Nuclear fuel failure protection system
11728057 · 2023-08-15
Assignee
Inventors
- Michael D. HEIBEL (Broomfield, CO, US)
- Jorge V. Carvajal (Irwin, PA, US)
- Shawn C. STAFFORD (Scottdale, PA, US)
- Jeffrey L. ARNDT (Pittsburgh, PA, US)
Cpc classification
Y02E30/30
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A system that provides a direct indication of peak fuel rod centerline temperature and peak fuel rod clad temperature than conventionally inferred from the power distribution by directly and continuously measuring the fuel temperatures of the fuel pellets in one or more of the hottest fuel elements in the core. The peak fuel rod clad temperature is then obtained from the maximum measured peak fuel rod centerline temperature in combination with the maximum coolant core exit temperature and the minimum coolant flow rate.
Claims
1. A system to determine a maximum measured internal fuel rod temperature and a peak clad temperature of one or more of fuel rods in an operating nuclear core, the system comprising: sensors disposed in one or more of the fuel rods and being structured to directly measure the temperatures at one or more locations within the one or more of the fuel rods; an instrument thimble disposed outside the one or more fuel rods and being structured to receive the measured temperatures from the sensors; signal processing elements structured to receive signals indicative of the temperatures measured by the sensors and to: identify a hottest temperature within the one or more fuel rods as the maximum measured internal fuel rod temperature and a core location where the hottest temperature is measured, receive a measured maximum temperature of coolant exiting the core at the core location where the hottest temperature is measured and the minimum flow rate of the coolant, and determine the peak clad temperature from the maximum measured internal fuel rod temperature, the maximum temperature of the coolant exiting the core at the core location where the hottest temperature is measured and the minimum flow rate of the coolant.
2. The system of claim 1, wherein the sensors are passive.
3. The system of claim 1, wherein the instrument thimble is structured to interrogate the sensors.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein at least one of the sensors includes a resonant circuit structured to change its resonant frequency based on the directly measured temperature.
5. The system of claim 1, wherein at least one of the sensors includes a liquid metal thermometer, a ferritic core, and an inductor coil, wherein the liquid metal thermometer is structured to cause the ferritic core to move into or out of the inductor coil based on changes in temperature.
6. The system of claim 1, wherein the signal processing elements are structured to receive the signals from the instrument thimble.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A further understanding of the invention can be gained from the following description of the preferred embodiments when read in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(6)
(7) The sensor system also includes an instrument thimble 30 including a corresponding transmitting and/or receiving element 32. In some example embodiments of the disclosed concept, the transmitting and/or receiving element 32 in the instrument thimble 30 is structured to interrogate the transmitting and/or receiving element 22 in the sensor 20. For example, the transmitting and/or receiving element 32 in the instrument thimble 30 may interrogate the transmitting and/or receiving element 32 in the sensor 20 by outputting a radio frequency signal and sensing the output of the transmitting and/or receiving element 22 in the sensor 20, similar to the operation of a radio frequency identification (RFID) system. The output of the sensor 20, such as its oscillation frequency, may be indicative of characteristics within the fuel rod 10 such as pellet temperature 12. For example, center-line fuel temperature can be correlated to the inductance change in a resonant circuit of the sensor 20 resulting from a temperature change within the fuel rod 10 and, therefore, the resonant frequency change resulting from the change in inductance, can be detected at the instrument thimble 30.
(8) The sensor system may also include another transmitting and/or receiving element 42 and signal processing elements 44 located in a mild environment 40, such as outside the nuclear reactor core. The equipment located in the mild environment may be structured to receive outputs of the instrument thimble 30, and may be used to process the output of the instrument thimble 30. For example, the signal processing elements 44, may include a processor and/or memory structured to determine temperature characteristics, such as the maximum measured internal fuel rod temperature (T.sub.M), based on the output of the instrument thimble 30. The signal processing elements 44 may use T.sub.M to calculate the limiting Peak Clad Temperature (Tc). A Reactor Protection System (RPS) may then use the values of T.sub.M and Tc to determine whether a reactor trip should occur to ensure the required health and safety of the general public is maintained under all operating conditions.
