V European Conference on Computational Fluid Dynamics ECCOMAS CFD 2010 J. C. F. Pereira and A. Sequeira (Eds) Lisbon, Portugal,14-17 June 2010 FLOW ANALYSIS IN THE HCLL-TBM ITER CHANNELS INCLUDING MHD AND HEAT TRANSFER E. Mas de les Valls * , J. Fradera † and L. Batet † * Technical University of Catalonia (UPC), GREENER, Technology for Fusion (T4F), Dept. of Heat Engines, Av. Diagonal 647, 08028 Barcelona, Spain e-mail: elisabet.masdelesvalls@gits.ws † Dept. of Physics and Nuclear Engineering, Av. Diagonal 647, 08028 Barcelona, Spain Key words: MHD, heat transfer, Breeding Blanket Abstract. One of the key components regarding heat transfer and tritium inventories in deuterium-tritium nuclear fusion reactors is the (tritium) Breeding Blanket, called Test Blanket Module or TBM in ITER experiment. Several designs are going to be tested in ITER, one of those is the HCLL (Helium Cooled Lithium Lead) design. Before being tested, it is of major interest to predict in detail several flow parameters such as pressure drop, tritium inventories and tritium permeation rates through walls. The goal of the present study is to analyze the flow near the gap region (close to the first wall) in the HCLL-TBM so as to quantify tritium inventories and permeation fluxes. To do so, simplified C-shaped channels are simulated under ITER specifications. The flow appears to be very complex and, in order to get the origin of this complexity, the phe- nomenon physics are decoupled. First, the pure hydrodynamic case is simulated; obtaining that the critical Reynolds number is around TBM/ITER specifications. Second, the MHD flow with perfectly insulating walls is studied and, as expected due to the high Hartmann number, hydrodynamic instabilities disappear. Finally, when heat transfer is introduced, vorticity is generated due to Rayleigh-B´ enard instabilities at the channel inlet and, as the flow travels through the channel, faster vortices appear in the gap region and in the outlet channel. These vortices originate high tritium concentration zones. Hence, the existence of vortices is of crucial interest for tritium inventories prediction and HCLL design. 1