scholarly journals The Best Estimate Plus Uncertainty approach in nuclear reactor safety and licensing: Brief history and the elements after licensing

2019 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 299-312
Author(s):  
Francesco D’Auria ◽  
Giorgio Galassi

The best estimate plus uncertainty is, at the same time, an approach, a procedure and a frame- work in nuclear thermal-hydraulics and nuclear reactor safety and licensing. The motivation at the basis of the best estimate plus uncertainty is the lack of knowledge in the areas of single and, mainly, two-phase transient thermal-hydraulics. In other terms and introducing some simplifications, the insufficient knowledge of turbulence imposes the design of roadmaps for the application of imperfect (thermal-hydraulic) models to the evaluation of design features and of safety for complex technological installations or systems like the nuclear power plants and, more specifically, the water cooled nuclear reactors. Furthermore, the legal counterpart of nuclear reactor safety, or the licensing, is concerned: therefore the best estimate plus uncertainty must account for rules and regulations derived from the fundamental radioprotection principle which imposes the minimization of the impact of radiations upon humans and the environment under any circumstance. In the present paper, the key elements of the approach are identified and characterized. These shall be seen as the support for a consistent application of thermal-hydraulics to the design and safety of water-cooled nuclear reactors.

2008 ◽  
Vol 2008 ◽  
pp. 1-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Aksan

Best-estimate thermal-hydraulic system codes are widely used to perform safety and licensing analyses of nuclear power plants and also used in the design of advance reactors. Evaluation of the capabilities and the performance of these codes can be accomplished by comparing the code predictions with measured experimental data obtained on different test facilities. OECD/NEA Committee on the Safety of Nuclear Installations (CSNI) has promoted, over the last twenty-nine years, some forty-eight international standard problems (ISPs). These ISPs were performed in different fields as in-vessel thermal-hydraulic behaviour, fuel behaviour under accident conditions, fission product release and transport, core/concrete interactions, hydrogen distribution and mixing, containment thermal-hydraulic behaviour. 80% of these ISPs were related to the working domain of principal working group no.2 on coolant system behaviour (PWG2) and were one of the major PWG2 activities for many years. A global review and synthesis on the contribution that ISPs have made to address nuclear reactor safety issues was initiated by CSNI-PWG2 and an overview on the subject of small break LOCA ISPs is given in this paper based on a report prepared by a writing group. In addition, the relevance of small break LOCA in a PWR with relation to nuclear reactor safety and the reorientation of the reactor safety program after TMI-2 accident are shortly summarized. The experiments in four integral test facilities, LOBI, SPES, BETHSY, ROSA IV/LSTF and the recorded data during a steam generator tube rupture transient in the DOEL-2 PWR (Belgium) were the basis of the five small break LOCA related ISP exercises, which deal with the phenomenon typical of small break LOCAs in Western design PWRs. Some lessons learned from these small break LOCA ISPs are identified in relation to code deficiencies and capabilities, progress in the code capabilities, possibility of scaling, and various additional aspects. ISPs are providing unique material and benefits for some safety-related issues.


2014 ◽  
Vol 136 (12) ◽  
pp. 44-47
Author(s):  
Robert A. Leishear

This article focuses on various aspects of research theory and development work concerning accidental combustion in nuclear facility and oil industry pipelines. The theory has safety implications for any pipeline where explosive gases can form in liquid-filled systems, and is consistent with pipeline accidents in nuclear power plants, such as Three Mile Island. Nuclear reactor accidents deserve further investigation, since reactor fires and explosions were ignited by sources that were reported to be unknown. The NRC documented extensive actions to improve reactor safety after the Three Mile Island accident; however, this new ignition theory has yet to be fully evaluated with respect to off-normal reactor operations in the United States and abroad. Several nuclear reactor fires and explosions warrant consideration. This new theory confirms a source of ignition. Reactor explosions can be stopped to improve nuclear reactor safety, prevent deaths, and avoid environmental disasters.


2020 ◽  
Vol 239 ◽  
pp. 19005
Author(s):  
Zhang Wenxin ◽  
Qiang shenglong ◽  
Yin qiang ◽  
Cui Xiantao

Neutron cross section data is the basis of nuclear reactor physical calculation and has a decisive influence on the accuracy of calculation results. AFA3Gassemble is widely used in nuclear power plants. CENACE is an ACE format multiple-temperature continuous energy cross section library that developed by China Nuclear Data Centre. In this paper, we calculated the AFA3G assemble by RMC.We respectively used ENDF6.8/, ENDF/7 and CENACE data for calculation. The impact of nuclear data on RMC calculation is studied by comparing the results of different nuclear data.


