Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5475103 | Annals of Nuclear Energy | 2017 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The evaluation of methodology for large break loss of coolant accident (LBLOCA) licensing analysis involves two kinds of methodologies, namely deterministic methodology and risk-informed methodology. According to the existing 10 CFR50.46, LBLOCA is one of the most essential design-basis accidents and a deterministic methodology shall be applied to perform LBLOCA analysis based on a so-called surrogate sequence. Without considering how low this sequence occurrence probability is, this surrogate sequence satisfies all the required licensing assumptions. However, in the to-be-issued 10 CFR 50.46a, the LBLOCA can be categorized as an accident beyond design basis and the margin of peak cladding temperature (PCT) shall be evaluated in a risk-informed manner. Regarding the deterministic LBLOCA methodologies, the PCT margin quantified by the traditional appendix K methodology with conservative appendix K models and bounding plant parameters can be enlarged by 41.5Â K with the deterministic-realistic hybrid methodology (DRHM), in which realistic plant parameters and statistical uncertainty analysis are utilized. It was noted that the PCT margin released by realistic plant parameters can be about 1/4-1/5 of the margin generated by a full-scoped BEPU methodology with both best-estimate models and realistic plant parameters. Furthermore, by relaxing the licensing sequence assumptions, an additional LBLOCA PCT margin of 44.3-62.2Â K can be released from the deterministic approaches by applying the risk-informed safety margin characterization (RISMC) methodology. It was also observed from the risk-informed LBLOCA analysis, to have a cumulated occurrence probability over 99% in the load spectrum, the third sequence by order of ascending PCT was referred and the associated sequence occurrence probability of this sequence is 5.07Â *Â 10â3. While in the deterministic methodology, the occurrence probability of the traditional surrogate or licensing sequence is only 5.46Â *Â 10â5.
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Authors
L.Y. Chou, T.H. Liang, K.S. Liang, C.K. Cheng, B.S. Pei,