Containment Structures
Containment Structures
M. Ragheb
4/19/2011
INTRODUCTION
A misconception about nuclear power plants containment structures is that their
massive concrete construction is a protection against the release of radioactive products
in the case of a postulated accident. Such a task is achieved by the overall containment
system as a collection of the Engineered Safety Features, not just by the concrete shell
alone.
It must be understood that the concrete component is meant as a biological shield
against gamma-ray radiation and a protection of the reactor internals against damage
from the effects of the outside elements including missiles such as light posts driven by
tornado or hurricane 100-miles per hour winds, and even the direct impact by a massive
aircraft such as a Boeing-747.
The concrete shell in fact is strong at its exterior curvature, and weak at its interior
curvature. This is an inherent characteristic of shell structures. Think about how difficult
it is to crush an egg by squeezing it in ones hand, yet it is easy for the weak and helpless
chick to peck its way out of the interior of an eggs shell.
The concrete shell is designed to withstand the direct impact of an aircraft on its
exterior, but miserably fails a buildup of stress at its interior. An increase of stress by
steam release, if unquenched, at its interior will eventually cause it to fail; much like a
chain at its weakest link. The weakest links in that case occur at the coolant inlet and
outlet pipes and the instrumentation cabling and electrical power penetrations.
Figure 1. Large 22 in Liner Tear near a containment scale model piping penetration.
Source: Sandia Laboratory.
Figure 2. PWR dry steel shell containment surrounded by concrete biological shield.
Another PWR containment design is shown in Fig. 3, where an ice condenser is
used to quench any release of radioactivity or steam caused maybe by an earthquake
event.
Supporting equipment
Type
Containment spray isolation valves
Hydrogen igniters
Hydrogen recombiners
Hydrogen mixing fans and compressors
Hydrogen mixing valves
DW VBK valves MOV
Low Pressure Coolant Injection, LPCI isolation valve
Airlock seals
Hatch seals
Electrical penetrations
Reactor Pressure Vessel, RPV level / pressure transmitters
ADS valves
Hydrogen sensors
Pressure transmitters
Temperature transmitters
Power cables
Instrument cables
Electrical terminal box/board
Figure 6. Recorded hydrogen flow rate was associated with a stress spike from suspected
hydrogen ignition at the Three Mile Island accident.
SP-2, Surry
SP-3, Sequoyah
SP-15, Limerick
Parameter
Containment capability
Upper bound spike
Early failure physically unreasonable best estimate pressure rise rate, including
heat sinks
Best estimate failure time, with unlimited water in cavity
Containment capability
Upper bound spike
Early failure physically unreasonable best estimate failure time, with dry cavity
Containment capability
Upper bound loading
Lower bound loading
Thermal loads
Early failure
Containment capability
Upper bound loading
Lower bound loading
Thermal loads
Early failure
Containment capability
Upper bound loading
Lower bound loading
Thermal loads
Early failure, upper bound too conservative
Containment capability
Upper bound loading
Wall fluxes
Penetration seal temperature
Pressurization failure from diffusion flames
Seal failure
Containment capability
Upper bound loading
Thermal loads
Early failure (100 percent core dispersal, 100 percent clad oxidation, no seal
oxidation, no early depressurization, unobstructed flow)
Technical
specification
149 psia
107 psia
10 psi/hr
16 hrs
134 psia
107 psia
Several days
65 psia, 330 oF
70-100 psia
50-70 psia
500-700 oF
Quite likely
132 psia, 330 oF
132 psia in 40 min
132 psi in 2 hrs
500-700 oF
Quite likely
155 psia, 330 oF
145 psia in 2-3 hrs
100 psi in 3 hrs
550-700 oF
Rather unlikely
75 psia
30 psia
103-104 BTU/(hr.ft2)
345 oF
Unreasonable
Unlikely
150 psia
176 psia
1,340 oF
Quite likely
Toshiba from Japan and its Westinghouse subsidiary that it acquired from British
Nuclear Fuel Ltd. (BNFL) in the USA are committed to the design and development of
advanced nuclear reactors that are safe, low-cost, reliable, and environmentally
acceptable. Their AP1000 design is meant for near term deployment and their 4S and
hydrogen production systems are targeted for future technology development.
The AP1000 is the only Generation III+ nuclear power plant to receive design
certification from the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission. It is an advanced
plant that further increases safety through the use of naturally occurring forces such as
gravity, natural circulation, and condensation. In the unlikely event of a plant
emergency, these safety systems, because of their inherent nature, will automatically
activate without the need for human intervention.
In addition to the enhanced safety features, the AP1000 is cost-effective. The
plant is composed of modules that are constructed in either factories or shipyards, thereby
improving quality while reducing the potential for delays that are associated with field
construction.
Even though it is an advanced plant, it is a proven design that is based on the
same Westinghouse PWR technology that has supported the nuclear industry over the last
50 years. Toshiba brings to the partnership with Westinghouse a highly efficient and
reliable turbine generator design, state-of-the-art construction technologies, and
knowledgeable construction management.
Toshiba and Westinghouse are also developing the 4S, a Super Safe, Small, and
Simple reactor. The 4S is a 10-50 MWe, passive safety fast spectrum plant that has a 30year operating life before the need to refuel, also known as a battery reactor.
Figure 7. Advanced Passive AP1000 PWR includes a cooling chimney using natural
convection in its containment structure. Source: Toshiba-Westinghouse.
Figure 8. Containment structure of the AP1000 PWR has a gap between the steel shell
and the concrete shield allowing natural convection cooling. The cooling is enhanced
with a tang on top of it containing a supplemental water coolant supply. Source: ToshibaWestinghouse.
