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Keywords = passive autocatalytic recombiner

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21 pages, 10037 KiB  
Article
Validation and Application of a Code for Three-Dimensional Analysis of Hydrogen–Steam Behavior in a Nuclear Reactor Containment during Severe Accidents
by Jongtae Kim and Kukhee Lim
Appl. Sci. 2024, 14(15), 6695; https://doi.org/10.3390/app14156695 - 31 Jul 2024
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1437
Abstract
In a pressurized water reactor (PWR) during a loss of coolant accident (LOCA) or a station blackout (SBO) accident, water and steam are released into the containment building. The water vapor mixes with the atmosphere, partially condensing into droplets or condensing on the [...] Read more.
In a pressurized water reactor (PWR) during a loss of coolant accident (LOCA) or a station blackout (SBO) accident, water and steam are released into the containment building. The water vapor mixes with the atmosphere, partially condensing into droplets or condensing on the containment walls. Although a significant amount of water vapor condenses, it coexists with hydrogen generated by the reactor core oxidation. As water vapor condenses, the volume fraction of hydrogen increases, raising the risk of explosion or flame acceleration. As such, water vapor’s behavior directly affects hydrogen distribution. To conservatively evaluate hydrogen safety in a PWR during a severe accident, lumped-parameter codes have been heavily used. As a best-estimate approach for hydrogen safety analysis in a PWR containment, a turbulence-resolved CFD code called contain3D has been developed. This paper presents the validation results of the code and simulation results of hydrogen behavior affected by water vapor condensation and hydrogen removal by passive autocatalytic recombiners (PARs) in the APR1400 containment. The results provide insight into the three-dimensional behaviors of the hydrogen in the containment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue CFD Analysis of Nuclear Engineering)
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17 pages, 3456 KiB  
Article
Mitigating Hydrogen Risks in Light-Water Nuclear Reactors: A CFD Simulation of the Distribution and Concentration
by Joseph Amponsah and Archibong Archibong-Eso
Hydrogen 2023, 4(4), 709-725; https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrogen4040045 - 22 Sep 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2682
Abstract
During severe accidents in light-water nuclear reactors, the release of hydrogen poses significant risks to the integrity of the containment and the surrounding infrastructure. To address this, passive autocatalytic re-combiners (PARs) have been adopted in several countries. However, it remains challenging to eliminate [...] Read more.
During severe accidents in light-water nuclear reactors, the release of hydrogen poses significant risks to the integrity of the containment and the surrounding infrastructure. To address this, passive autocatalytic re-combiners (PARs) have been adopted in several countries. However, it remains challenging to eliminate the production of flammable combinations and the potential for local flame explosions, even with PARs installed. Understanding the distribution and concentration of generated hydrogen, particularly in 100% fuel-clad coolant reactions, is therefore crucial. In this study, numerical investigations using ANSYS CFX, a commercially available code, are conducted to analyze the hydrogen generation and distribution in a 1000 MWe nuclear power plant. The results show the effectiveness of PARs through a comparative evaluation of reactors with PARs and without PARs installed. The simulated scenario involved the release of hydrogen from the reactor pressure vessel, resulting in a reduction in the maximum hydrogen concentration released from 17.85% in the containment model without PARs to 9.72% in the containment model with PARs installed after 22,000 s. These findings highlight the importance of understanding and controlling the hydrogen distribution in light-water nuclear reactors during severe accidents. This study is useful in informing the mitigation risks strategy for hydrogen release in light-water nuclear reactors. Full article
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26 pages, 14905 KiB  
Article
3D Analysis of Hydrogen Distribution and Its Mitigation Using Passive Autocatalytic Recombiners (PARs) Inside VVER-1000 Containment
by Muhammet Enis Kanik, Omid Noori-kalkhoran, Kevin Fernández-Cosials and Massimiliano Gei
Energies 2023, 16(18), 6612; https://doi.org/10.3390/en16186612 - 14 Sep 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1814
Abstract
Hydrogen is a flammable gas that can generate thermal and mechanical loads which could jeopardise the containment integrity upon combustion inside nuclear power plants containment. Hydrogen can be generated from various sources and disperses into the containment atmosphere, mixing with steam and air [...] Read more.
