Literature DB >> 33867650

Development of N2O-MTV for low-speed flow and in-situ deployment to an integral effect test facility.

Matthieu A André1, Ross A Burns2, Paul M Danehy3, Seth R Cadell4, Brian G Woods4, Philippe M Bardet1.   

Abstract

A molecular tagging velocity (MTV) technique is developed to non-intrusively measure velocity in an integral effect test (IET) facility simulating a high temperature helium-cooled nuclear reactor in accident scenarios. In these scenarios, the velocities are expected to be low, on the order of 1 m/s or less, which forces special requirements on the MTV tracer selection. Nitrous oxide (N2O) is identified as a suitable seed gas to generate NO tracers capable of probing the flow over a large range of pressure, temperature, and flow velocity. The performance of N2O-MTV is assessed in the laboratory at temperature and pressure ranging from 295 to 781 K and 1 to 3 atm. MTV signal improves with a temperature increase, but decreases with a pressure increase. Velocity precision down to 0.004 m/s is achieved with a probe time of 40 ms at ambient pressure and temperature. Measurement precision is limited by tracer diffusion, and absorption of the tag laser beam by the seed gas. Processing by cross-correlation of single shot images with high signal-to-noise ratio reference images improves the precision by about 10% compared to traditional single shot image correlations. The instrument is then deployed to the IET facility. Challenges associated with heat, vibrations, safety, beam delivery, and imaging are addressed in order to successfully operate this sensitive instrument in-situ. Data are presented for an isothermal depressurized conduction cool-down. Velocity profiles from MTV reveal a complex flow transient driven by buoyancy, diffusion, and instability taking place over short (<1 s) and long (>30 min) time-scales at sub-meter per second speed. The precision of the in-situ results is estimated at 0.027, 0.0095, and 0.006 m/s for a probe time of 5, 15, and 35 ms, respectively.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Molecular tagging velocimetry; in-situ measurement; integral effect test facility

Year:  2017        PMID: 33867650      PMCID: PMC8051182          DOI: 10.1007/s00348-017-2470-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Fluids        ISSN: 0723-4864            Impact factor:   2.480


  6 in total

1.  Femtosecond laser electronic excitation tagging for quantitative velocity imaging in air.

Authors:  James B Michael; Matthew R Edwards; Arthur Dogariu; Richard B Miles
Journal:  Appl Opt       Date:  2011-09-10       Impact factor: 1.980

2.  Unseeded velocity measurement by ozone tagging velocimetry.

Authors:  R W Pitz; T M Brown; S P Nandula; P A Skaggs; P A Debarber; M S Brown; J Segall
Journal:  Opt Lett       Date:  1996-05-15       Impact factor: 3.776

3.  Simultaneous velocity and temperature measurements in gaseous flow fields using the VENOM technique.

Authors:  Rodrigo Sánchez-González; Ravi Srinivasan; Rodney D W Bowersox; Simon W North
Journal:  Opt Lett       Date:  2011-01-15       Impact factor: 3.776

4.  Krypton tagging velocimetry of an underexpanded jet.

Authors:  N J Parziale; M S Smith; E C Marineau
Journal:  Appl Opt       Date:  2015-06-01       Impact factor: 1.980

5.  Nitric oxide flow tagging in unseeded air.

Authors:  N Dam; R J Klein-Douwel; N M Sijtsema; J J Meulen
Journal:  Opt Lett       Date:  2001-01-01       Impact factor: 3.776

6.  Velocity measurement by H2O photolysis and laser-induced fluorescence of OH.

Authors:  L R Boedeker
Journal:  Opt Lett       Date:  1989-05-15       Impact factor: 3.776

  6 in total
  1 in total

1.  Freestream velocity-profile measurement in a large-scale, high-enthalpy reflected-shock tunnel.

Authors:  D Shekhtman; W M Yu; M A Mustafa; N J Parziale; J M Austin
Journal:  Exp Fluids       Date:  2021-05-05       Impact factor: 2.480

  1 in total

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