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Storage of Thermal REactor Safety Analysis data
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 results
Organization
Type of Facility
Corium
Experiments available
0
Description:

In case of prolonged loss of cooling accident, the fuel rods of the core of a pressurized water reactor (PWR) will be damaged, and will collapse to form what is called a "debris bed", i.e. an agglomeration of fragments of zircaloy cladding and UO2 pellets (or UO2 and PuO2 pellets in the case of MOX fuel rods) which, if not rapidly cooled, will melt and become increasingly difficult to cool. This problem was identified through analysis of the Three Mile Island accident (TMI-2) which occurred in the United States in 1979.



One of the recommended actions to mitigate such accident sequences consists of reinjecting cooling water into the core, an action so-called "reflooding". Although essential for cooling the fuel assemblies, this action may nevertheless compromise the integrity of the reactor containment building. Indeed, reflooding a melting core at very high temperature may cause an explosive thermal reaction, so-called "steam explosion", between the cooling water and the molten corium. Such an explosion can generate projectiles which could damage the containment building. Furthermore, the water vapor resulting from the vaporization of the injected water will oxidize the metallic compounds of the core (zircaloy cladding, steel structures) and generate hydrogen with the potential to undergo a combustion inside the containment, as it was observed during the Fukushima accident.



The "Debris bed reflooding" experimental research program was launched in order to better understand and model these phenomena, the final objective being to determine the conditions under which cooling water can be injected so as to cool the core in an efficient manner with an acceptable risk for the containment. This additional knowledge will be subsequently used to clarify the choice of emergency operating procedures for severe accident conditions and to support the assessment of the relevance of EDF's Severe Accident Operating Guidelines.

Facility is in operation.

Organization
Type of Facility
Corium
Experiments available
0
Description:

The tests conducted in the PRELUDE facility help to validate key technical options for PEARL:

  • Induction heating to obtain heating sequences between 100-300 W/kg with homogeneous distribution in the different particle beds (slightly oxidised steel balls with 1, 2, 4 and 8 mm diameters), as well as to reach a temperature of 1,000°C at the hottest spot in the debris bed.
  • Material of the test section ensuring the thermomechanical resistance of the tube containing the particles bed,
  • Instrumentation to record the fi rst thermohydraulic measurements at atmospheric pressure when refl ooding the particle bed (about 25 kg) heated to of 400, 700 and 1,000°C.

This modular facility will remain operational to support the larger-scale PEARL facility (debris bed of about 500 kg) for complementary separate effects tests.

Facility is not operating, now called PEARL.

Organization
Type of Facility
Corium
Experiments available
15
Description:

The JRC-Ispra FARO plant was a large multipurpose test facility in which reactor severe accidents could be simulated by out-of-pile experiments. A quantity in the order of up to 200 kg of oxide fuel type melts (up to 3000 °C) could be produced in the FARO furnace, possibly mixed with metallic components, and delivered to a test section containing a water pool at an initial pressure up to 5.0 MPa. The reference scenario of the current test series is relevant to a postulated in-vessel core melt down accident when jets of molten corium penetrate into the lower plenum water pool, fragment and settle on the lower head.

 

Quenching: Investigation of basic phenomenologies relevant to the fragmentation and quenching of molten material into the water coolant at different initial pressure and water subcooling. 12 Tests have been performed: 5 at 50 bar initial pressure, 1 at 20 bar and 6 tests at pressure lower than 5 bar. In the last test an external trigger was applied to the molten mixture.



Objectives:

  • investigation of basic phenomenologies relevant to the progression of severe accidents in water cooled reactors with particular emphasis on the interaction of molten fuel with coolant and/or structures under both in-vessel and ex-vessel postulated severe accident conditions.
  • Provision of an Experimental Data Base for the Development and Improvement of Analytical Models and the Independent Assessment of Large System Codes used in LWR Safety Analysis.

Facility is dismanteled.

Organization
Type of Facility
Corium
Experiments available
36
Description:

The test section of the KROTOS facility consists of a stainless steel test section bolted to lugs welded on the inner side walls of a stainless steel pressure vessel. The cylindrical pressure vessel, inner diameter 0.4 m, height, 2.21 m, has a thick flat bottom and a flanged flat upper head and is designed to withstand a static pressure of 2.5 MPa at 493 K. The cylindrical test section, inner diameter 200 mm, outer diameter 240 mm, closed at the bottom by either a flat plate or with a gas trigger device, can contain water up to a height of about 1.27 m (about 40 litres).



The KROTOS main objective is to provide basic experimental information on FCI (Fuel-Coolant Interaction) phenomena relevant to severe accident situations in nuclear reactors.

 

KROTOS was transferred to CEA Cadarache at the end of the JRC-Ispra MFCI programme in 1999. It is at present part of the French institute research programme on severe accidents.

Organization
Type of Facility
Corium
Experiments available
2
Description:

The JRC-Ispra FARO plant is a large multipurpose test facility in which reactor severe accidents could be simulated by out-of-pile experiments. A quantity in the order of up to 200 kg of oxide fuel type melts (up to 3000 °C) could be produced in the FARO furnace, possibly mixed with metallic components, and delivered to a test section containing a water pool at an initial pressure up to 5.0 MPa. The reference scenario of the current test series is relevant to a postulated in-vessel core melt down accident when jets of molten corium penetrate into the lower plenum water pool, fragment and settle on the lower head.

 

Spreading: These tests are designed to investigate the impact on the core catcher of corium ejected after reactor pressure vessel failure during a core meltdown accident. The way melt spreads on the core catcher surface is important because of its effect on the long-term coolability of the melt. Two tests have been performed, one with a dry surface and one with 1 cm of water layer.



Objectives:

  • investigation of basic phenomenologies relevant to the progression of severe accidents in water cooled reactors with particular emphasis on the interaction of molten fuel with coolant and/or structures under both in-vessel and ex-vessel postulated severe accident conditions.
  • Provision of an Experimental Data Base for the Development and Improvement of Analytical Models and the Independent Assessment of Large System Codes used in LWR Safety Analysis.

Facility is dismanteled.