Hydrogen is a flammable gas that can generate thermal and mechanical loads which could jeopardise the containment integrity upon combustion inside nuclear power plants containment. Hydrogen can be generated from various sources and disperses into the containment atmosphere, mixing with steam and air following a loss of coolant accident and its progression. Therefore, the volumetric hydrogen concentration should be examined within the containment to determine whether a flammable mixture is formed or not. Codes with 3D capabilities could serve this examination by providing detailed contours/maps of the hydrogen distribution inside containment in view of the local stratification phenomenon. In this study, a 3D VVER-1000 as-built containment model was sketched in AutoCAD and then processed into GOTHIC nuclear containment analysis code for hydrogen evaluation. The model was modified to a great extent by installing 80 passive autocatalytic recombiners and locating hydrogen sources to evaluate the performance of the hydrogen removal system inside the containment on maintaining the hydrogen concentration below the flammability limit during a large break loss of coolant accident. 2D profiles and 3D contours of volumetric hydrogen concentration with and without PARs are presented as the simulation outcome of this study. The results were validated against the results of the Final Safety Analysis Report, which also demonstrates the effectiveness of the hydrogen removal system as an engineered safety feature to keep the containment within a safe margin. Detailed 3D contours of hydrogen distribution inside containment can be employed to evaluate the local hot spots of hydrogen, rearranging and optimising the number and location of PARs to avoid the hydrogen explosion inside containment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Nuclear Energy Systems)
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20 pages, 8598 KiB  
Article
Passive Hydrogen Recombination during a Beyond Design Basis Accident in a Fusion DEMO Plant
by Matteo D’Onorio, Tommaso Glingler, Guido Mazzini, Maria Teresa Porfiri and Gianfranco Caruso
Energies 2023, 16(6), 2569; https://doi.org/10.3390/en16062569 - 8 Mar 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 1886
Abstract
One of the most important environmental and safety concerns in nuclear fusion plants is the confinement of radioactive substances into the reactor buildings during both normal operations and accidental conditions. For this reason, hydrogen build-up and subsequent ignition must be avoided, since the [...] Read more.
One of the most important environmental and safety concerns in nuclear fusion plants is the confinement of radioactive substances into the reactor buildings during both normal operations and accidental conditions. For this reason, hydrogen build-up and subsequent ignition must be avoided, since the pressure and energy generated may threaten the integrity of the confinement structures, causing the dispersion of radioactive and toxic products toward the public environment. Potentially dangerous sources of hydrogen are related to the exothermal oxidation reactions between steam and plasma-facing components or hot dust, which could occur during accidents such as the in-vessel loss of coolant or a wet bypass. The research of technical solutions to avoid the risk of a hydrogen explosion in large fusion power plants is still in progress. In the safety and environment work package of the EUROfusion consortium, activities are ongoing to study solutions to mitigate the hydrogen explosion risk. The main objective is to preclude the occurrence of flammable gas mixtures. One identified solution could deal with the installation of passive autocatalytic recombiners into the atmosphere of the vacuum vessel pressure suppression system tanks. A model to control the PARs recombination capacity as a function of thermal-hydraulic parameters of suppression tanks has been modeled in MELCOR. This paper aims to test the theoretical effectiveness of the PAR intervention during an in-vessel loss of coolant accident without the intervention of the decay heat removal system for the Water-Cooled LithiumLead concept of EU-DEMO. Full article
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19 pages, 1368 KiB  
Review
The Potential of Antibody Technology and Silver Nanoparticles for Enhancing Photodynamic Therapy for Melanoma
by Zaria Malindi, Stefan Barth and Heidi Abrahamse
Biomedicines 2022, 10(9), 2158; https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10092158 - 1 Sep 2022
Cited by 9 | Viewed by 3774
Abstract
Melanoma is highly aggressive and is known to be efficient at resisting drug-induced apoptotic signals. Resection is currently the gold standard for melanoma management, but it only offers local control of the early stage of the disease. Metastatic melanoma is prone to recurrence, [...] Read more.
