| Literature DB >> 27110782 |
Ben De Pauw1,2, Alfredo Lamberti3, Julien Ertveldt4, Ali Rezayat5, Katrien van Tichelen6, Steve Vanlanduit7, Francis Berghmans8.
Abstract
Excessive fuel assembly vibrations in nuclear reactor cores should be avoided in order not to compromise the lifetime of the assembly and in order to prevent the occurrence of safety hazards. This issue is particularly relevant to new reactor designs that use liquid metal coolants, such as, for example, a molten lead-bismuth eutectic. The flow of molten heavy metal around and through the fuel assembly may cause the latter to vibrate and hence suffer degradation as a result of, for example, fretting wear or mechanical fatigue. In this paper, we demonstrate the use of optical fiber sensors to measure the fuel assembly vibration in a lead-bismuth eutectic cooled installation which can be used as input to assess vibration-related safety hazards. We show that the vibration characteristics of the fuel pins in the fuel assembly can be experimentally determined with minimal intrusiveness and with high precision owing to the small dimensions and properties of the sensors. In particular, we were able to record local strain level differences of about 0.2 μϵ allowing us to reliably estimate the vibration amplitudes and modal parameters of the fuel assembly based on optical fiber sensor readings during different stages of the operation of the facility, including the onset of the coolant circulation and steady-state operation.Entities:
Keywords: FBG; experiments; fluid-structure interaction; high temperature; liquid metal flows; operational modal analysis; vibration
Year: 2016 PMID: 27110782 PMCID: PMC4851085 DOI: 10.3390/s16040571
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Concept drawing and photograph of the seven-pin fuel assembly.
Figure 2Owing to the phase-correlation approach to demodulation, the reflected spectral information of the FBGs and the (temperature) controlled environment, the strain resolution (determined as the standard deviation of the noise) was approximately 0.2 .
Figure 3Scheme of an optical fiber with draw tower gratings (DTGs) embedded in a small groove near the surface of the pin.
Figure 4Photograph and scheme of the test facility containing the fuel assembly at SCK·CEN. The inset shows an enlarged image of the T-section holding the egress locations of the optical fibers.
Figure 5(Top): The LBE flow velocity during the course of the test procedure; middle: Corresponding average strain values as measured with all the FBGs on all fuel pins; (Bottom): rms value of the strain AC component of the middle figure; inset: Illustration of the high-pass filtering applied to the strain measurements to eliminate the drag (i.e., the DC component (red)) and obtain the vibration (AC component).
Figure 6(Left): rms vibration amplitude and corresponding standard deviation averaged over all FBGs per fuel pin at an LBE flow of 4 m/s. The central fuel pin exhibits a slightly higher vibration amplitude compared to the peripheral fuel pins; (Right): The rms vibration amplitude measured with the different FBGs on the central fuel pin.
Figure 7Experimentally estimated mode shapes and approximate eigen-frequency and damping ranges during external excitation of the fuel pins.
Figure 8Rigid body “mode shape” occurring as a consequence of the fuel pin fixation or the support structure vibration. The additional FBG located in the capillary measures the relative movement from the fuel pin to its supports. Therefore, only that FBG identifies the rigid body mode.