Experimental Investigation of Subcooled Choking Flow in a Steam Generator Tube Crack

Author(s):  
Hung Nguyen ◽  
Mark Brown ◽  
Shripad T. Revankar ◽  
Jovica Riznic

Steam generator tubes have a history of small cracks and even ruptures, which lead to a loss of coolant from the primary side to the secondary side. These tubes have an important role in reactor safety since they serve as one of the barriers between radioactive and non-radioactive materials of a nuclear power plant. A rupture then signifies the loss of the integrity of the tube itself. Therefore, choking flow plays an integral part not only in the engineered safeguards of a nuclear power plant, but also to everyday operation. There is limited data on actual steam generators tube wall cracks. Here experiments were conducted on choked flow of subcooled water through two samples of axial cracks of steam generator tubes taken from US PWR steam generators. The purpose of the experimental program was to develop database on critical flow through actual steam generator tube cracks with subcooled liquid flow at the entrance. The knowledge of this maximum flow rate through a crack in the steam generator tubes of a pressurized water nuclear reactor will allow designers to calculate leak rates and design inventory levels accordingly while limiting losses during loss of coolant accidents. The test facility design is modular so that various steam generator tube cracks can be studied. Two sets of PWR steam generators tubes were studied whose wall thickness is 1.285 mm. Tests were carried out at stagnation pressure up to 6.89 MPa and range of subcoolings 16.2–59°C. Based on these new choking flow data, the applicability of analytical models to highlight the importance of non-equilibrium effects was examined.

Author(s):  
Hyun Su Kim ◽  
Jong Sung Kim ◽  
Tae Eun Jin ◽  
Hong Deok Kim ◽  
Han Sub Chung

The steam generator in a nuclear power plant is a large heat exchanger that uses heat from reactor to generate steam to drive the turbine generators. Rupture of a steam generator tube can result in release of fission products to environment. Therefore, an accurate integrity assessment of the steam generator tubes with cracks is of great importance for maintaining safety of a nuclear power plant. The steam generator tubes are supported at periodic intervals by support plates and rotations of the tubes are constrained. Although it was reported that the limit load for a circumferential crack was significantly affected by boundary condition of the tube, existing limit load solutions do not include the constraining effect of tube supports. This paper provides detailed limit load solutions for circumferential cracks in steam generator tubes considering the actual boundary conditions to simulate the constraining effect of the tube supports. Such solutions are developed based on three dimensional (3D) finite element analyses. The resulting limit load solutions are given in a polynomial form, and thus can be simply used in practical integrity assessment of the steam generator tubes.


2007 ◽  
Vol 345-346 ◽  
pp. 1357-1360
Author(s):  
Hyun Su Kim ◽  
Tae Eun Jin ◽  
Hong Deok Kim ◽  
Han Sub Chung ◽  
Yoon Suk Chang ◽  
...  

Steam generator in a nuclear power plant is huge heat exchanger that transfers heat from reactor to make steam to drive turbine-generator. Failure of the steam generator tubes can result in the release of fission products to the secondary side. Therefore, accurate integrity assessment of the cracked steam generator tubes is of great importance for maintaining the safety of the nuclear power plant. This paper provides limit loads for circumferential through-wall cracks in steam generator tubes under combined internal pressure and bending loads. Such limit loads are developed on the basis of three dimensional finite element analyses assuming elastic-perfectly plastic material behavior. As for the crack location, both the top of the tubesheet and U-bend regions are considered. The analysis results can be directly applied to the practical integrity assessment of cracked steam generator tubes, because the comparison between experimental data and FE results shows a very good agreement.


2021 ◽  
Vol 382 ◽  
pp. 111403
Author(s):  
Sung Il Kim ◽  
Hyung Seok Kang ◽  
Young Su Na ◽  
Eun Hyun Ryu ◽  
Rae Joon Park ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 124-126 ◽  
pp. 1529-1532
Author(s):  
Dong Jin Kim ◽  
Hong Pyo Kim ◽  
Joung Soo Kim ◽  
Yun Soo Lim ◽  
Seong Sik Hwang

Growth model of a circumferential outer diameter stress corrosion crack (ODSCC) in a retired steam generator tube of the Kori 1 nuclear power plant was proposed based on extensive destructive examinations of the pulled tubes of Alloy 600 from the Kori 1 plant. A small ODSCC grows in a lateral direction as well as a forward direction until it meets a neighboring ODSCC which also grows in a lateral direction as well as a forward direction. And then, the two ODSCCs which meet on the same circumferential plane are consolidated into a single ODSCC. By repeating such a consolidation process with time, it seems that the apparent growth rate of an ODSCC in the lateral direction is much faster than that in the forward direction. Growth model of a circumferential ODSCC from a retired steam generator tube of the Kori 1 plant reveals that many ODSCCs are initiated and grow in both directions independently until they meet and finally they are consolidated.


Author(s):  
Michael C. Liu ◽  
Robert J. Gialdini ◽  
Russell C. Cipolla ◽  
Chang-Hoon Ha ◽  
Min-Ki Cho ◽  
...  

Abstract Tube integrity is an important aspect for safe and reliable operation of nuclear power plant steam generators. As a U.S. industry and licensing requirement, all in-service steam generator tubes shall retain structural integrity over the full range of normal operating conditions and design basis accidents by meeting the structural integrity performance criterion (SIPC) as given in NEI 97-06. The SIPC margin shall be maintained during plant operation between tube examinations. The burst strength of tubes subjected to wall thinning will depend on the extent and mode of degradation, and the magnitude of design loads to include pressure differential across the tube wall during normal operation and postulated accident conditions. In addition, non-pressure loads that can occur during postulated accident events shall be evaluated and included in the assessment of tube integrity if determined to significantly reduce the tube burst strength. The EPRI Flaw Handbook provides burst pressure relationships for flaws which include a reduction factor that accounts for the effect of applied bending stress on circumferential degradation. However, this previous industry work was only for planar crack-like flaws and did not directly address uniform volumetric wall loss which can have both axial and circumferential extent. This paper describes a test program to determine the effect of bending loads on the burst pressure of a tube with uniform thinning over a given axial length. The uniform thinning geometry was selected since it represented a bounding case of general wall loss and is conservative for calculating a tube repair limit for volumetric degradation for a given steam generator design. Tube repair limits are required for defining an upper limit on in-service degradation for which a tube is to be removed from service. Tube repair limits are cited in the Plant Technical Specifications, which is an important part of the licensing basis.


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