Melanoma is highly aggressive and is known to be efficient at resisting drug-induced apoptotic signals. Resection is currently the gold standard for melanoma management, but it only offers local control of the early stage of the disease. Metastatic melanoma is prone to recurrence, and has a poor prognosis and treatment response. Thus, the need for advanced theranostic alternatives is evident. Photodynamic therapy has been increasingly studied for melanoma treatment; however, it relies on passive drug accumulation, leading to off-target effects. Nanoparticles enhance drug biodistribution, uptake and intra-tumoural concentration and can be functionalised with monoclonal antibodies that offer selective biorecognition. Antibody–drug conjugates reduce passive drug accumulation and off-target effects. Nonetheless, one limitation of monoclonal antibodies and antibody–drug conjugates is their lack of versatility, given cancer’s heterogeneity. Monoclonal antibodies suffer several additional limitations that make recombinant antibody fragments more desirable. SNAP-tag is a modified version of the human DNA-repair enzyme, O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase. It reacts in an autocatalytic and covalent manner with benzylguanine-modified substrates, providing a simple protein labelling system. SNAP-tag can be genetically fused with antibody fragments, creating fusion proteins that can be easily labelled with benzylguanine-modified payloads for site-directed delivery. This review aims to highlight the benefits and limitations of the abovementioned approaches and to outline how their combination could enhance photodynamic therapy for melanoma. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Nanobiomaterials: From Fundamentals to Biomedical Applications)
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21 pages, 8692 KiB  
Article
Experimental Study on Hydrogen Recombination Characteristics of a Passive Autocatalytic Recombiner during Spray Operation
by Jongtae Kim, Seongho Hong, Ki-Han Park, Jin-Hyeok Kim and Jeong-Yun Oh
Hydrogen 2022, 3(2), 197-217; https://doi.org/10.3390/hydrogen3020013 - 18 May 2022
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 3982
Abstract
During an accident, hydrogen distribution in a containment building of a nuclear power plant (NPP) and characteristics of hydrogen depletion by passive autocatalytic recombiners (PARs) differ depending on the thermal-hydraulic behaviors occurring in the containment. A spray system installed in the NPP containment [...] Read more.
During an accident, hydrogen distribution in a containment building of a nuclear power plant (NPP) and characteristics of hydrogen depletion by passive autocatalytic recombiners (PARs) differ depending on the thermal-hydraulic behaviors occurring in the containment. A spray system installed in the NPP containment to control the pressure in accident conditions may interact with PAR operations. This study intended to experimentally evaluate the hydrogen removal characteristics of a grid-type PAR when a spray was operating. For the experimental simulation of hydrogen recombination characteristics of the PAR affected by a spray operation, we used the SPARC experimental facility, which was equipped with a pressure vessel capable of controlling the wall temperature with a volume of 82 m3. To measure gas species concentrations, 14 probes each for hydrogen, oxygen, and water vapor were installed. Two tests were designed depending on the spray initiation time. The SSP3 test was an experiment to simulate an accident in which the PAR operated as hydrogen was released after the spray is activated, and the SSP4 test was an experiment to simulate an accident in which the spray began after the operation of the PAR was initiated by the hydrogen release. In the experiment, two contradictory results were obtained, which were an increased start-up delay time of the PAR by early initiation of the spray and a negligible impact on the PAR’s performance by the delayed initiation of the spray. Full article
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32 pages, 14313 KiB  
Review
Catalytic Hydrogen Combustion for Domestic and Safety Applications: A Critical Review of Catalyst Materials and Technologies
by Alina E. Kozhukhova, Stephanus P. du Preez and Dmitri G. Bessarabov
Energies 2021, 14(16), 4897; https://doi.org/10.3390/en14164897 - 11 Aug 2021
Cited by 45 | Viewed by 8966
Abstract
Spatial heating and cooking account for a significant fraction of global domestic energy consumption. It is therefore likely that hydrogen combustion will form part of a hydrogen-based energy economy. Catalytic hydrogen combustion (CHC) is considered a promising technology for this purpose. CHC is [...] Read more.
