Emmanuel Porcheron
Institut de radioprotection et de sûreté nucléaire
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Publication
Featured researches published by Emmanuel Porcheron.
Measurement Science and Technology | 2010
A Quérel; Pascal Lemaitre; M. Brunel; Emmanuel Porcheron; Gérard Gréhan
Our objective was to develop an airborne optical sizemeter for atmospheric water droplet characterization. We chose the ILIDS (interferometric laser imaging for droplet sizing) method. This paper details the acquisition method developed to implement the image processing and the experimental tests performed to validate the method. The purpose is to develop a strategy for real-time data analysis in order to obtain information on droplets size during flight; this work is included in the EUFAR project that is supported by the 7th Framework Program of the European Commission (FP7).
Measurement Science and Technology | 2006
Pascal Lemaitre; Emmanuel Porcheron; Gérard Gréhan; Laurent Bouilloux
In order to study the heat and mass transfers between a spray of droplets and the atmosphere in thermal-hydraulics conditions representative of a severe accident in a Pressurized Water Nuclear Reactor, the French Institute for Radioprotection and Nuclear Safety (IRSN) developed the TOSQAN facility. The present paper presents the development and the quantification of an optical diagnostic, global rainbow refractometry, in order to measure falling droplet temperature.
Applied Optics | 2015
Lila Ouldarbi; Gaële Perret; Pascal Lemaitre; Emmanuel Porcheron; Sébastien Coëtmellec; Gérard Gréhan; Denis Lebrun; Marc Brunel
We present a system to characterize a triphasic flow in a 3D volume (air bubbles and solid irregular particles in water) using only one CCD sensor. A cylindrical interferometric out-of-focus imaging setup is used to determine simultaneously the 3D position and the size of bubbles and irregular sand particles in a flow. The 3D position of the particles is deduced from the ellipticity of their out-of-focus image. The size of bubbles is deduced from analysis of interference fringes. The characteristics of irregular sand particles are obtained from analysis of their speckle-like pattern. Experiments are confirmed by simulations.
Applied Optics | 2016
Marc Brunel; Pascal Lemaitre; Emmanuel Porcheron; Sébastien Coëtmellec; Gérard Gréhan; J. Jacquot-Kielar
It is shown that the size and relative positions of two irregular rough particles can be analyzed using interferometric out-of-focus imaging despite the overlapping of their out-of-focus images. Simulations are confirmed by experiments done with ice particles generated in a freezing column.
Measurement Science and Technology | 2015
Pascal Lemaitre; M. Brunel; A Rondeau; Emmanuel Porcheron; Gérard Gréhan
According to changes in aircraft certifications rules, instrumentation has to be developed to alert the flight crews of potential icing conditions. The technique developed needs to measure in real time the amount of ice and liquid water encountered by the plane. Interferometric imaging offers an interesting solution: It is currently used to measure the size of regular droplets, and it can further measure the size of irregular particles from the analysis of their speckle-like out-of-focus images. However, conventional image processing needs to be speeded up to be compatible with the real-time detection of icing conditions. This article presents the development of an optimised algorithm to accelerate image processing. The algorithm proposed is based on the detection of each interferogram with the use of the gradient pair vector method. This method is shown to be 13 times faster than the conventional Hough transform. The algorithm is validated on synthetic images of mixed phase clouds, and finally tested and validated in laboratory conditions. This algorithm should have important applications in the size measurement of droplets and ice particles for aircraft safety, cloud microphysics investigation, and more generally in the real-time analysis of triphasic flows using interferometric particle imaging.
Nuclear Technology | 2011
Pascal Lemaitre; Emmanuel Porcheron; Amandine Nuboer
Abstract During the course of a hypothetical severe accident in a nuclear power plant, spray may be activated in order to reduce static pressure in the containment. The Institut de Radioprotection et de Sûreté Nucléaire (IRSN) has developed the TOSQAN experiment to provide a better understanding of the heat transfer and mass transfer that take place between a spray and the surrounding confined gas in such a situation. This paper studies how the temperature of the spray at the injection point influences the dynamics of a test. To carry out this analysis, we performed two spray tests: spray test 101 (ST101), which served as a reference, and spray test 107 (ST107), which had exactly the same initial and boundary conditions except for the temperature of the spray at the injection point, which varied from 25°C to 58°C. First, we present the entire scenario for ST101 and ST107 and the results of the tests. We then focus our analysis on the intercomparison of the thermal-hydraulic behavior induced by the spray temperature at the injection point and the wall temperature. This intercomparison is divided into two parts: global and local.
