Fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling

Boiling two-phase flow is found in many industrial applications such as boiling water reactors, two-phase flow heat exchangers and refrigeration systems. The physics of two-phase gas-liquid flow may lead to undesirable system instabilities, and in the literature density wave oscillations (DWO) is re...

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Main Author: Strømsvåg, Dag
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Institutt for energi- og prosessteknikk 2011
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Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-12583
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-ntnu-125832013-01-08T13:30:20ZFundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcoolingeng Strømsvåg, DagNorges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Institutt for energi- og prosessteknikkInstitutt for energi- og prosessteknikk2011ntnudaim:5911SIE5 energi og miljøVarme- og energiprosesserBoiling two-phase flow is found in many industrial applications such as boiling water reactors, two-phase flow heat exchangers and refrigeration systems. The physics of two-phase gas-liquid flow may lead to undesirable system instabilities, and in the literature density wave oscillations (DWO) is reported to be the most commonly observed instability phenomenon. However, the literature alsoprovides two opposing views on what the fundamental mechanism of DWO is. The so-called classical description of DWO focuses on the variation in mixture density as the governing mechanism, and the oscillation period will consequently be about one to two times the channel residence time. The findings presented in citet{Rizwan-Uddin1994} show that it is the variation in mixture velocity that hasthe dominating effect, and the oscillation period was reported to be closer to four times the channel residence time. citet{Ambrosini2000} united the two opposing views by stating that the governing mechanismdepends on the level of system subcooling. The classical description of DWO is based on a lower level of subcooling, while citet{Rizwan-Uddin1994} considered higher subcooling. Here, the fundamental mechanisms of DWO and the effect of system subcooling is investigated further by performing a numerical analysis using a one dimensional homogenous equilibrium flow model. The modeled system consists of a horizontal uniformlyheated boiling channel with an inlet- and exit restriction. The system is exposed to constant externally imposed pressure drop. The effect of system subcooling is investigated by comparing the self-sustained periodicoscillations which make out the modeled stability threshold. The flow model is validated by observing the above mentioned effects of subcooling on DWO. Further, it is found that the change from a density dominated exit restriction towards a velocity dominated exit restriction is a smooth transition for increased subcooling. The amplitude of the variations in exit mixture velocity increases continuously with subcooling, anddue to the squared relationship between the exit restriction pressure drop and the exit mixture velocity, velocity becomes the governing mechanism at high subcooling.The modeled stability threshold approaches a straight line at high subcooling. This line represents operating conditions which have the same mean boiling boundary location. However, the amplitude of the variations about this mean limit grows exponentially at high subcooling. The oscillation period of the observed DWO grows continuously with higher subcooling, and the period increases exponentially at high subcooling. In contrast, the mean boiling channel residence time approaches an upper mean limit at high subcooling. It is postulated that it is the transition towards a more mixture velocity dominated system that causes the oscillation period to evolve as it does with respect to the level of subcooling. Student thesisinfo:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-12583Local ntnudaim:5911application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic ntnudaim:5911
SIE5 energi og miljø
Varme- og energiprosesser
spellingShingle ntnudaim:5911
SIE5 energi og miljø
Varme- og energiprosesser
Strømsvåg, Dag
Fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling
description Boiling two-phase flow is found in many industrial applications such as boiling water reactors, two-phase flow heat exchangers and refrigeration systems. The physics of two-phase gas-liquid flow may lead to undesirable system instabilities, and in the literature density wave oscillations (DWO) is reported to be the most commonly observed instability phenomenon. However, the literature alsoprovides two opposing views on what the fundamental mechanism of DWO is. The so-called classical description of DWO focuses on the variation in mixture density as the governing mechanism, and the oscillation period will consequently be about one to two times the channel residence time. The findings presented in citet{Rizwan-Uddin1994} show that it is the variation in mixture velocity that hasthe dominating effect, and the oscillation period was reported to be closer to four times the channel residence time. citet{Ambrosini2000} united the two opposing views by stating that the governing mechanismdepends on the level of system subcooling. The classical description of DWO is based on a lower level of subcooling, while citet{Rizwan-Uddin1994} considered higher subcooling. Here, the fundamental mechanisms of DWO and the effect of system subcooling is investigated further by performing a numerical analysis using a one dimensional homogenous equilibrium flow model. The modeled system consists of a horizontal uniformlyheated boiling channel with an inlet- and exit restriction. The system is exposed to constant externally imposed pressure drop. The effect of system subcooling is investigated by comparing the self-sustained periodicoscillations which make out the modeled stability threshold. The flow model is validated by observing the above mentioned effects of subcooling on DWO. Further, it is found that the change from a density dominated exit restriction towards a velocity dominated exit restriction is a smooth transition for increased subcooling. The amplitude of the variations in exit mixture velocity increases continuously with subcooling, anddue to the squared relationship between the exit restriction pressure drop and the exit mixture velocity, velocity becomes the governing mechanism at high subcooling.The modeled stability threshold approaches a straight line at high subcooling. This line represents operating conditions which have the same mean boiling boundary location. However, the amplitude of the variations about this mean limit grows exponentially at high subcooling. The oscillation period of the observed DWO grows continuously with higher subcooling, and the period increases exponentially at high subcooling. In contrast, the mean boiling channel residence time approaches an upper mean limit at high subcooling. It is postulated that it is the transition towards a more mixture velocity dominated system that causes the oscillation period to evolve as it does with respect to the level of subcooling.
author Strømsvåg, Dag
author_facet Strømsvåg, Dag
author_sort Strømsvåg, Dag
title Fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling
title_short Fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling
title_full Fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling
title_fullStr Fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling
title_full_unstemmed Fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling
title_sort fundamental mechanisms of density wave oscillations and the effect of subcooling
publisher Norges teknisk-naturvitenskapelige universitet, Institutt for energi- og prosessteknikk
publishDate 2011
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:no:ntnu:diva-12583
work_keys_str_mv AT strømsvagdag fundamentalmechanismsofdensitywaveoscillationsandtheeffectofsubcooling
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