Development of a physics-based monitoring algorithm detecting CO 2 ingress accidents in a sodium-cooled fast reactor

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Abstract

One of the benefits of the supercritical CO 2 Brayton cycle in Sodium-cooled Fast Reactors is an enhanced plant safety, since potential reactions of CO 2 with liquid sodium have been reported to be less stringent than a sodium-water reaction found in the Rankine cycle. However, moderate chemical interactions between CO 2 and liquid sodium make detecting CO 2 ingress accidents harder. Thus, this paper proposes a new physics-based detection algorithm by comparing the real-time pressure measurements of two identical heat exchangers for the early detection. The CO 2 ingress occurs owing to a crack at the pressure boundary wall, a certain self-recovery of structural damage does not happen over time, and an accident probabilistically starts at only one component of two. The proposed physics-based method with the probabilistic analysis was compared to the pure data-based method. Finally, the damage degradation was developed with a simplified mass and energy transfer model, and the proposed algorithm was verified with experimental data. The results show that a 99.99% detection probability can be achieved for the air ingress of 30 cc/s, which is equivalent to the 0.12 g/s CO 2 ingress, in a 70 s detection time, limiting down to 0.1% false alarms due to sensor noise c 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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APA

Kim, H., Kim, J. T., Eoh, J., & Lim, D. W. (2019). Development of a physics-based monitoring algorithm detecting CO 2 ingress accidents in a sodium-cooled fast reactor. Energies, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/en12010001

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