Issue 36

T. Fekete, Frattura ed Integrità Strutturale, 36 (2016) 99-111; DOI: 10.3221/IGF-ESIS.36.10 99 Focused on Fracture Mechanics in Central and East Europe Review of pressurized thermal shock studies of large scale reactor pressure vessels in Hungary Tamás Fekete HAS Centre for Energy Research, Department of Fuel and Reactor Materials, Structural Integrity Group tamas.fekete@energia.mta.hu A BSTRACT . In Hungary, four nuclear power units were constructed more than 30 years ago; they are operating to this day. In every unit, VVER-440 V213-type light-water cooled, light-water moderated, pressurized water reactors are in operation. Since the mid-1980s, numerous researches in the field of Pressurized Thermal Shock (PTS) analyses of Reactor Pressure Vessels (RPVs) have been conducted in Hungary; in all of them, the concept of structural integrity was the basis of research and development. During this time, four large PTS studies with industrial relevance have been completed in Hungary. Each used different objectives and guides, and the analysis methodology was also changing. This paper gives a comparative review of the methodologies used in these large PTS Structural Integrity Analysis projects, presenting the latest results as well. K EYWORDS . Structural Integrity Analyses; Reactor Pressure Vessels; Pressurized Thermal Shock. I NTRODUCTION n a preceding paper [2], the concept and the general methodology of Pressurized Thermal Shock (PTS) Structural Integrity analyses of large scale Reactor Pressure Vessels (RPV) were presented. The PTS phenomenon was known to specialists earlier, but became widely known and consequently, subject to intensive research when in the late 1970’s, two accidents occurred in the US. Those accidents showed that transients can occur in pressurized water reactors, resulting in a severe overcooling that causes thermal shock in the vessel, concurrent with or followed by re-pressurization. These are the transients generally known under the name of PTS. The very high tensile stress caused by thermal shock at the inner surface of the vessel wall can cause the cleavage initiation of a pre-existing flaw of a certain dimension to occur (i. e. crack-like defect). Concern about brittle crack initiation during PTS can arise because during operation the neutron irradiation exposure around the energy-generating core makes the material of the Reactor Pressure Vessel (RPV) increasingly susceptible to cleavage fracture initiation. Although PTS calculations have been part of RPV safety evaluations since the first half of the 1980’s, there are various approaches that are analogous in general, but have many differences in details. There exists no internationally recognized standard; there are guidelines in Europe that are recommended to use (e. g. specifically for VVER units [4] and [16]); various approaches are used at a national level in different countries. In Hungary, the HAEA Guide 3.18v3 [3] is currently in effect. During the last three decades, four large PTS studies have been conducted in Hungary. Each used different objectives and guides, and the Analysis methodology has also been changing. In the preceding paper [2], the conceptual model of PTS Structural Integrity calculations was presented. It was shown that using the conceptual model –that is based on the notion of typed graph-transformation systems– the calculations and their evolution can be described on a theoretical level. Using I

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