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CFD Modeling of Film Condensation from a Steam-Air Mixture in Vertical Channels

Bronwyn Rempel, Geoffrey S. Gray, Scott J. Ormiston

Nuclear Technology / Volume 211 / Number 10 / October 2025 / Pages 2427-2445

Research Article / dx.doi.org/10.1080/00295450.2024.2410612

Received:March 31, 2024
Accepted:September 17, 2024
Published:September 24, 2025

Steam condensation in the presence of a noncondensable gas is of vital importance for passive cooling containment systems. The noncondensable gas causes a significant reduction in the condensation rate and heat transfer across the containment, which is important for postulated loss-of-coolant accidents in a nuclear reactor.

In this work, computational fluid dynamics models of condensation and the adjacent single-phase steam-air mixture flow are developed for laminar and turbulent flow in vertical channels by two distinct wall condensation modeling approaches using the commercial code STAR-CCM+. The first is the fluid film model available in STAR-CCM+, which solves liquid layer governing equations with connections to the adjacent gas mixture flow. The second is a user-defined wall condensation model that neglects the fluid film and instead accounts for mass, momentum, and heat transfer via user-defined volumetric sink terms adjacent to the cold wall.

The condensation models are assessed by first comparing the calculated results with the numerical solution of laminar flow, solved using a complete two-phase model that solves parabolic equations based on conservation of mass, momentum, energy, and species for each phase. Next, the results of a two-dimensional analysis are compared with COPAIN experiments and existing numerical solutions from three-dimensional analyses. The comparisons include new, detailed results that have not been reported in previous analyses of a COPAIN case. These new results include local field profiles of velocity, temperature, and air mass fraction, and local mass flux.