Prospect on the LOCA Analysis Method on the Advanced Pressurized Water Reactor in China

Author(s):  
Yan Wang ◽  
Xie Heng

The LOCA analysis for the advanced pressurized water reactor (PWR) is very important and the methods on it are developing. There are two basic approaches for LOCA (loss of coolant accident) licensing at current. One is based on the conservative requirement of Appendix K of 10CFR50.46 of USNRC, and another is the best estimate (BE) analysis methodology which needs strict sensitivity and uncertainty analysis. The results achieved by the best estimate analysis are closer to the reality than those achieved by the conservative methodology, and the realistic BELOCA analysis in nuclear realm becomes an international trend currently although its development still meet lots of challenges. The research and design on AP1000 to be built in China and larger advanced pressurized water reactor (CAP1400 or CAP1700) as one of Chinese national science & technology major project is in progress. The reliable licensing LOCA analysis as one of the most important accident safety analysis is absolutely necessary. There are three ways to get the code applied in licensing accident analysis: the first way is developing code based on the best estimated methodology with strict uncertainty analysis, the second way is to develop new analysis code based on the conservative Appendix K, and the third way is improving the current system analysis code, which had been verified and validated by many cases, to satisfy the requirements of Appendix K. The last one may be the most feasible way for the AP1000 design with high efficiency and economic competition. Some code like RELAP5 has been used for LOCA analysis, and its results showed good agreement with the test data. RELAP is the transient thermal-hydraulic system analysis code developed by Idaho National Laboratory, in which some model and correlations are not consistent with the conservative requirements of Appendix K, so it can not be applied for licensing LOCA analysis and evaluation directly. In this paper the way to develop analysis code for LOCA license is discussed, and some areas in RELAP code needed to be modified for according with Appendix K are also described, which will be helpful for the advanced PWR design and development in China.

Author(s):  
B. Alexandreanu ◽  
O. K. Chopra ◽  
W. J. Shack

A program is under way at Argonne National Laboratory to evaluate the resistance of Ni alloys and their welds to environmentally assisted cracking in simulated Light Water Reactor (LWR) coolant environments. This paper focuses on the cracking behavior of Ni-alloy welds in simulated pressurized water reactor (PWR) environment at 290–350°C. Crack growth tests have been conducted on both field- and laboratory-produced welds. The results are compared with the existing crack-growth-rate (CGR) data for Ni-alloy welds to determine the relative susceptibility of specific Ni-alloy welds to environmentally enhanced cracking. To analyze the CGRs, a superposition model was used to establish the individual contributions of mechanical fatigue, corrosion fatigue, and stress corrosion cracking.


KnE Energy ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Roziq Himawan

<p>Fatigue strength evaluations have been performed to the pressurizer component in Pressurized Water Reactor. Fatigue is the main failure mechanism of material during system in operation. Therefore, this evaluation becomes important to be performed since the pressurizer has a very important function in the reactor’s system. Analysis was performed by using Nuclear Power Plant operation data from 40 years operation and base on Miner theory. This analysis covered all stress level experienced by the reactor during the service. To determine the value of fatigue usage factor a, fatigue curve of SA 533 material was applied. Analysis results show that the cumulative fatigue damage during 40 years in operation is 4,23×10<sup>-4</sup>. This value still far enough below failure criteria, which a value is 1. Therefore, the pressurizer design has already fulfilled the design qualification in term of fatigue aspect.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 2015 ◽  
pp. 1-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Mandelli ◽  
Steven Prescott ◽  
Curtis Smith ◽  
Andrea Alfonsi ◽  
Cristian Rabiti ◽  
...  

In this paper we evaluate the impact of a power uprate on a pressurized water reactor (PWR) for a tsunami-induced flooding test case. This analysis is performed using the RISMC toolkit: the RELAP-7 and RAVEN codes. RELAP-7 is the new generation of system analysis codes that is responsible for simulating the thermal-hydraulic dynamics of PWR and boiling water reactor systems. RAVEN has two capabilities: to act as a controller of the RELAP-7 simulation (e.g., component/system activation) and to perform statistical analyses. In our case, the simulation of the flooding is performed by using an advanced smooth particle hydrodynamics code called NEUTRINO. The obtained results allow the user to investigate and quantify the impact of timing and sequencing of events on system safety. In addition, the impact of power uprate is determined in terms of both core damage probability and safety margins.


2017 ◽  
Vol 127 ◽  
pp. 369-376 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinyi Pan ◽  
Bin Jia ◽  
Jingru Han ◽  
Jianping Jing ◽  
Chunming Zhang

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