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Home / Publications / Journals / Nuclear Science and Engineering / Volume 91 / Number 3

Survey of Natural-Circulation Cooling in U.S. Pressurized Water Reactors

Brent E. Boyack

Nuclear Science and Engineering / Volume 91 / Number 3 / November 1985 / Pages 248-261

Technical Paper / dx.doi.org/10.13182/NSE85-A17302

Literature describing natural-circulation analyses, experiments, and plant operation have been obtained from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, reactor vendors, utility-sponsored research groups, utilities, national laboratories, and foreign sources. These have been reviewed and significant results and conclusions identified. Three modes of natural-circulation cooling are covered: singlephase, two-phase, and reflux condensation. Single-phase natural circulation is amply verified by plant operational data, test data from scaled experimental facilities, and analysis with assessed computer codes. Ample evidence also exists that two-phase natural circulation can successfully cool pressurized water reactors. This mode occurs during certain events such as small-break loss-of-coolant accidents. The data base for reflux condensation is primarily from tests in scaled experimental facilities. There are no plant operational data and only limited assessment of thermal-hydraulic systems codes has been performed. Further work is needed before this mode of natural circulation can be confidently used.