Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4925701 Nuclear Engineering and Design 2017 15 Pages PDF
Abstract
In the feed-and-bleed (F&B) operation, one of the important long-term cooling strategies to maintain core safety in pressurized water reactors, low pressure safety injection (LPSI) pumps are typically considered inoperable as depressurization is first required, which leads to core dry-out before reaching LPSI operable pressure. This study investigates whether H-SITs, with the important design feature of passive coolant injection under any pressure condition of the primary coolant system, can make up the core during depressurization thereby allowing LPSI pumps to be used in F&B operation as an additional means of long-term cooling. The effectiveness of the H-SITs is verified using thermal-hydraulic simulations, and based on the results a novel F&B operation strategy with H-SITs and LPSI pumps is developed. A probabilistic safety assessment (PSA) model is then developed in order to assess the risk effect of the suggested strategy. PSA results demonstrate that the proposed strategy lowers core damage frequency in the target plant by 5.0 percent in the case of a small break loss of coolant accident. Total core damage frequency of the plant decreases by 4.8 percent compared to the reference model, and also lowers the number of cutsets by around 13 percent from the original value.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Energy Engineering and Power Technology
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