Spatial heating and cooking account for a significant fraction of global domestic energy consumption. It is therefore likely that hydrogen combustion will form part of a hydrogen-based energy economy. Catalytic hydrogen combustion (CHC) is considered a promising technology for this purpose. CHC is an exothermic reaction, with water as the only by-product. Compared to direct flame-based hydrogen combustion, CHC is relatively safe as it foregoes COx, CH4, and under certain conditions NOx formation. More so, the risk of blow-off (flame extinguished due to the high fuel flow speed required for H2 combustion) is adverted. CHC is, however, perplexed by the occurrence of hotspots, which are defined as areas where the localized surface temperature is higher than the average surface temperature over the catalyst surface. Hotspots may result in hydrogen’s autoignition and accelerated catalyst degradation. In this review, catalyst materials along with the hydrogen technologies investigated for CHC applications were discussed. We showed that although significant research has been dedicated to CHC, relatively limited commercial applications have been identified up to date. We further showed the effect of catalyst support selection on the performance and durability of CHC catalysts, as well as a holistic summary of existing catalysts used for various CHC applications and catalytic burners. Lastly, the relevance of CHC applications for safety purposes was demonstrated. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue High Activity Oxygen Evolution Electrocatalysts)
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23 pages, 14979 KiB  
Article
A Thermally Conductive Pt/AAO Catalyst for Hydrogen Passive Autocatalytic Recombination
by Alina E. Kozhukhova, Stephanus P. du Preez, Aleksander A. Malakhov and Dmitri G. Bessarabov
Catalysts 2021, 11(4), 491; https://doi.org/10.3390/catal11040491 - 12 Apr 2021
Cited by 35 | Viewed by 4382
Abstract
In this study, a Pt/anodized aluminum oxide (AAO) catalyst was prepared by the anodization of an Al alloy (Al6082, 97.5% Al), followed by the incorporation of Pt via an incipient wet impregnation method. Then, the Pt/AAO catalyst was evaluated for autocatalytic hydrogen recombination. [...] Read more.
In this study, a Pt/anodized aluminum oxide (AAO) catalyst was prepared by the anodization of an Al alloy (Al6082, 97.5% Al), followed by the incorporation of Pt via an incipient wet impregnation method. Then, the Pt/AAO catalyst was evaluated for autocatalytic hydrogen recombination. The Pt/AAO catalyst’s morphological characteristics were determined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The average Pt particle size was determined to be 3.0 ± 0.6 nm. This Pt/AAO catalyst was tested for the combustion of lean hydrogen (0.5–4 vol% H2 in the air) in a recombiner section testing station. The thermal distribution throughout the catalytic surface was investigated at 3 vol% hydrogen (H2) using an infrared camera. The Al/AAO system had a high thermal conductivity, which prevents the formation of hotspots (areas where localized surface temperature is higher than an average temperature across the entire catalyst surface). In turn, the Pt stability was enhanced during catalytic hydrogen combustion (CHC). A temperature gradient over 70 mm of the Pt/AAO catalyst was 23 °C and 42 °C for catalysts with uniform and nonuniform (worst-case scenario) Pt distributions. The commercial computational fluid dynamics (CFD) code STAR-CCM+ was used to compare the experimentally observed and numerically simulated thermal distribution of the Pt/AAO catalyst. The effect of the initial H2 volume fraction on the combustion temperature and conversion of H2 was investigated. The activation energy for CHC on the Pt/AAO catalyst was 19.2 kJ/mol. Prolonged CHC was performed to assess the durability (reactive metal stability and catalytic activity) of the Pt/AAO catalyst. A stable combustion temperature of 162.8 ± 8.0 °C was maintained over 530 h of CHC. To confirm that Pt aggregation was avoided, the Pt particle size and distribution were determined by TEM before and after prolonged CHC. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Catalytic Materials)
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21 pages, 5677 KiB  
Article
The Tailored CFD Package ‘containmentFOAM’ for Analysis of Containment Atmosphere Mixing, H2/CO Mitigation and Aerosol Transport
by Stephan Kelm, Manohar Kampili, Xiongguo Liu, Allen George, Daniel Schumacher, Claudia Druska, Stephan Struth, Astrid Kuhr, Lucian Ramacher, Hans-Josef Allelein, K. Arul Prakash, G. Vijaya Kumar, Liam M. F. Cammiade and Ruiyun Ji
Fluids 2021, 6(3), 100; https://doi.org/10.3390/fluids6030100 - 3 Mar 2021
Cited by 38 | Viewed by 5612
Abstract
The severe reactor accident at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (2011) has confirmed the need to understand the flow and transport processes of steam and combustible gases inside the containment and connected buildings. Over several years, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) models, mostly based [...] Read more.
