Importance Analyses on Phenomenological Parameters for the Aerosol Dynamics Models in I-COSTA for a Severe Nuclear Power Plant Accident
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Summary of the Numerical Methods in the I-COSTA Code
2.1. Summary of Multicomponent Sectional Equations and Mason Equations for Hygroscopic Growth in I-COSTA
- : mass concentration of aerosol particles of component k in section l,
- : coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in sections lower than l forming an aerosol particle in section l,
- ncomp: number of components of the aerosol particles considered in the multicomponent sectional equations,
- : coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in section l and sections lower than l forming an aerosol particle larger than those in section l,
- : coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in section l and sections lower than l forming an aerosol particle remaining section l,
- : intra-sectional coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in section l forming an aerosol particle larger than those in section l,
- : coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in section l forming an aerosol particle larger than those in section l,
- : injection rates of the aerosol particles in section l,
- : removal rates of the aerosol particles in section l via deposition.
- ul, vl: mass of a single aerosol particle in section l,
- S: saturation ratio, in other words, relative humidity in the containment,
- Sr,k: effective saturation ratio at the surface of the aerosol particles expressed as
- ak: thermal conduction of the latent heat associated with condensation from particles to the atmosphere, expressed as
- bk: diffusion of water vapor from the atmosphere to the particle surface of component k expressed as
- : effective vapor diffusion coefficient for component k expressed as
- : effective thermal conductivity of atmosphere in the containment expressed as
2.2. Summary of Coupling Scheme of Multicomponent Sectional Equations and Mason Equations for Hygroscopic Growth in I-COSTA
- v: mass of a single particle,
- slopl,k: slope of the mass concentration function for component k in section l, defined as
- : mass concentration of aerosol particles of component k that remain in section l after hygroscopic growth for the time step of Δt,
- : mass concentration of aerosol particles of component k that grow in size to section l + 1 after hygroscopic growth for the time step of Δt,
- frl,k: fraction of the aerosol particles of component k in section l that remain in section l after hygroscopic growth, which is expressed as
- trl,k: fraction of the aerosol particles of component k in section l that grow up to section l + 1 after hygroscopic growth, which is expressed as
- nbin: number of sections of the aerosol particles considered in the multicomponent sectional equations.
- : mass concentration of aerosol particles of component k that remain in section l after hygroscopic growth for the time step of Δt.
2.3. Comparison of the Coupling Scheme in I-COSTA and That in the Conventional Codes
2.4. Selected Parameters and Their Uncertainty Range for Importance Analysis
2.5. Summaries of the Framework for Importance Analysis
3. Numerical Results
3.1. Computation Conditions on the Importance Analysis
3.2. Importance Analyses on the Phenomenological Parameters for the Aerosol Dynamics
4. Summary and Conclusions
- The range of the phenomenological parameters taken from previous studies leads to 50% of the airborne concentration of the aerosol particles obtained from experimental values.
- The range of sensitivity of the maximum airborne aerosol concentrations is seven times the uncertainty range of the measurement during experiment, i.e., the uncertainty range of the measurement is known to be 7% of the concentrations [17].
- The larger range of sensitivity compared to the range of measurement appears to be caused by the uncertainty range of the phenomenological parameters. In order to make the accuracy of the aerosol dynamics model comparable to that of the experimental measurement, the uncertainty of the parameters should be reduced.
- From the correlation coefficients between the phenomenological parameters and the airborne concentrations, the dynamic shape factor and the saturation ratio were found to be important parameters with respect to the airborne concentrations of the aerosol particles.
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Nomenclature
A | Global transition rate matrix |
Al,k | Elemental transition rate matrix for aerosol particles of component k in section l |
ak | Thermal conduction of the latent heat associated with condensation from particles to the atmosphere |
Ar,k | Activity of the aerosol particles |
bk | Diffusion of water vapor from the atmosphere to the particle surface of component k |
Vapor diffusion coefficient for component k | |
Effective vapor diffusion coefficient for component k | |
Slip correction factor | |
Radius function of the aerosol particles for component k with respect to the mass of particles u | |
frl,k | Fraction of the aerosol particles of component k in section l that remain in section l after hygroscopic growth |
Thermal conductivity of atmosphere in the containment | |
Effective thermal conductivity of atmosphere in the containment | |
Mw | Molecular weight of the water |
nbin | Number of sections of the aerosol particles considered in the multicomponent sectional equations |
ncomp | Number of components of the aerosol particles considered in the multicomponent sectional equations |
no, ni, | Number of Gaussian quadrature sets |
Vector form of the multicomponent sectional equations of the aerosol particles | |
Mass concentration of aerosol particles of component k in section l | |
Mass concentration of aerosol particles of component k that remain section l after hygroscopic growth for the time step of Δt | |
Mass concentration of aerosol particles of component k that grow up to section l + 1 after hygroscopic growth for the time step of Δt | |
R | Gas constant |