EVOLUTIONARY PRESSURIZED WATER REACTOR, EPR AREVA
DESIGN
The Evolutionary Pressurized Water Reactor, EPR is a Generation 3+ European
Pressurized Water Reactor design with a capacity of 1600 MWe. It features advanced
technologies, making it a reactor with the advocated following characteristics:
1. A high level of safety:
Extended prevention of the reactor core melt down hypothetical accident and its
potential consequences, resistance to external risks such as an aircraft crash or a strong
earthquake. The major safety systems comprise four sub-systems or "trains". Each train
is capable of performing the entire safety function independently. There is one train in
each of the four safeguard buildings, which are separated from each other by the reactor
building to prevent simultaneous failure of the trains.
2. Optimized environmental qualities:
A 15 percent reduction in the production of long half-life radioactive waste, and
increased performance and thermal efficiency.
3. Simplified operation and maintenance conditions:
Totally computerized control room, with a more user-friendly human-machine
interface.
4. Improved economic competitiveness.
Areva is developing two EPR projects in Europe. In Finland construction is
underway of an EPR for the Finnish utility TVO (Olkiluoto 3 project). The Finnish EPR
will be the first Generation III+ reactor to go into service. In France, Electricit De
France (EDF) has reached a decision to build a series of EPR reactors at the Flamanville3 project site.
Figure 9. Cutout through the Evolutionary PWR Reactor, EPR pressurized water reactor
design showing its double walled containment. Source: Areva.
Figure 10. Evolutionary Pressurized Reactor, EPR melted corium retention and auxiliary
water storage pools. Source: Areva.
Figure 11. Advanced Boiling Water Reactor, ABWR containment structure. Source: GE.
Figure 12. PWR containment systems in the USA: Large dry containment, 78 percent
(left), Sub-atmospheric containment, 9 percent (center), ice condenser containment, 13
percent (right).
The PWR containment structures in the USA are predominantly large dry posttensioned concrete designs.
Table 3. USA containment structures designs, 1986.
Containment
type
Large dry
Ice condenser
Sub atmospheric
Total
Steel
9
6
15
Reinforced
Concrete
8
2
6
16
Post-tensioned
concrete
33
33
Total
50
8
6
64
Figure 14. German containment structure for the NPP Goesgen PWR, 920 MWe, design
overpressure: 4.9 bar, free volume: 56,000 m3.
Figure 15. Containment structure of the NPP Beznau PWR, 350 MWe, design
overpressure: 2.6 bar, free volume: 37,000 m3.
Figure 16. Steel shell and concrete BWR containment structure showing the pressure
suppression pool.
Table 4. USA containment structures designs, 1986.
Containment
type
Pre Mark I
Mark I
Mark II
Mark III
Total
Steel
4
22
1
2
29
Reinforced
Concrete
2
3
1
6
Post-tensioned
concrete
2
33
Total
4
24
6
3
37
Figure 17. Mark I steel containment design used in 60 percent of USA BWRs.
Figure 18. Mark I light bulb BWR containment and toroidal pressure suppression pool
design. Source: GE.
Figure 19. Comparison of Mark II (left), 16 percent and Mark III (right), 8 percent
containment systems. Source: GE.
In the late 1980s, all BWRs with Mark I containments in the USA were ordered to
be retrofitted with venting systems to help reduce pressure in an overheating situation,
rather than allow it to build up in a containment system that regulators were concerned
could not take it.
A venting system was in place at the Fukushima plants to help relieve built-up
pressure. With electrical power cut off in the aftermath of the earthquake and backup
sources of power either failing or exhausted, workers injected seawater mixed with boron
into the reactor to maintain control reportedly using fire engines pumps. They had
difficulty venting the resulting steam with a report that pressure relief valves were
operated manually.
Figure 21. Cutout through concrete Mark I light bulb BWR containment design. Source:
GE.
Figure 24. Mark III General Electric, GE BWR Containment. Source: GE.
Figure 26. Containment and ventilation system for the NPP Muehleberg BWR, 322
MWe, free volume (dry and wet wells): 5,800 m3, drywell free volume: 3,700 m3, water
volume in pressure suppression pool: 2,100 m3, design overpressure: 3.8 bar.
Figure 27. Containment structure of NPP Leibstadt BWR, 990 MWe, free volume (dry
and wet wells): 44,000 m3, drywell free volume: 7,770 m3, water volume in pressure
suppression pool: 3,760 m3, design overpressure: 1.0 bar.
Figure 30. Siemens Kraft Werk Union, KWU Baulinie 69 BWR containment, Germany.
Figure 31. Siemens Kraft Werk Union, KWU Baulinie 72 BWR containment, Germany.
DISCUSSION
A misconception about nuclear power plants containment structures is that their
massive concrete construction is a protection against the release of radioactive products
in the case of a postulated accident. Such a task is achieved by the overall containment
system as a collection of the Engineered Safety Features, ESFs not just by the concrete
shell alone.
The concrete structures in the existing power plants designs act as insulators
against the controlled release of energy to the environment and would eventually fail, if
the ESFs fail to perform their functions.
They are being replaced by evolutionary designs that allow heat exchange with
the environment, hence avoiding the buildup of pressure in the case of a serious accident
and eventual failure to contain the release of radioactivity in a postulated accident.
A suggested more logical location for the pressure suppression pool in BWR
reactor designs is above the reactor core. This offers the benefit of providing passive
natural circulation convection cooling of the core, upon equalizing the pressure between
the core and the pressure suppression pool, without the need for active pumping requiring
off-site or on-site power supplies in addition to operator intervention subject to human
error. Reactors with the design feature of the water from in the pressure suppression pool
below the core should be replaced with more advanced designs providing passive
convection cooling using the chimney effect in the core and with a pressure suppression
pool positioned above the core.
REFERENCES