Author(s):  
Florentine KOPPENBORG

Abstract The March 2011 nuclear accident (3.11) shook Japan’s nuclear energy policy to its core. In 2012, the Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) returned to government with a pro-nuclear policy and the intention to swiftly restart nuclear power plants. In 2020, however, only six nuclear reactors were in operation. Why has the progress of nuclear restarts been so slow despite apparent political support? This article investigates the process of restarting nuclear power plants. The key finding is that the ‘nuclear village’, centered on the LDP, Ministry of Economy Trade and Industry, and the nuclear industry, which previously controlled both nuclear policy goal-setting and implementation, remained in charge of policy decision making, i.e. goal-setting, but lost policy implementation power to an extended conflict over nuclear reactor restarts. The main factors that changed the politics of nuclear reactor restarts are Japan’s new nuclear safety agency, the Nuclear Regulation Authority (NRA), and a substantial increase in the number of citizens’ class-action lawsuits against nuclear reactors. These findings highlight the importance of assessing both decision making and implementation in assessments of policy change.


Radiocarbon ◽  
1986 ◽  
Vol 28 (2A) ◽  
pp. 668-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pavel Povinec ◽  
Martin Chudý ◽  
Alexander Šivo

14C is one of the most important anthropogenic radionuclides released to the environment by human activities. Weapon testing raised the 14C concentration in the atmosphere and biosphere to +100% above the natural level. This excess of atmospheric C at present decreases with a half-life of ca 7 years. Recently, a new source of artificially produced 14C in nuclear reactors has become important. Since 1967, the Bratislava 14C laboratory has been measuring 14C in atmospheric 14CO2 and in a variety of biospheric samples in densely populated areas and in areas close to nuclear power plants. We have been able to identify a heavy-water reactor and the pressurized water reactors as sources of anthropogenic 14C. 14C concentrations show typical seasonal variations. These data are supported by measurements of 3H and 85Kr in the same locations. Results of calculations of future levels of anthropogenic 14C in the environment due to increasing nuclear reactor installations are presented.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabahattin Akbas ◽  
Victor Martinez-Quiroga ◽  
Fatih Aydogan ◽  
Abderrafi M. Ougouag ◽  
Chris Allison

The design and the analysis of nuclear power plants (NPPs) require computational codes to predict the behavior of the NPP nuclear components and other systems (i.e., reactor core, primary coolant system, emergency core cooling system, etc.). Coupled calculations are essential to the conduct of deterministic safety assessments. Inasmuch as the physical phenomena that govern the performance of a nuclear reactor are always present simultaneously, ideally computational modeling of a nuclear reactor should include coupled codes that represent all of the active physical phenomena. Such multi-physics codes are under development at several institutions and are expected to become operational in the future. However, in the interim, integrated codes that incorporate modeling capabilities for two to three physical phenomena will remain useful. For example, in the conduct of safety analyses, of paramount importance are codes that couple neutronics and thermal-hydraulics, especially transient codes. Other code systems of importance to safety analyses are those that couple primary system thermal-hydraulics to fission product chemistry, neutronics to fuel performance, containment behavior and structural mechanics to thermal-hydraulics, etc. This paper surveys the methods used traditionally in the coupling of neutronic and thermal-hydraulics codes. The neutron kinetics codes are used for computing the space-time evolution of the neutron flux and, hence, of the power distribution. The thermal-hydraulics codes, which compute mass, momentum and energy transfers, model the coolant flow and the temperature distribution. These codes can be used to compute the neutronic behavior and the thermal-hydraulic states separately. However, the need to account with fidelity for the dynamic feedback between the two sets of properties (via temperature and density effects on the cross section inputs into the neutronics codes) and the requirement to model realistically the transient response of nuclear power plants and to assess the associated emergency systems and procedures imply the necessity of modeling the neutronic and thermal-hydraulics simultaneously within a coupled code system. The focus of this paper is a comparison of the methods by which the coupling between neutron kinetics and thermal-hydraulics treatments has been traditionally achieved in various code systems. As discussed in the last section, the modern approaches to multi-physics code development are beyond the scope of this paper. From the field of the most commonly used coupled neutron kinetic-thermal-hydraulics codes, this study selected for comparison the coupled codes RELAP5-3D (NESTLE), TRACE/PARCS, RELAP5/PARCS, ATHLET/DYN3D, RELAP5/SCDAPSIM/MOD4.0/NESTLE. The choice was inspired by how widespread the use of the codes is, but was limited by time availability. Thus, the selection of codes is not to be construed as exhaustive, nor is there any implication of priority about the methods used by the various codes. These codes were developed by a variety of institutions (universities, research centers, and laboratories) geographically located away from each other. Each of the research group that developed these coupled code systems used its own combination of initial codes as well as different methods and assumptions in the coupling process. For instance, all these neutron kinetics codes solve the few-groups neutron diffusion equations. However, the data they use may be based on different lattice physics codes. The neutronics solvers may use different methods, ranging from point kinetics method (in some versions of RELAP5) to nodal expansion methods (NEM), to semi-analytic nodal methods, to the analytic nodal method (ANM). Similarly, the thermal-hydraulics codes use several different approaches: different number of coolant fields, homogenous equilibrium model, separate flow model, different numbers of conservation equations, etc. Therefore, not only the physical models but also the assumptions of the coupled codes and coupling techniques vary significantly. This paper compares coupled codes qualitatively and quantitatively. The results of this study are being used both to guide the selection of appropriate coupled codes and to identify further developments into coupled codes.