Removal rates of the aerosol particles in section l via deposition, | |
S | Saturation ratio, in other words, relative humidity in the containment |
Injection rates of the aerosol particles in section l | |
Sr,k | Effective saturation ratio at the surface of the aerosol particles |
slopl,k | Slope of the mass concentration function for component k in section l |
T∞ | Temperature of the atmosphere in the containment |
trl,k | Fraction of the aerosol particles of component k in section l that grow up to section l + 1 after hygroscopic growth |
U(u,t) | Deposition via thermophoresis, |
VT(u) | Deposition via gravitational settling |
Diffu(u) | Deposition via diffusiophoresis, |
Abscissas for Gaussian quadrature | |
ul | Mass of a single aerosol particle in section l |
v | Mass of a single particle |
vl | Mass of a single aerosol particle in section l |
Weights for Gaussian quadrature | |
xl | Radius of a single aerosol particle in section l |
αc | Condensation coefficient |
αT | Thermal accommodation coefficient |
(u,v) | Kernel for Brownian, gravitational, and turbulent shear coagulations for particles having masses of u and v |
(u,v) | Brownian coagulation kernel, |
(u,v) | Gravitational coagulation kernel |
(u,v) | Turbulent inertial coagulation kernel |
(u,v) | Turbulent shear coagulation kernel |
Coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in sections lower than l forming an aerosol particle in section l | |
Coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in section l and sections lower than l forming an aerosol particle larger than those in section l | |
Intra-sectional coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in section l forming an aerosol particle larger than those in section l | |
Coagulation rate of the aerosol particles in section l forming an aerosol particle larger than those in section l | |
Diffusion boundary thickness | |
Collision shape factor of an aerosol particle with mass u | |
Sticking efficiency of the two aerosol particles | |
Gas viscosity | |
Mean free path of an aerosol particle, | |
λl,k | Transition rate of aerosol particles of component k in section l |
ρw | Density of the water |
σ | Surface tension of water |
Dynamic shape factor of an aerosol particle with mass u | |
Turbulent energy dissipation rate |
Appendix A. Description on the Coefficients Used in Equations (1)–(29)
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Parameter | Value |
---|---|
Van’t Hoff factor | 1.00 |
Volume of chamber [m3] | 2.86 |
Temperature [K] | 298 |
Saturation ratio | 1.00005 |
Effective saturation ratio | 1.0 |
Pressure [Pa] | |
Density of aerosol particle [kg/m3] | 1000 |
Number of sections (nsection) | 20 |
Parameters [Units] | Description | Mean | Min. | Max. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sticking efficiency () (P_stick) | Effect of Van der Walls force | 1.0 | 0.1 | 1.0 |
Slip correction factor () | Deviation from continuum mechanics | 1.37 | 1.1 | 1.3 |
Diffusion boundary thickness () | Deposition via Brownian diffusion | 10−5 | 10−6 | 10−4 |
Dynamic shape factor () | Drag force of non-spherical particles | 1.0 | 1.0 | 4.0 |
Collision shape factor () | Spatial extent of non-spherical particle | 1.0 | 1.0 | 4.0 |
Thermal accommodation coefficient (αT) | Interaction between gas and particle in terms of temperature | 1.0 | 0.5 | 1.5 |
Turbulent energy dissipation rate () | Rate at which turbulent kinetic energy is converted into thermal energy | 10−3 | 5 × 10−4 | 1.5 × 10−3 |
Saturation ratio (S) | Humidity | Experimental condition | 95% | 105% |
Effective diffusion coefficient of vapor () | Diffusion coefficient for vapor | Experimental condition | 95% | 105% |
Effective thermal conductivity of the atmosphere in the containment () | Thermal conductivity on the particle | Experimental condition | 93% | 107% |
Density of aerosol particles () | Mixed particle density | 1000.0 | 1000.0 | 5000.0 |
Ratio of thermal conductivity of the atmosphere to that of particles () | Ratio of thermal conductivity of gas to that of particle | 0.037 | 0.0002 | 0.055 |
Experiments | Aerosols | Solubility (Van’t Hoff Factor) |
---|---|---|
KAEVER-148 | Ag | 0.08 |
KAEVER-186 | Ag | 0.08 |
CsOH | 2.0 | |
KAEVER-187 | Ag | 0.08 |
CsI | 1.68 | |
CsOH | 2.0 |
Parameter | Value | |
---|---|---|
Volume [m3] | 1.00 | |
Deposition surface [m3] | Ceiling | 5.677 |
Vertical wall | 26.2665 | |
Floor | 5.6667 |
Parameter | Value | |
---|---|---|
Numerical method for solving Equation (29) | Time step size (Δt, s) | Determined by step doubling method (0.05~0.2) |
Time discretization | Implicit Euler method | |
Method for solving time discretized equations | Newton method | |
Section-averaged coefficients | Quadrature | Gaussian quadrature |
Number of sets of weights and abscissas | 20 | |
Number of sections | 20 |
Case | Average (1) | Standard Deviation (2) |
---|---|---|
10 | 2.45 × 10−3 | 5.79 × 10−2 |
50 | 1.54 × 10−3 | 4.68 × 10−3 |
100 | 5.10 × 10−4 | 1.94 × 10−3 |
500 | 6 × 10−5 | 1.19 × 10−4 |
1000 | 2.46 × 10−5 | 7.96 × 10−5 |
2000 | 1.27 × 10−6 | 1.42 × 10−6 |
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Lee, Y. Importance Analyses on Phenomenological Parameters for the Aerosol Dynamics Models in I-COSTA for a Severe Nuclear Power Plant Accident. Processes 2025, 13, 1935. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13061935
Lee Y. Importance Analyses on Phenomenological Parameters for the Aerosol Dynamics Models in I-COSTA for a Severe Nuclear Power Plant Accident. Processes. 2025; 13(6):1935. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13061935
Chicago/Turabian StyleLee, Yoonhee. 2025. "Importance Analyses on Phenomenological Parameters for the Aerosol Dynamics Models in I-COSTA for a Severe Nuclear Power Plant Accident" Processes 13, no. 6: 1935. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13061935
APA StyleLee, Y. (2025). Importance Analyses on Phenomenological Parameters for the Aerosol Dynamics Models in I-COSTA for a Severe Nuclear Power Plant Accident. Processes, 13(6), 1935. https://doi.org/10.3390/pr13061935