An HTGR-hydrogen production system should be designed to have stable controllability because of a large difference in thermal dynamics between reactor and hydrogen production system and such a control design concept should be universally applicable to a variety of hydrogen production processes by the use of nuclear heat from HTGR. A transient response analysis of an HTGR-steam reforming hydrogen production system showed that a steam generator installed in a helium circuit for cooling the nuclear reactor provides stable controllability of the total system, resulting in avoiding a reactor scram. A survey of control design-related characteristics among several hydrogen production processes revealed the similarity of endothermic chemical reactions by the use of high temperature heat and that steam is required as a reactant of the endothermic reaction or for preheating a reactant. Based on these findings, a system design concept with stable controllability and universal applicability was proposed to install a steam generator as a downstream cooler of an endothermic reactor in the helium circuit of an HTGR-hydrogen production system.
CITATION STYLE
Hada, K., Shibata, T., Nishihara, T., & Shiozawa, S. (1996). Universally applicable design concept of stably controlling an HTGR-hydrogen production system. Nippon Genshiryoku Gakkaishi/Journal of the Atomic Energy Society of Japan, 38(10), 834–844. https://doi.org/10.3327/jaesj.38.834
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