In typical pressurized water reactor (PWR), to cope with beyond design basis events such as station black out (SBO) or small break loss of coolant accident with safety injection system failure, injection from accumulator sustains core cooling by compensating for loss of coolant. Core cooling is sustained by single- or two-phase natural circulation or reflux condensation depending on primary coolant mass inventory. Behavior of the natural circulation in PWR has been investigated in the facilities such as Large Scale Test Facility (LSTF) which is a full-height and full-pressure and thermal-hydraulic simulator of typical four-loop PWR. Two steady-state natural circulation tests were conducted in LSTF at both high and low pressure. These two tests were conducted changing the primary mass inventory as a test parameter, while keeping the other parameters such as core power, steam generator (SG) pressure, and steam generator water level as they are.

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) plans new natural circulation tests to cover wider range of core power and pressure as test-matrix (including the previous LSTF tests) to validate applicability of the model in wider range of core power and pressure conditions including the SBO conditions. In this paper, the previous LSTF natural circulation tests are reviewed and the new test plan will be described. Additionally, MHI also started a feasibility study to improve the steam generator tube and inlet/outlet plenum model using the M-RELAP5 code [4]. Newly developed model gives reasonable agreement with the previous LSTF tests and applies to the new test conditions. The feasibility findings will also be described in this paper.

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