The severe reactor accident at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant (2011) has confirmed the need to understand the flow and transport processes of steam and combustible gases inside the containment and connected buildings. Over several years, Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) models, mostly based on proprietary solvers, have been developed to provide highly resolved insights; supporting the assessment of effectiveness of safety measures and possible combustion loads challenging the containment integrity. This paper summarizes the design and implementation of containmentFOAM, a tailored solver and model library based on OpenFOAM®. It is developed in support of Research & Development related to containment flows, mixing processes, pressurization, and assessment of passive safety systems. Based on preliminary separate-effect verification and validation results, an application oriented integral validation case is presented on the basis of an experiment on gas mixing and H2 mitigation by means of passive auto-catalytic recombiners in the THAI facility (Becker Technologies, Eschborn, Germany). The simulation results compare well with the experimental data and demonstrate the general applicability of containmentFOAM for technical scale analysis. Concluding the paper, the strategy for dissemination of the code and measures implemented to minimize potential user errors are outlined. Full article
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18 pages, 9832 KiB  
Article
Numerical Analysis for Hydrogen Flame Acceleration during a Severe Accident in the APR1400 Containment Using a Multi-Dimensional Hydrogen Analysis System
by Hyung Seok Kang, Jongtae Kim, Seong Wan Hong and Sang Baik Kim
Energies 2020, 13(22), 6151; https://doi.org/10.3390/en13226151 - 23 Nov 2020
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 2590
Abstract
Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI) established a multi-dimensional hydrogen analysis system to evaluate hydrogen release, distribution, and combustion in the containment of a Nuclear Power Plant (NPP), using MAAP, GASFLOW, and COM3D. In particular, KAERI developed an analysis methodology for a hydrogen [...] Read more.
Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute (KAERI) established a multi-dimensional hydrogen analysis system to evaluate hydrogen release, distribution, and combustion in the containment of a Nuclear Power Plant (NPP), using MAAP, GASFLOW, and COM3D. In particular, KAERI developed an analysis methodology for a hydrogen flame acceleration, on the basis of the COM3D validation results against measured data of the hydrogen combustion tests in the ENACCEF and THAI facilities. The proposed analysis methodology accurately predicted the peak overpressure with an error range of approximately ±10%, using the Kawanabe model used for a turbulent flame speed in the COM3D. KAERI performed a hydrogen flame acceleration analysis using the multi-dimensional hydrogen analysis system for a severe accident initiated by a station blackout (SBO), under the assumption of 100% metal–water reaction in the Reactor Pressure Vessel (RPV), to evaluate an overpressure buildup in the containment of the Advanced Power Reactor 1400 MWe (APR1400). The magnitude of the overpressure buildup in the APR1400 containment might be used as a criterion to judge whether the containment integrity is maintained or not, when the hydrogen combustion occurs during a severe accident. The COM3D calculation results using the established analysis methodology showed that the calculated peak pressure in the containment was lower than the fracture pressure of the APR1400 containment. This calculation result might have resulted from a large air volume of the containment, a reduced hydrogen concentration owing to passive auto-catalytic recombiners installed in the containment during the hydrogen release from the RPV, and a lot of stem presence during the hydrogen combustion period in the containment. Therefore, we found that the current design of the APR1400 containment maintained its integrity when the flame acceleration occurred during the severe accident initiated by the SBO accident. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Hydrogen Safety)
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21 pages, 6375 KiB  
Article
MELCOR Analysis of a SPARC Experiment for Spray-PAR Interaction during a Hydrogen Release
by Hyoung Tae Kim and Jongtae Kim
Energies 2020, 13(21), 5696; https://doi.org/10.3390/en13215696 - 30 Oct 2020
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2570
Abstract
A series of experiments were performed in the SPARC (spray-aerosol-recombiner-combustion) test facility to simulate a hydrogen mitigation system with the actuation of a PAR (passive auto-catalytic re-combiner) and spray system. In this study, the SPARC-SPRAY-PAR (SSP1) experiment is chosen to benchmark the MELCOR [...] Read more.
