Environmental Assisted Fatigue and EDF 900 MWe PWRs Fleet: Towards an Exemption of Environmental Effects Consideration for Secondary Circuit Components

Sam Cuvilliez, G. Léopold, T. Métais
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Abstract

Environmentally Assisted Fatigue (EAF) is receiving nowadays an increased level of attention for existing Nuclear Power Plants (NPPs) as utilities are now working to extend their life. In the wake of numerous experimental fatigue tests carried out in air and also in a PWR environment, the French RCC-M code [1] has recently been amended (in its 2016 edition) with two Rules in Probatory Phase (RPP), equivalent to ASME code-cases, “RPP-2” and “RPP-3” [2] [3]. RPP-2 consists of an update of the design fatigue curve in air for stainless steels (SSs) and nickel-based alloys, and is also associated with RPP-3 which provides guidelines for incorporating the environmental penalty “Fen” factor in fatigue usage factor calculations. Alongside this codification effort, an EAF screening has recently been carried out within EDF DT [4] on various areas of the primary circuit of the 900 MWe plants of the EDF fleet. This screening led to the identification of a list of 35 “sentinel locations” which are defined as areas most prone to EAF degradation process. These locations will be subjected to detailed EAF analysis in the stress report calculations (according to the above-mentioned RCC-M code cases) for the fourth decennial inspection of the 900 MWe (VD4 900 MWe) power plants. The potential impact of EAF on the secondary circuit components is another question to address in anticipation of the VD4 900 MWe, as they may be considered as class 1 or class 2 equipment for RCC-M application according to the equipment specification. This paper presents the approach proposed by EDF towards an exemption of environmental effects consideration for secondary circuit components. The argument is first based on a review of experimental campaigns led in Japan and France (respectively on fatigue test specimens and at the component scale) which indicate a Dissolved Oxygen (DO) content threshold below which environmental effects are almost inexistent. The (conservative) value of 40 ppb has been selected consistently with NUREG/CR-6909 revision 0 [5]. The second part of the argument is built, on the one hand, on the analysis of the EDF Technical Specifications for Operation (STE) which narrows the scope of the study only to unit outages, and, on the other hand, on the analysis of 5 years of operations of all 900 MWe plants of the EDF fleet (equivalent to 170 reactor-years). It has been shown that the DO content rarely exceeded the 40 ppb threshold in the secondary coolant, and that in this case, the considered locations were not submitted to any fatigue loading.
环境辅助疲劳和edf900mwe压水堆机队:对二次回路组件的环境影响考虑的豁免
环境辅助疲劳(environmental Assisted Fatigue, EAF)如今越来越受到现有核电站(NPPs)的关注,因为公用事业公司正在努力延长它们的寿命。在空气和压水堆环境中进行了大量的疲劳试验之后,法国RCC-M规范[1]最近进行了修订(2016年版),其中包含两个试用阶段(RPP)规则,相当于ASME规范案例,“RPP-2”和“RPP-3”[2][3]。RPP-2包括不锈钢(ss)和镍基合金在空气中的设计疲劳曲线的更新,并且还与RPP-3相关联,后者提供了在疲劳使用系数计算中纳入环境惩罚“Fen”因素的指导方针。在这项编纂工作的同时,最近在EDF DT[4]内对EDF机队900兆瓦发电厂主回路的各个区域进行了EAF筛选。这种筛选导致确定了35个“哨点”的列表,这些哨点被定义为最容易发生EAF降解过程的区域。这些地点将在900兆瓦(VD4 900兆瓦)发电厂第四次十年一次检查的应力报告计算中(根据上述RCC-M规范案例)进行详细的EAF分析。EAF对二次电路组件的潜在影响是VD4 900 MWe预期要解决的另一个问题,因为根据设备规范,它们可能被视为RCC-M应用的1类或2类设备。本文介绍了EDF提出的免除二次回路元件环境影响考虑的方法。这一论点首先是基于对日本和法国(分别在疲劳试验样品和部件尺度上)进行的实验活动的回顾,这些活动表明溶解氧(DO)含量阈值低于该阈值,环境影响几乎不存在。40 ppb的(保守)值与NUREG/CR-6909修订版0一致[5]。论点的第二部分,一方面建立在对法国电力公司运营技术规范(STE)的分析之上,该技术规范将研究范围缩小到机组停机,另一方面,建立在对法国电力公司所有900兆瓦电厂5年运行情况(相当于170个反应堆年)的分析之上。研究表明,在二次冷却剂中,DO含量很少超过40 ppb的阈值,在这种情况下,所考虑的位置不受任何疲劳载荷的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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