As the heat transfer is based on physical processes which are expected to be deterministic, a major anticipation is
that the experimental data should show good repeatability, if not reproducibility. In other words, it is expected
that repetition of experiments with very similar inputs (bulk pressure and enthalpy, mass flow rate, heat flux …),
should result in consistent and very similar outputs (heat transfer coefficient or inside wall temperature).
However, comparable experiments with supercritical water in the literature, although rather scarce, as well as
the experimental work conducted at the Chair of Energy Systems at the Technical University of Munich tend to
show that repeatable or reproducible data are difficult to obtain. This is the case particularly within the pseudocritical
region where DHT is likely to occur. This may impair the ability to assess accurately the overheating of
the piping in critical cases, and therefore the safety of the concerned plants. This paper aims to focus on this
problem from an experimental perspective, trying to identify both the magnitude of the phenomenon as well as
at which parameters non-reproducibility occurs. Ultimately, the authors try to answer the following question: Is
it possible to reach reproducibility?
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As the heat transfer is based on physical processes which are expected to be deterministic, a major anticipation is
that the experimental data should show good repeatability, if not reproducibility. In other words, it is expected
that repetition of experiments with very similar inputs (bulk pressure and enthalpy, mass flow rate, heat flux …),
should result in consistent and very similar outputs (heat transfer coefficient or inside wall temperature).
However, comparable experiments with super...
»