Surface rewetting is essential for the re-establishment of normal and safe temperature levels following dryout in rod clusters or boiler tubes, or following postulated loss-of-coolant accidents in water reactors. Rewetting experiments have been performed with tubes and rods with a wide range of materials and experimental conditions (surface temperatures 300–800°C, constant water flows 0.1–30 g s−1). The physical processes involved in the rewetting of high temperature surfaces have been shown to be identical for both falling water films and bottom flooding. The variation of rewetting velocity with mass flow has been determined, and shown to be independent of hydraulic diameter over the range 0.2–6 mm of practical interest. Data have also been obtained on the mass ‘carryover’ fraction. Theoretical solutions for the rewetting velocities have been obtained by analysis of thermal conduction in the surface. At low mass flows, effectively one-dimensional (axial) conduction cools the surface ahead of the rewetting front, and gives agreement with experiment. At higher mass flows the rewetting velocity is substantially independent of surface thickness and conductivity. The present data and the available world data for rewetting are shown to be in agreement with the theory.
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