A series of experiments were performed in the SPARC (spray-aerosol-recombiner-combustion) test facility to simulate a hydrogen mitigation system with the actuation of a PAR (passive auto-catalytic re-combiner) and spray system. In this study, the SPARC-SPRAY-PAR (SSP1) experiment is chosen to benchmark the MELCOR (a lumped-parameter code for severe accident analysis) predictions against test data. For this purpose, firstly we prepared the base input model of the SPARC test vessel, and tested it by a simple verification problem with well-defined boundary conditions. The implementation of a currently used PAR correlation in MELCOR is shown to be appropriate for the simulation of a PAR actuation experiment. In an SSP1 experiment, the PAR is reacting with hydrogen, and the spray actuation starts as soon as hydrogen injection is complete. The MELCOR simulation well predicts the pressure behavior and the gas flow affected by operating both a PAR and spray system. However, the local hydrogen concentration measurement near the inlet nozzle is much higher than the volume average-value by MELCOR, since high jet flow from the nozzle is dispersed in the corresponding cell volume. The experimental reproduction of the phenomena we expect, or, conversely, the identification of phenomena we do not understand, will continue to support the verification of analytical models using experimental data and to analyze the impact of spray on PAR operations in severe accident conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Hydrogen Safety)
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21 pages, 7318 KiB  
Article
Experimental Study on a Hydrogen Stratification Induced by PARs Installed in a Containment
by Jongtae Kim, Seongho Hong, Ki Han Park, Jin Heok Kim and Jeong Yun Oh
Energies 2020, 13(21), 5552; https://doi.org/10.3390/en13215552 - 23 Oct 2020
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 2736
Abstract
Hydrogen can be produced in undesired ways such as a high temperature metal oxidation during an accident. In this case, the hydrogen must be carefully managed. A hydrogen mitigation system (HMS) should be installed to protect a containment of a nuclear power plant [...] Read more.
Hydrogen can be produced in undesired ways such as a high temperature metal oxidation during an accident. In this case, the hydrogen must be carefully managed. A hydrogen mitigation system (HMS) should be installed to protect a containment of a nuclear power plant (NPP) from hazards of hydrogen produced by an oxidation of the fuel cladding during a severe accident in an NPP. Among hydrogen removal devices, passive auto-catalytic recombiners (PARs) are currently applied to many NPPs because of passive characteristics, such as not requiring a power supply nor an operators’ manipulations. However, they offer several disadvantages, resulting in issues related to hydrogen control by PARs. One of the issues is a hydrogen stratification in which hydrogen is not well-mixed in a compartment due to the high temperature exhaust gas of PARs and accumulation in the lower part. Therefore, experimental simulation on hydrogen stratification phenomenon by PARs is required. When the hydrogen stratification by PARs is observed in the experiment, the verification and improvement of a PAR analysis model using the experimental results can be performed, and the hydrogen removal characteristics by PARs installed in an NPP can be evaluated using the improved PAR model. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Hydrogen Safety)
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