Accident Management Actions in an Upper-Head Small-Break Loss-of-Coolant Accident with High-Pressure Safety Injection Failed

Abstract Since the Three Mile Island accident, an important focus of pressurized water reactor (PWR) transient analyses has been a small-break loss-of-coolant accident (SBLOCA). In 2002, the discovery of thinning of the vessel head wall at the Davis Besse nuclear power plant reactor indicated the possibility of an SBLOCA in the upper head of the reactor vessel as a result of circumferential cracking of a control rod drive mechanism penetration nozzle—which has cast even greater importance on the study of SBLOCAs. Several experimental tests have been performed at the Large Scale Test Facility to simulate the behavior of a PWR during an upper-head SBLOCA. The last of these tests, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development Nuclear Energy Agency Rig of Safety Assessment (OECD/NEA ROSA) Test 6.1, was performed in 2005. This test was simulated with the TRACE 5.0 code, and good agreement with the experimental results was obtained. Additionally, a broad analysis of an upper-head SBLOCA with high-pressure safety injection failed in a Westinghouse PWR was performed taking into account different accident management actions and conditions in order to check their suitability. This issue has been analyzed also in the framework of the OECD/NEA ROSA project and the Code Applications and Maintenance Program (CAMP). The main conclusion is that the current emergency operating procedures for Westinghouse reactor design are adequate for these kinds of sequences, and they do not need to be modified.

[1]  R. L. Anderson,et al.  Inadequate-core-cooling instrumentation using heated-junction thermocouples for reactor-vessel level measurement , 1982 .

[2]  Annalisa Manera,et al.  Analysis of an RPV upper head SBLOCA at the ROSA facility using TRACE , 2010 .

[3]  G. E. McCreery,et al.  Detection of inadequate core cooling with core exit thermocouples: LOFT PWR experience , 1983 .

[4]  J. Teng,et al.  Simulation of a PWR Reactor Vessel Level Indicating System during Station Blackout with MELCOR 1.8.5 , 2006 .

[5]  G. E. McCreery,et al.  Limitations of detecting inadequate core cooling with core exit thermocouples , 1984 .

[6]  Gabriel Rodríguez,et al.  A code for simulation of human failure events in nuclear power plants: SIMPROC , 2011 .

[7]  Joon-Eon Yang,et al.  An estimation of an operator's action time by using the MARS code in a small break LOCA without a HPSI for a PWR , 2007 .

[8]  G.Th. Analytis,et al.  Boil-off experiments with the PSI-NEPTUN facility: Analysis and code assessment overview report , 1993 .

[9]  Vicente Abella,et al.  Comparison of different versions of TRACE5 code in the simulation of LSTF (ROSA V) , 2010, 2010 1st International Nuclear & Renewable Energy Conference (INREC).

[10]  César Queral,et al.  SCAIS (Simulation Code System for Integrated Safety Assessment): Current status and applications , 2008 .

[11]  Paul D. Bayless RELAP-5/MOD 3.2 Assessment Using an 11% Upper Plenum Break Experiment in the PSB Facility , 2003 .

[12]  Mitsuhiro Suzuki,et al.  Performance of Core Exit Thermocouple for PWR Accident Management Action in Vessel Top Break LOCA Simulation Experiment at OECD/NEA ROSA Project , 2008 .

[13]  César Queral,et al.  TRACE Model of Almaraz Nuclear Power Plant , 2005 .