Patent classifications
G21C13/087
CONTAINMENT STRUCTURE AND ARRANGEMENT FOR NUCLEAR REACTOR
A safety system for a nuclear reactor includes a first containment structure and a second containment structure. The double containment configuration is designed and configured to meet all design basis accidents and beyond design basis events with independent redundancy. The remaining systems that control reactivity, decay heat removal, and fission product retention may be categorized and designed as business systems, structures, and components, and can therefore be designed and licensed according to an appropriate quality grade for business systems.
ELECTRIC MELTING METHOD FOR FORMING CYLINDER OF PRESSURE VESSEL OF NUCLEAR POWER STATION
An electric melting method for forming a cylinder of a pressure vessel of nuclear power station, in which an electric melting head and a base material are connected to the anode and cathode of a power supply respectively. During the forming of a metal component, the raw metal wire is sent to a surface of the base material by a feeder and the electric melting head to create the electric arc between the raw wire and the base material, wherein the electric arc melts certain of deposited auxiliary material and crates a molten slag pool; a current creates the resistance heat and the electroslag heat; the raw wire is molten under the high-energy heat resource composed of the electric arc heat, the resistance heat and the electroslag heat, and creates a molten pool on partial surface of the base material.
ELECTRIC MELTING METHOD FOR FORMING CYLINDER OF PRESSURE VESSEL OF NUCLEAR POWER STATION
An electric melting method for forming a cylinder of a pressure vessel of nuclear power station, in which an electric melting head and a base material are connected to the anode and cathode of a power supply respectively. During the forming of a metal component, the raw metal wire is sent to a surface of the base material by a feeder and the electric melting head to create the electric arc between the raw wire and the base material, wherein the electric arc melts certain of deposited auxiliary material and crates a molten slag pool; a current creates the resistance heat and the electroslag heat; the raw wire is molten under the high-energy heat resource composed of the electric arc heat, the resistance heat and the electroslag heat, and creates a molten pool on partial surface of the base material.
Very simplified boiling water reactors for commercial electricity generation
Nuclear reactors have very few systems for significantly reduced failure possibilities. Nuclear reactors may be boiling water reactors with natural circulation-enabling heights and smaller, flexible energy outputs in the 0-350 megawatt-electric range. Reactors are fully surrounded by an impermeable, high-pressure containment. No coolant pools, heat sinks, active pumps, or other emergency fluid sources may be present inside containment; emergency cooling, like isolation condenser systems, are outside containment. Isolation valves integral with the reactor pressure vessel provide working and emergency fluid through containment to the reactor. Isolation valves are one-piece, welded, or otherwise integral with reactors and fluid conduits having ASME-compliance to eliminate risk of shear failure. Containment may be completely underground and seismically insulated to minimize footprint and above-ground target area.
Integrated passive cooling containment structure for a nuclear reactor
An integrated passive cooling containment structure for a nuclear reactor includes a concentric arrangement of an inner steel cylindrical shell and an outer steel cylindrical shell that define both a lateral boundary of a containment environment of the nuclear reactor that is configured to accommodate a nuclear reactor and an annular gap space between the inner and outer steel cylindrical shells, a concrete donut structure at a bottom of the annular gap space, and a plurality of concrete columns spaced apart azimuthally around a circumference of the annular gap and extending in parallel from a top surface of the concrete donut structure to a top of the annular gap space. The outer and inner steel cylindrical shells and the concrete donut structure at least partially define one or more coolant channels extending through the annular gap space.
Dry cask storage system having detection apparatus
A dry cask storage system for spent nuclear fuel includes a detection apparatus having a resonant electrical circuit, with resonant electrical circuit being situated within an interior region of a metallic vessel wherein the SNF is situated. The detection apparatus includes a transmitter that generates an excitation pulse that causes the resonant circuit to resonate and to generate a response pulse. The resonant circuit includes an inductor that is formed with a core whose magnetic permeability varies with temperature such that the frequency of the resonant circuit varies as a function of temperature. The response pulse is then used to determine the temperature within the interior of the vessel where the SNF is situated. Pressure detection is also provided.
Dry cask storage system having detection apparatus
A dry cask storage system for spent nuclear fuel includes a detection apparatus having a resonant electrical circuit, with resonant electrical circuit being situated within an interior region of a metallic vessel wherein the SNF is situated. The detection apparatus includes a transmitter that generates an excitation pulse that causes the resonant circuit to resonate and to generate a response pulse. The resonant circuit includes an inductor that is formed with a core whose magnetic permeability varies with temperature such that the frequency of the resonant circuit varies as a function of temperature. The response pulse is then used to determine the temperature within the interior of the vessel where the SNF is situated. Pressure detection is also provided.
Nuclear fuel assembly with multi-pitch wire wrap
A nuclear fuel assembly is constructed with fuel assembly components that are wire wrapped and positioned in hexagonal rings within a fuel assembly duct. The fuel assembly components positioned in an outermost ring of the fuel assembly are wire wrapped with a pitch that is shorter than fuel assembly components positioned at an interior ring of the fuel assembly. The shorter pitch at the outer ring of the fuel assembly increases pressure drop of a coolant fluid at the edge and corner subchannels and thereby reduces the temperature gradient across the fuel assembly, which provides a higher output temperature of the nuclear reactor without substantially increasing peak temperature of the fuel cladding.
Integrated passive cooling containment structure for a nuclear reactor
An integrated passive cooling containment structure for a nuclear reactor includes a concentric arrangement of an inner steel cylindrical shell and an outer steel cylindrical shell that define both a lateral boundary of a containment environment of the nuclear reactor that is configured to accommodate a nuclear reactor and an annular gap space between the inner and outer steel cylindrical shells, a concrete donut structure at a bottom of the annular gap space, and a plurality of concrete columns spaced apart azimuthally around a circumference of the annular gap and extending in parallel from a top surface of the concrete donut structure to a top of the annular gap space. The outer and inner steel cylindrical shells and the concrete donut structure at least partially define one or more coolant channels extending through the annular gap space.
Transition metal-based materials for use in high temperature and corrosive environments
A material (e.g., an alloy) comprises molybdenum, rhenium, and at least one element selected from the group consisting of tellurium, iodine, selenium, chromium, nickel, copper, titanium, zirconium, tungsten, vanadium, and niobium. Methods of forming the material (e.g., the alloy) comprise mixing molybdenum powder, rhenium powder, and a powder comprising at least one element selected from the group consisting of tellurium, iodine, selenium, chromium, nickel, copper, titanium, zirconium, tungsten, vanadium, and niobium. The mixed powders may be coalesced to form the material (e.g., the alloy).