Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-xtgtn Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-16T18:26:44.562Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

X-Ray Absorption Measurement of Steam Voids in Water at High Pressures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

G. E. Martin
Affiliation:
General Electric Company, Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory, *Schenectady, New York
E. W. Grohse
Affiliation:
General Electric Company, Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory, *Schenectady, New York
Get access

Abstract

X-ray absorption, having been earlier demonstrated to be a unique tool for the accurate measurement of density profiles within gas-fluidized solid systems such as those employed in the chemical and related industries, is being applied to the measurement of steam voids in water flowing through electrically heated rectangular stainless steel channels under conditions of pressure, temperature, flow rate, and heat flux corresponding to “local boiling” (subcooled water) as well as “bulk boiling” (saturated water) in the coolant channels of water-cooled nuclear reactors.

A balanced dual-beam photometer system is employed. A dual-beam X-ray tube and two scintillation-crystal-photomultiplier-tube detector probes are mounted in a manner permitting remote-operated traversing of the test channel in the horizontal as well as vertical directions. The photomultiplier tubes are used in a difference circuit with one of the tubes monitoring the test channel and the other a remoteoperated reference wedge. The difference-measuring connection offers common made rejection so that any differential output Is due to a change in attenuation of the testchannel beam. This output is fed through a differential amplifier to a strip-chart recorder.

With a test channel consisting of 0.020-in-thick stainless steel walls, backed by 0.062-in. beryllium windows for strength, void concentrations within a 0.250-in, thickness of water currently can be measured with an absolute accuracy of 2% or better (which is far superior to that obtainable with previous techniques) and further improvements in accuracy appear likely. The test channel is enclosed in a heavy steel housing with windows, permitting void measurements to be made at pressures up to 2000 psia.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International Centre for Diffraction Data 1960

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. Grohse, E. W., “Analysis of Gas-Fluidized Solid Systems by X-Ray Absorption,” A.I.Ch.E. Journal, Vol. 1, 1955, p. 358.Google Scholar
2. Maurer, G. W., “A Method of Predicting Boiling Vapor Fractions in Reactor Coolant Channels,” Westinghouse Electric Corporation, WAFD-AD-TH-556, November, 1959.Google Scholar
3. Egen, R. A., Dingee, D. A., and Chastain, J. W., “Vapor Formation and Behavior in Boiling Heat Transfer, “ BMI-1163, February, 1957.Google Scholar
4. Marchaterre, J. F. and Petrick, M., “Prediction of Steam Volume Fractions in Boiling System,” Argonne National Laboratory; 1959 Annual Meeting of the ANS June 16-17, 1959, Gatlinburg, Tennessee.Google Scholar
5. Eicheldinger, C., “ERDL Task 3, Phase III-Design, Fabrication and Preliminary Testing of Nucleate Boiling Test Section,” Martin Company, MND-E-2116, September 1959.Google Scholar
6. Ball, W. P., Langmuir, D. B., and Wright, R. W., “X-Ray Measurement of Time Varying Steam Void Fraction in a Thin Water Channel, “ Ramo-Wooldridge, RW-RL-137 (Presented a: December 9, 1958 Meeting of ANS).Google Scholar