Purging or blanketing with nitrogen is fairly common.
Check if this solution is possible, or am I stating the obvious?:
If your reactor to be protected can be closed, and fed nitrogen through pipeline and valves, you could have a nitrogen source at high pressure in a separate vessel, a shutdown valve, a checkvalve to prevent backflow, a pressure reducing valve station with PSV, possibly a new checkvalve and an on/off valve for inlet to your reaction tank.
Provided correct arrangement and pressures the necessary amount will be drawn into the tank when steam collapses.
If necessary you could purge by having a controlled outlet of nitrogen from the ractor, maintaining a slight overpressure inside, feeding in extra nitrogen as before.
The presure reducing station capacity (volume/time) during a possibly 'sudden steam collapse' (is this actually the situation?) inside your reactor: have to be measured directly or by measured temperature and pressure curve over time inside vessel against actual steam table.
You could also guesstimate aginst the given tank volume, nitrogen feeding pressure and pressure reduction capacity. (Like: I need xNm3 in not less than y seconds).
Note: beware of allowed operating under- and overpressure for closed tanks. They tend to collapse very fast by underpressure, especially by sudden steam collapsing,and shold be protected by bursting discs or other type of protection....