(9) It will be appreciated that any suitable type of sensor may be employed as sensor 20. Some example embodiments of sensors are described herein in connection with
(10)
(11) The example embodiment shown in
(12) As shown in
(13)
(14) The sensor shown in
(15) The acquired temperature data from the foregoing embodiment may be measured continuously. In principal, the temperature sensors used by the device described above could be placed at multiple axial positions in the fuel rods in the fuel assemblies located in the reactor core. This includes the top and bottom of the fuel rod and could include additional axial positions in the fuel rod. A number of these sensors distributed in the fuel rods expected to have the highest power level in the reactor can be used to determine the most limiting fuel temperature. The fuel rods having the highest power level can be determined from a measure of the core power distribution which is routinely run. When the centerline fuel temperature measurements are used in conjunction with the measured corresponding maximum coolant fluid temperature and minimum coolant flow rate obtained from existing sensors, the value of T.sub.M can be used to calculate the value of Tc. Any suitable existing sensor may be employed to measure the maximum coolant fluid temperature and minimum coolant flow rate. The RPS may then use the values of T.sub.M and Tc to determine whether a reactor trip should occur to ensure the required health and safety of the general public is maintained under all operating conditions.
(16) M. M. El-Wakil, “Nuclear Heat Transport”, American Nuclear Society, copyright 1971, Third Printing, Section 5-6, which is incorporated in its entirety herein by reference, provides a description of how the value of Tc can be generated based on knowledge of T.sub.M, coupled with the surrounding bulk coolant temperature (T.sub.F) and knowledge of the heat transfer characteristics of the fuel pellet and fuel rod structural materials. T.sub.F is determined from the maximum coolant fluid temperature and minimum coolant flow rate. An expression for Tc as a function of time, derived from a corresponding measured T.sub.M and T.sub.F, coupled with known heat transfer characteristics of the fuel pellets and fuel rod sheath is:
(17)
Where: r=fuel pellet diameter c=cladding thickness L=fuel rod length kf=fuel pellet thermal conductivity kc=cladding thermal conductivity Ar=cross section area of fuel pellet Ar+c=cross sectional area of fuel pellet and cladding h=cladding heat transfer coefficient by convection
(18) An additional adjustment to the form of ω(t) to account for the thermal resistivity of a gap between the fuel pellet and cladding may be added by those skilled in the art to account for expected changes in fuel characteristics.
(19) The values of Tc will need to be increased to account for uncertainties associated with the values of the constants, the measured values of T.sub.F and T.sub.M, and the expected difference between the limiting value of Tc and the value of Tc determined at the position of the measured value of T.sub.M. In the preferred embodiment of this approach, the adjustment to the value of Tc at the position of the measured T.sub.M to obtain a limiting Tc may be determined by those skilled in the art from a continuously measured or predicted axial power distribution (AO) for the instrumented locations. A similar approach is used to adjust the value of the measured T.sub.M values to calculate the value of the peak T.sub.M as a function of time. This can be accomplished by those skilled in the art resulting in an expression for adjusted peak clad temperature of the form:
T.sub.M.sup.A(t)(1+β(t))T.sub.M(t)
T.sub.C.sup.A(t)=(1+θ(t))T.sub.C(t) Eq. 4
(20) Once the distributions of T.sub.M.sup.A(t) and T.sub.C.sup.A(t) values at a given time are determined from measured or expected reactor power distribution information in the fuel rods expected to have the highest relative power located in the fuel assemblies expected to have the highest relative power, the limiting values of T.sub.M(t) and T.sub.C.sup.A(t) can be determined. A turbine runback and/or reactor trip can be established at a properly conservative setpoint for each parameter.
(21) The foregoing methodology enables the reactor protection system to determine whether to trip the reactor using data more directly aligned with the key parameters of importance in determining whether the fuel rods will experience a Departure from Nucleate Boiling (DNB) or fuel pellet melting. This methodology eliminates the need for complex nuclear power distribution measurement codes and DNB prediction and analysis methods. Furthermore, the foregoing methodology may be used in both existing and future pressurized water reactor, boiling water reactor and light water reactor types. Additionally, the sensors needed for this technique may be integrated into the fuel assemblies.
(22)
(23) The method of
(24) The systems and method described herein provide improved measurement and calculation of T.sub.M and Tc, while prior systems and methods made more conservative assumptions that limit the operating power levels and power distributions allowed in reactor designs. The systems and methods according to the disclosed concept allow fuel rods to operate much closer to the actual safety limits for fuel pellets and cladding operation, which can improve energy generate for the same amount of fuel by 28%.
(25) While specific embodiments of the invention have been described in detail, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various modifications and alternatives to those details could be developed in light of the overall teachings of the disclosure. Accordingly, the particular embodiments disclosed are meant to be illustrative only and not limiting as to the scope of the invention which is to be given the full breadth of the appended claims and any and all equivalents thereof.