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Heat Transfer to Mercury Flowing In-Line Through an Unbaffled Rod Bundle: Effect of Rod Displacement on Local Surface Temperature and Local Heat Flux

 

作者: DwyerO. E.,   HlavacP. J.,   HelfantM. A.,  

 

期刊: Nuclear Science and Engineering  (Taylor Available online 1970)
卷期: Volume 41, issue 3  

页码: 321-335

 

ISSN:0029-5639

 

年代: 1970

 

DOI:10.13182/NSE70-A19090

 

出版商: Taylor&Francis

 

数据来源: Taylor

 

摘要:

AbstractAn experimental study of heat transfer to mercury flowing longitudinally through an unbaffled rod bundle was carried out. The purpose was to determine the effect of lateral displacement of a rod on local heat transfer behavior. In a previous paper, the effects of extent and direction of displacement on the rod-average heat transfer coefficient were presented for the displaced rod, on that (or those) toward which it was displaced, and on that (or those) from which it was displaced. Here, the effects of extent and direction of displacement on the peripherally local heating surface temperature, local heat flux, local heat transfer coefficient, and local surface temperature fluctuations are presented for the displaced rod.The test bundle had aP/Dratio of 1.75, and the rods were special electrical heaters. It was found that rod displacement can cause a large circumferential variation in its local heat transfer characteristics. Aside from theP/Dratio, the independent parameters affecting these characteristics are circumferential angle (θ), relative cladding thickness [(r2−r1)/r2], relative cladding conductivity (kw/kf), and flow rate (Pe).It was found that displacement of a rod can produce circumferential variations in its surface temperature comparable to the average temperature drop from the heating surface to the coolant stream. For a given displacement, this variation increases as average heat fluxincreases and as (r2−r1)/r2,kw/kf, and Pe decrease; changes inhave the greatest effect, and those in (r2−r1)/r2andkw/kf, the least. For a given displacement and flow rate, the greater the surface temperature variation, the less will be the circumferential variation in the local heat flux. Thus, as either cladding thickness or conductivity increase, the variation in the local heat transfer coefficient (and therefore the average) remains about the same. It was found that, as a rod is displaced from its symmetrical position, the local heat transfer coefficients surprisingly decrease at all circumferential points, which partly explains why the rod-average heat transfer coefficient is highly adversely affected by lateral rod displacement. This is only true for liquid-metal coolants.

 

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