Assessment of Models for Near Wall Behavior and Swirling Flows in Nuclear Reactor Sub-system Simulations![]() Presentation: Session: Transport and mixing 2 Room: Room M Session start: 10:30 Fri 28 Aug 2015 Thomas M. Smith tmsmith@sandia.gov Affifliation: Sandia National Laboratories Mark A. Christon christon@lanl.gov Affifliation: Los Alamos National Laboratory Emilio Baglietto emiliob@mit.edu Affifliation: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Hong Luo hluo2@ncsu.edu Affifliation: North Carolina State University Topics: - Transport and mixing, - Wall bounded flows Abstract: Accurate simulation of turbulence remains one of the most challenging problems in nuclear reactor analysis and design. Due to limitations in computing resources, Reynolds averaged Navier Stokes models (RANS) continue to play an important role in reactor simulations. The Consortium for advanced simulations of light water reactors (CASL) is a Department of Energy technology hub that is investing in research and developmentof a state-of-the-art computational fluid dynamics capabilityto meet the challenges of turbulent simulation of nuclear reactors. In this presentation, we assess several RANS eddy viscosity models appropriate for single-phase incompressible turbulent flows. Specifically, we compare the single equation Splalart-Allmaras to several variations of the $k-\varepsilon$ model. The assessment takes into consideration elements of full system reactor cores such as complex geometries, heterogeneous meshes, swirling flow, near wall flow behavior, heat transfer and robustness issues. The goal of this strategically oriented assessment is to provide an accurate and robust turbulent simulation capability for the CASL community. Metrics of performance will be constructed by comparing different models on a strategically chosen set of problems that represent reactor core sub-systems. |