MPHinman
Mechanical
- Mar 12, 2009
- 2
Hello,
I am a new Mech. Engineer at a nuclear plant and I am having a hard time getting started with a specific calc that I am not allowed to use a computer program for.
Basically, I have a pool (fuel transfer pool in a nucler plant) with a source of heat in the bottom (nuclear fuel assemblies). Above the pool is air in a closed containment building. If we lose the ability to remove the heat from the water that is being generated by the fuel assemblies, the water starts to heat up. As the water heats up, the air begins to heat up, which changes the pressure in the air.
The goal is to find the amount of heat escaping the water at different conditions so I can determine what the air pressure will be at given conditions at different times.
I think Q=h*A*delta(T) is the way to approach this problem, however, I am having a hard time identifying "h" and checking myself.
Any tips will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
MPH
I am a new Mech. Engineer at a nuclear plant and I am having a hard time getting started with a specific calc that I am not allowed to use a computer program for.
Basically, I have a pool (fuel transfer pool in a nucler plant) with a source of heat in the bottom (nuclear fuel assemblies). Above the pool is air in a closed containment building. If we lose the ability to remove the heat from the water that is being generated by the fuel assemblies, the water starts to heat up. As the water heats up, the air begins to heat up, which changes the pressure in the air.
The goal is to find the amount of heat escaping the water at different conditions so I can determine what the air pressure will be at given conditions at different times.
I think Q=h*A*delta(T) is the way to approach this problem, however, I am having a hard time identifying "h" and checking myself.
Any tips will be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
MPH