Reactor Pressure Vessel: EDF R&D Program to Support Lifetime Management

Author(s):  
Jean-Philippe Fontes ◽  
Christelle Raynaud ◽  
Alain Martin ◽  
Aurore Parrot ◽  
Anna Dahl ◽  
...  

The Reactor Pressure Vessel (RPV) is with the concrete containment one of the two components of a NPP whose replacement is not considered as reasonably feasible. The RPV lifetime has thus an important impact on the lifetime of the whole NPP. One of the key issues concerning RPV lifetime is the radiation effect on the RPV steel in the core zones. The vessel steel becomes indeed more brittle in the RPV core region where radiation is high. Margins have been included at design and manufacturing stages taking into account the material’s embrittlement. Moreover, operating measures have been taken to manage ageing of RPV in order to extend lifetime. The challenge is to preserve high margins and to provide the safety studies showing these margins. A large R&D program has been developed to support lifetime extension. The objective of the program is to develop tools and provide input data for the demonstration of the safe operation of the reactor pressure vessel significantly over a 40-year lifetime. The aim of the paper is to present an overview of the R&D program to support lifetime management on the fields of materials, mechanics and thermalhydraulics. Experiments are indeed performed on irradiated material in order to improve the knowledge on embrittlement for high fluences and to be able to determine embrittlement correlations for materials representative of French RPV. Actions are also planned to improve evaluation of the RPV mechanical behaviour and to describe physical phenomena such as crack arrest or warm pre-stressing effect. Last, studies are realized to improve the thermal loadings evaluations under hypothetical accidental scenarios. These studies are supported by thermalhydraulic numerical simulations whose validation is obtained by comparison to experimental results from experimental hydraulic loops representative of French RPV.

Author(s):  
Yoosung Ha ◽  
Tohru Tobita ◽  
Hisashi Takamizawa ◽  
Yutaka Nishiyama

The applicability of miniature-C(T) (Mini-C(T)) specimens to fracture toughness evaluation was investigated for neutron-irradiated reactor pressure vessel (RPV) steel. By carefully selecting the test temperature, valid fracture toughness and reference temperature (To) were determined successfully with a relatively small number of specimens. The value of To determined using irradiated Mini-C(T) specimens was in good agreement with that determined using irradiated pre-cracked Charpy-type (PCCv) specimens. In addition, the scatter of the 1T-equivalent fracture toughness values obtained using the irradiated Mini-C(T) specimens was not significantly different from that obtained using the irradiated PCCv and other larger unirradiated specimens. The To values determined using Mini-C(T) specimens agree very well with the correlation between the Charpy 41J transition temperature and the To of commercially manufactured RPV steels reported in the past.


Author(s):  
Li Chengliang ◽  
Shu Guogang ◽  
Chen Jun ◽  
Liu Yi ◽  
Liu Wei ◽  
...  

The effect of neutron irradiation damage of reactor pressure vessel (RPV) steels is a main failure mode. Accelerated neutron irradiation experiments at 292 °C were conducted on RPV steels, followed by testing of the mechanical, electrical and magnetic properties for both the unirradiated and irradiated steels in a hot laboratory. The results showed that a significant increase in the strength, an obvious decrease in toughness, a corresponding increase in resistivity, and the clockwise turn of the hysteresis loops, resulting in a slight decrease in saturation magnetization when the RPV steel irradiation damage reached 0.0409 dpa; at the same time, the variation rate of the resistivity between the irradiated and unirradiated RPV steels shows good agreement with the variation rates of the mechanical properties parameters, such as nano-indentation hardness, ultimate tensile strength, yield strength at 0.2% offset, upper shelf energy and reference nil ductility transition temperature. Thus, as a complement to destructive mechanical testing, the resistivity variation can be used as a potentially non-destructive evaluation technique for the monitoring of the RPV steel irradiation damage of operational nuclear power plants.


2017 ◽  
Vol 488 ◽  
pp. 222-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristina Lindgren ◽  
Magnus Boåsen ◽  
Krystyna Stiller ◽  
Pål Efsing ◽  
Mattias Thuvander

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