Publications Details
An interpretation of the results of some recent direct containment heating (DCH) experiments in the Surtsey facility
Williams, D.C.
Direct containment heating (DCH) has recently been studied at Sandia National Laboratory`s Surtsey facility in a number of experiments in which high-temperature thermite melts are ejected by pressurized steam from a melt generator into scaled reactor cavities. Steam blowdown from the melt generator disperses at least part of the melt into the Surtsey vessel. Efficient team-metal chemical reaction was observed in many of the experiments. Analysis of the results suggests that hydrogen generation occurs primarily in the cavity can actually reduce hydrogen generation by separating the debris from the blowdown steam. Debris-gas heat transfer appears to include both a component that takes place in the cavity in proportion to the hydrogen generation, and a second component that takes place in the Surtsey vessel itself. The magnitude of the latter depends upon the amount of debris dispersed and the length of the unobstructed flight path in the Surtsey vessel. Some possible implications of these results are discussed.