Establishment and Verification of the Kinetics Model of Uranium Continuous Dissolution by Using Discrete Element Method
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Reaction Model Establishment and Parameter Setting
2.1. Discrete Element Method
2.2. Establishment of Reaction Kinetics
- when ε = εmax, φ1 = φ2,
- when ε = 100, φ2 = A2 + B2 + C2 = 0.
2.3. Physical Model
2.4. Simulated Operating Conditions
2.5. Reaction Model Verification
2.5.1. Comparison of Single Pellet Dissolution Experiments
2.5.2. Comparison of Continuous Dissolution Experiments
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Pellet Dissolution Time
3.2. Changes in Nitric Acid Concentration and Uranium Concentration
4. Conclusions
- Based on the batch dissolution data of individual UO2 pellets, a kinetic model was developed to describe the dissolution reaction of these pellets. Subsequently, a dissolution reaction calculation program was created using the discrete element model to simulate the uranium dissolution process in a rotary drum dissolver.
- Due to the full mixed flow model and the assumption that the nitric acid concentration was uniformly distributed axially in the drum, the pellet dissolution rate in the experiment was higher than the simulation results, and the deviation between the simulation and the experiment was 10.8%. In the future, it will be necessary to consider the influence of the rotation of the drum and the countercurrent contact between the solids and liquids in the kinetic reaction model.
- When the dissolver reaches equilibrium, the pellets require 10 h to dissolve completely under standard operating conditions. The dissolver takes 30 h to reach the equilibrium. After 30 h, the uranium concentration in the dissolver is 243 gU/L and the concentration of nitric acid is 2.8 mol/L.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
A1, B1 | correction factor parameter of the low percentage of dissolved volume |
A2, B2, C2 | correction factor parameters of the high percentage of dissolved volume |
Ci | stoichiometric number of each component of the solution |
E1, E2 | reaction activation energy, J/mol |
E1,ref, E2,ref | reaction activation energy at experimental temperature, J/mol |
Fin,i | inlet flow rate of nitric acid, kg/s |
Fout,i | outlet flow rate, kg/s |
[HNO3] | concentration of nitric acid, mol/L |
K1, K2 | pre-factor of reaction rate |
Karea | initial surface area of pellets, m3 |
M | total mass of solution, kg |
Mi | mass of a certain solution component, kg |
MWi | molar mass of each component of the solution, kg/kmol |
R | reaction rate of pellets, kmol/s |
S1 | stirring factor |
T | reaction temperature, 300 K |
Tref | experimental temperature, K |
V | total volume of solution, 0.0215 m3 |
Yi | mass fraction of the components of the solution in the dissolver, kg/kg |
Yin,i | mass fraction of the components at the inlet of the nitric acid, kg/kg |
αgas,max | maximum gas volume fraction on the solid surface without stirring, the value is 0.5 |
αliquid | correction factor of solid–liquid contact area |
Γ | order of reactant concentration |
Ε | percentage of dissolved volume, % |
εmax | percentage of dissolved volume at the maximum surface area of the pellet, % |
Ρ | density, kg/m3 |
Φ | reaction surface area correction factor |
φ1 | correction factor for low percentage of dissolved volume |
φ2 | correction factor for high percentage of dissolved volume |
Ω | stirring speed, rpm |
Subscripts | |
I | subscript of solution component, HNO3, UO2(NO3)2, H2O |
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Reaction Kinetic Model Parameter | Parameter Value |
---|---|
K1 | 2522.84 |
K2 | 1.54 × 10−7 |
E1 | −21,485.72 |
E2 | −20,000.0 |
E1,ref | 40,172.24 |
E2,ref | −17,051.69 |
γ | 2.3 |
A1 | 2.69 |
B1 | 0.76 |
A2 | −18.16 |
B2 | 8.84 |
C2 | 9.32 |
εmax | 24.34 |
S1 | 0.12 |
Variable | Value |
---|---|
Nitric acid feeding rate | 3.5 L/h (1.1257 g/s) |
Concentration of acid | 6 mol/L |
Density of UO2 | 10,350 kg/m3 |
Fuel pellet charging rate | Five pellets every two minutes (each pellet is 7.08 g) |
Drum rotating speed | 0.014 rpm |
Operating pressure | 101.325 kPa |
Overflow outlet pressure | 101.325 kPa |
Variable | Value |
---|---|
Poisson’s ratio | 0.25 |
Density | 10,350 kg/m3 |
Shear modulus | 107 Pa |
Coefficient of restitution | 0.1 |
Coefficient of static friction | 0.1 |
Coefficient of rolling friction | 0.1 |
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Li, T.; Liu, F.; Zhou, J.; Zuo, C.; Yan, T.; Zheng, W. Establishment and Verification of the Kinetics Model of Uranium Continuous Dissolution by Using Discrete Element Method. Processes 2023, 11, 2343. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082343
Li T, Liu F, Zhou J, Zuo C, Yan T, Zheng W. Establishment and Verification of the Kinetics Model of Uranium Continuous Dissolution by Using Discrete Element Method. Processes. 2023; 11(8):2343. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082343
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Tianchi, Fang Liu, Jia Zhou, Chen Zuo, Taihong Yan, and Weifang Zheng. 2023. "Establishment and Verification of the Kinetics Model of Uranium Continuous Dissolution by Using Discrete Element Method" Processes 11, no. 8: 2343. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082343
APA StyleLi, T., Liu, F., Zhou, J., Zuo, C., Yan, T., & Zheng, W. (2023). Establishment and Verification of the Kinetics Model of Uranium Continuous Dissolution by Using Discrete Element Method. Processes, 11(8), 2343. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr11082343