2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 32-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Kowalczyk ◽  
J. Głuch ◽  
P. Ziółkowski

Abstract This paper is aimed at analysis of possible application of helium to cooling high-temperature nuclear reactor to be used for generating steam in contemporary ship steam-turbine power plants of a large output with taking into account in particular variable operational parameters. In the first part of the paper types of contemporary ship power plants are presented. Features of today applied PWR reactors and proposed HTR reactors are discussed. Next, issues of load variability of the ship nuclear power plants, features of the proposed thermal cycles and results of their thermodynamic calculations in variable operational conditions, are presented.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (2B) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Lucas Busse ◽  
João Manoel Losada Moreira

Brazil is constructing with national technology two small nuclear reactors for propulsion and for radioisotope production with thermal power levels between 20 and 50 MW. These nuclear reactors fit more in the class of small modular reactors (SMR) than in the class of large nuclear power plants. In this article we apply the design approach of SMRs to propose an architecture of reactor protection systems for the small reactor under construction in the country. To do that the probabilistic analysis of the architecture of a nuclear reactor protection system is evaluated to determine the sensitivity of the components through an Reliability Block Diagram modeling. It was evaluated the modification of the architecture and the addition of redundancies when using components with lower life time than the components usually used for this purpose. The results showed that after one year of operation, the reference RPS system presents a failure probability of 0.17 %. The modified system, with components with lower life time, presents a point reliability value only 0.070 % lower than the reference one, but this difference grows exponentially over time, and in 10 years of operation it can reach values above 95%. Using equipment with lower life time characteristics implies a greater number of redundancies and, additionally, a greater number of maintenance procedures and spare parts. Therefore, this technical feasibility analysis should consider a RAM simulation as well.


Author(s):  
Salah Ud-din Khan ◽  
Minjun Peng ◽  
Muhammad Zubair ◽  
Shaowu Wang

Due to global warming and high oil prices nuclear power is the most feasible solution for generating electricity. For the fledging nuclear power industry small and medium sized nuclear reactors (SMR’s) are instrumental for the development and demonstration of nuclear reactor technology. Due to the enhanced and outstanding safety features, these reactors have been considered globally. In this paper, first we have summarized the reactor design by considering some of the large nuclear reactor including advanced and theoretical nuclear reactor. Secondly, comparison between large nuclear reactors and SMR’s have been discussed under the criteria led by International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA). Thirdly, a brief review about the design and safety aspects of some of SMR’s have been carried out. We have considered the specifications and parametric analysis of the reactors like: ABV which is the floating type integral Pressurized water reactor; Long life, Safe, Simple Small Portable Proliferation Resistance Reactor (LSPR) concept; Multi-Application Small Light Water Reactor (MASLWR) concept; Fixed Bed Nuclear Reactor (FBNR); Marine Reactor (MR-X) & Deep Sea Reactor (DR-X); Space Reactor (SP-100); Passive Safe Small Reactor for Distributed energy supply system (PSRD); System integrated Modular Advanced Reactor (SMART); Super, Safe, Small and Simple Reactor (4S); International Reactor Innovative and Secure (IRIS); Nu-Scale Reactor; Next generation nuclear power plant (NGNP); Small, Secure Transportable Autonomous Reactor (SSTAR); Power Reactor Inherently Safe Module (PRISM) and Hyperion Reactor concept. Finally we have point out some challenges that must be resolved in order to play an effective role in Nuclear industry.


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