Having previously verified the quasi-steady model under two-phase flow laboratory conditions, the present work investigates the feasibility of practical application of the model to a prototypical steam generator (SG) tube subjected to a nonuniform two-phase flow. The SG tube vibration response and normal work-rate induced by tube-support interaction are computed for a range of flow conditions. Similar computations are performed using the Connors model as a reference case. In the quasi-steady model, the fluid forces are expressed in terms of the quasi-static drag and lift force coefficients and their derivatives. These forces have been measured in two-phase flow over a wide range of void fractions making it possible to model the effect of void fraction variation along the tube span. A full steam generator tube subjected to a nonuniform two-phase flow was considered in the simulations. The nonuniform flow distribution corresponds to that along a prototypical steam-generator tube based on thermal-hydraulic computations. Computation results show significant and important differences between the Connors model and the two-phase flow based quasi-steady model. While both models predict the occurrence of fluidelastic instability, the predicted pre-instability and post instability behavior is very different in the two models. The Connors model underestimates the flow-induced negative damping in the pre-instability regime and vastly overestimates it in the post instability velocity range. As a result the Connors model is found to underestimate the work-rate used in the fretting wear assessment at normal operating velocities, rendering the model potentially nonconservative under these practically important conditions. Above the critical velocity, this model largely overestimates the work-rate. The quasi-steady model on the other hand predicts a more moderately increasing work-rate with the flow velocity. The work-rates predicted by the model are found to be within the range of experimental results, giving further confidence to the predictive ability of the model. Finally, the two-phase flow based quasi-steady model shows that fluidelastic forces may reduce the effective tube damping in the pre-instability regime, leading to higher than expected work-rates at prototypical operating velocities.
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June 2013
Technical Forum
Time Domain Simulation of the Vibration of a Steam Generator Tube Subjected to Fluidelastic Forces Induced by Two-Phase Cross-Flow
Téguewindé Sawadogo,
Téguewindé Sawadogo
1
1Corresponding author.
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Njuki Mureithi
Njuki Mureithi
e-mail: njuki.mureithi@polymtl.ca
BWC/AECL/NSERC Chair of Fluid-Structure Interaction,
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
C.P. 6079 Succursale Centre-ville,
Montréal, QC, H3C 3A7,
BWC/AECL/NSERC Chair of Fluid-Structure Interaction,
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
École Polytechnique de Montréal
,C.P. 6079 Succursale Centre-ville,
Montréal, QC, H3C 3A7,
Canada
Search for other works by this author on:
Téguewindé Sawadogo
Njuki Mureithi
e-mail: njuki.mureithi@polymtl.ca
BWC/AECL/NSERC Chair of Fluid-Structure Interaction,
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
C.P. 6079 Succursale Centre-ville,
Montréal, QC, H3C 3A7,
BWC/AECL/NSERC Chair of Fluid-Structure Interaction,
Department of Mechanical Engineering,
École Polytechnique de Montréal
,C.P. 6079 Succursale Centre-ville,
Montréal, QC, H3C 3A7,
Canada
1Corresponding author.
Contributed by the Pressure Vessel and Piping Division of ASME for publication in the Journal of Mechanical Design. Manuscript received May 4, 2012; final manuscript received December 4, 2012; published online May 21, 2013. Assoc. Editor: Jong Chull Jo.
J. Pressure Vessel Technol. Jun 2013, 135(3): 030905 (12 pages)
Published Online: May 21, 2013
Article history
Received:
May 4, 2012
Revision Received:
December 4, 2012
Citation
Sawadogo, T., and Mureithi, N. (May 21, 2013). "Time Domain Simulation of the Vibration of a Steam Generator Tube Subjected to Fluidelastic Forces Induced by Two-Phase Cross-Flow." ASME. J. Pressure Vessel Technol. June 2013; 135(3): 030905. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4023426
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