Severe accident prevention and mitigation in pressurized heavy water reactors

2022 ◽  
pp. 477-508
Author(s):  
Samuel Hilton Gyepi-Garbrah ◽  
Thambiayah Nitheanandan
Author(s):  
Pradeep Pandey ◽  
Parimal P. Kulkarni ◽  
Arun Nayak ◽  
Sumit V. Prasad

In some of the older design of pressurized heavy water reactors (PHWRs), such as in Rajasthan Atomic Power Station (RAPS) and Madras Atomic Power Station (MAPS), in case of a severe accident, the debris/corium may cause failure of the dump port of calandria and relocate into the dump tank. The sensible and decay heat of debris/corium makes the heavy water in dump tank to boil off leaving the dry debris in dump tank. The dry debris remelt with time and the molten corium, thus, formed has the potential to breach the dump tank and move into the containment cavity, which is highly undesirable. Hence, as an accident management strategy, water is being flooded outside the dump tank using fire water hook-up lines to remove the heat from corium to cool and stabilize it and terminate the accident progression, similar to in vessel retention. However, the question is “is the molten corium coolable by this technique.” The coolability of the molten corium in dump tank as in the reactor is assessed by conducting experiments in a scaled facility using a simulant material having comparable thermophysical properties with that of corium. Melting of dry debris resting on dump tank bottom marks the beginning of the experimental investigation for present analysis. Decay heat is simulated by a set of immersed heaters inside the melt. Temperature profiles at different locations in dump tank and in the melt pool are obtained as a function of time to demonstrate the coolability with decay heat. Large temperature gradient is observed within the corium, involving high melt center temperature and low tank wall temperature suggesting formation of crust which insulates the dump tank wall from hot corium.


Author(s):  
Robert J. Lutz ◽  
James H. Scobel ◽  
Richard G. Anderson ◽  
Terry Schulz

Probabilistic Risk Assessment (PRA) has been an integral part of the Westinghouse AP1000, and the former AP600, development programs from its inception. The design of the AP1000 plant is based on engineering solutions to reduce or eliminate many of the dominant risk contributors found in the existing generation of Pressurized Water Reactors (PWRs). Additional risk reduction features were identified from insights gained from the AP1000 PRA as it evolved with the design of the plant. These engineered solutions include severe accident prevention features that resulted in a significant reduction in the predicted core damage frequency. Examples include the removal of dependencies on electric power (both offsite power and diesel generators) and cooling water (service water and component cooling water), removal of common cause dependencies by using diverse components on parallel trains and reducing dependence on operator actions for key accident scenarios. Engineered solutions to severe accident consequence mitigation were also used in the AP1000 design based on PRA insights. Examples include in-vessel retention of molten core debris to eliminate the potential for ex-vessel phenomena challenges to containment integrity and passive containment heat removal through the containment shell to eliminate the potential for containment failure due to steam overpressure. Additionally, because the accident prevention and mitigation features of the AP1000 are engineered solutions, the traditional uncertainties associated with the core damage and release frequency are directly addressed.


Author(s):  
Thambiayah Nitheanandan ◽  
X. Cao ◽  
J.-H. Choi ◽  
D. Dupleac ◽  
D.-H. Kim ◽  
...  

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) organized a coordinated research project (CRP) on “Benchmarking Severe Accident Computer Codes for Heavy Water Reactors (HWR) Applications,” (IAEA TECDOC Series No. 1727), and the activity was completed in 2012. This paper summarizes the results from the CRP: the selection of a severe accident sequence, definition of appropriate geometrical and boundary conditions, benchmarking code analyses, comparison of the code results, evaluation of the capabilities of existing computer codes to predict important severe accident phenomena, and suggestions for code improvements and/or new experiments to reduce uncertainties.


2002 ◽  
Vol 124 (4) ◽  
pp. 483-486 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Mukhopadhyay ◽  
S. K. Gupta ◽  
V. Venkat Raj

ECCS is designed to keep the reactor fuel temperatures within safe limits. The paper describes an additional criterion for Indian pressurized heavy water reactors (IPHWRs) evolving from the need to avoid a small break loss of cooling accident (LOCA) developing into a more severe accident. During a small break loss of coolant accident (LOCA) in PHWRs, the hydro-accumulators ride on the system and inject emergency coolant. The atmospheric steam discharge valves (ASDVs) open and cool the system due to energy discharge. In addition, the pressure control system tends to maintain the pressure. Depending on the system design, this could lead to cold pressurization of the system. This paper examines this issue.


Author(s):  
Zhixiong Tan ◽  
Jiejin Cai

After Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident, alternative fuel-design to enhance tolerance for severe accident conditions becomes particularly important. Silicon carbide (SiC) cladding fuel assembly gain more safety margin as novel accident tolerant fuel. This paper focuses on the neutron properties of SiC cladding fuel assembly in pressurized water reactors. Annular fuel pellet was adopted in this paper. Two types of silicon carbide assemblies were evaluated via using lattice calculation code “dragon”. Type one was consisted of 0.057cm SiC cladding and conventional fuel. Type two was consisted of 0.089cm SiC cladding and BeO/UO2 fuel. Compared the results of SiC cladding fuel assembly neutronic parameters with conventional Zircaloy cladding fuel assembly, this paper analyzed the safety of neutronic parameters performance. Results demonstrate that assembly-level reactivity coefficient is kept negative, meanwhile, the numerical value got a relatively decrease. Other parameters are conformed to the design-limiting requirement. SiC kinds cladding show more flat power distribution. SiC cases also show the ability of reducing the enrichment of fuel pellets even though it has higher xenon concentration. These types of assembly have broadly agreement neutron performance with the conventional cladding fuel, which confirmed the acceptability of SiC cladding in the way of neutron physics analysis.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (5) ◽  
pp. 787-794
Author(s):  
V. V. Vladimirskii ◽  
B. I. Il'ichev ◽  
G. N. Karavaev ◽  
M. L. Okhlopkov ◽  
V. V. Seliverstov
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