, et. al. Correlation for Hypervaportron (2008)2.Shah correlation for flat surface (1977)

3rd Be tile (5 cm wide) exposed to 5 MW/m2 1st, 2nd and 4th Be tiles exposed to 0.2 MW/m2

400 g/s Hypervaportron Finger

Heat spread to the neighboring Cu results in a 30C lower than what reported last week

Adiabatic BC applied to surfaces: no heat communication with neighboring tiles except through Be/Cu contact

Next: 5 MW/m2 applied to both half of the 2nd and 3rd tiles

Hypervaportron heat transfer validation

Page 8: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

3 grooves

2 grooves

Max Cu surface Temp = 308 C

Max Cu surface Temp = 310 C

Velocity characteristics under the grooves – data used for groove optimization

Page 9: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

FW temperature response to single strip high heat flux of 5 MW/m2 (At toroidal location 0.282<y<0.332)

The rest of the surface is exposed to 0.2 MW/m2

Mass flow rate: 8 kg/s total or 200 g/s per finger

simplified model (without manifold)

• Maximum Be surface temperature ~778oC

• Previously, a single finger exposed to similar conditions, the maximum surface temperature was reported at 769oC

Page 10: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

at Y=0.35

Some fluid velocity details show flow non-uniformity

Page 11: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

CFD/thermal analysis for the BM04 shield block at different radial planes (color quantities: velocity m/s inside the pipe; temperature oC: SS)

Russian Design-4 series circuits -radial flow paths-large water volume fraction, -relatively cold compared with other designs.

IO is still yet to decide which design option should be considered

Page 12: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

2 inlets each with 4 kg/s Water enters the shield through the central pipe and distributes into 2 passes poloidally at the end of the pipe (x ~0.64 m)

Water leaves the shield through 4 outlet holes in this model

CFD analysis helps to see how water flows within the module

Page 13: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

BLANKET_2009_DESIGN#2PTXPT

the IO CAD transmitted to the US has a hole – water leaks out. Hole found in slot

Alternate shield design utilizing poloidal flow paths.

CFD analysis reveals design needs much improvement to fix the flow non-uniformity and consequent hot spots.

Page 14: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

CFD analysis for the modified BM04-shield Goal: to evaluate whether the back of the shield will be too hot under long pulse (3000 s) runs (using steady state run for initial check)

The model includes a coaxial connector

Cover plates modified

Modified BM04 model

Previous model Modified model

Page 15: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

CFD Analysis for BM04 Model BLKT_04_BSM_2009_DESIGN#2PCQZA-C-052609 (US fixed)

CFD model total nuclear heat to BM04 = 0.40473 MW

Water= 0.0494 MW

Steel = 0.35531MW

(MCNP calculated total nuclear heat = 0.395 MW with steel = 0.348 MW )

CFD water outlet temperature= 112.01C

(Inlet T= 100 C; inlet mass flow rate = 8 kg/s)

Fractional heat balance (Qinput/Qoutout) = 1.0006

Steady State AnalysisWater volume = 0.0284942 m3

Steel volume= 0.254979 m3

P = 148864 Pa

Page 16: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Plan X = 3.78

Temperature gradient plot shows heat flow directions and the relative location with respect to the coolant pipes

•Maximum temperature at the back ~ 250 C

•Shield maximum temperature = 266.1C

Page 17: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Velocity Distribution for BLKT_04_BSM

Inlet

Plan X=3.78

Some flow non-uniformity corresponding to ~ 30oC temperature non-uniformity

Again, use of parallel flow paths in the design results in some flow non-uniformity

Page 18: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

The Next Step: Pulsed Operation Analysis, Initial result: Steel Surface Temperature at the Plasma Shutdown after Ramp-down

Peak temperature drops ~19 degree lower than the steady state peak, but its location shifts to the back

Starting with steady state temperature conditions (time =0). Power is completely off at 60 s

No flow transient is observed, water velocity distribution remains the same during power ramp and down

Page 19: CFD Analysis for ITER FW/Shield Designs

Main areas of future work for FW / Blanket / Divertor

• He cooled first wall and divertor simulations for TBMs and Demo Divertors

• Coupled HIMAG / CFD / Neutronics / Structural codes for virtual blanket