18th International Conference on Nuclear Engineering: Volume 4, Parts A and B | 2010
Emmanuel Porcheron; Pascal Lemaitre; Amandine Nuboer
This paper presents the results of the TOSQAN tests performed in the field of the TOSQAN sump program undertaken by the Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire (IRSN). This work is devoted to study the heat and mass transfers induced by the water sump towards the containment atmosphere, for typical accidental thermal hydraulic conditions in PWR.Copyright
Journal of Nuclear Science and Technology | 2018
Christophe Journeau; Damien Roulet; Emmanuel Porcheron; Pascal Piluso; Christophe Chagnot
ABSTRACT Cutting fuel debris (solidified corium) is an important issue for the decommissioning of Fukushima Daiichi Power Station. The main reasons for developing and using suel debris simulants are presented. The relative merits of various types of materials (stainless steel, zircalloy, sintered ceramic, cast-fused zirconia, metal + ceramic, melted inactive simulants, prototypic fuel debris, irradiated fuel debris simulant) that can be used to test debris cutting have been assessed against criteria relevant for the cutting technique itself and also for (radioactive) aerosol and combustible gas generation. Simplified simulants can be used for the development of fuel debris cutting techniques but have limited representativeness so that melted inactive fuel debris simulant must be used to assess the cutting performance. Concerning combustible gas generation, zirconium plates provide an upper bound in term of underwater generation of hydrogen. Finally, for aerosol and dust generation, it appears that non-radioactive simulant cannot correctly represent the aerosol formed during cutting but prototypic fuel debris simulants, using depleted uranium are required. Laser cutting tests have been carried out with several types of simulant materials. Promising results were achieved in term of cutting ability both in air and underwater. Data have also been collected on the released aerosols. Nevertheless, confirmatory experiments with prototypic debris are still needed.
Journal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science | 2015
Pierre Marchal; Emmanuel Porcheron; Gérard Gréhan; Luc Lafanechere; Jonathan Walter; Thomas Gelain
The use of mechanical or thermal cutting tools when decommissioning nuclear facilities generates a lot of incandescent particles. These particles may represent a deterioration risk of the containment barriers associated with a potential fire hazard. The aim of this study is to characterize, in terms of temperature, diameter, and velocity, the incandescent particles emitted by a wheel grinder and to follow these parameters all along their path from emission point to their impact on the air filter. The characteristics of the particles correlated with a possible loss of filter efficiency should identify which particles degrade the filter. All the measurement techniques used to experimentally characterize the incandescent particles are presented in this article. Particles are characterized in terms of diameter by microscope visualizations. The particle velocity is measured with a high-speed camera using the particle tracking velocimetry (PTV) technique. An adaptation of a commercial monochromatic pyrometer is achieved to measure the temperature of the in-flight particles in a specific configuration. All of these techniques have been implemented on an experimental facility reproducing representative conditions of the cutting processes realized during dismantling operations. Both a global and a local approach to filter degradation are used to investigate the filter. The decontamination factor of a high efficiency particle air (HEPA) filter is measured, and detailed visualizations of the filter fiber deteriorations are obtained using a scanning electron microscope (SEM).
Journal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science | 2015
Emmanuel Porcheron; Pascal Lemaitre; Amandine Nuboer
During the course of a severe accident in a nuclear power plant, water can be collected in the sump containment through steam condensation on walls, cooling circuit leak, and by spray systems activation. Therefore, the sump can become a place of heat and mass exchanges through water evaporation and steam condensation, which influences the distribution of hydrogen released in containment during nuclear core degradation. The objective of this paper is to present the analysis of semi-analytical experiments on sump interaction between containment atmosphere for typical accidental thermal hydraulic conditions in a pressurized water reactor (PWR). Tests are conducted in the TOSQAN facility developed by the Institut de Radioprotection et de Surete Nucleaire in Saclay. The TOSQAN facility is particularly well adapted to characterize the distribution of gases in a containment vessel. A tests’ grid was defined to investigate the coupled effect of the sump evaporation with wall condensation, for air steam conditions, with noncondensable gases (He, SF6), and for steady and transient states (two depressurization tests).