SYSTEMS AND METHODS FOR UNDERWATER TOOL POSITIONING
20200286637 ยท 2020-09-10
Inventors
- Vincent C. Vigliano (Wilmington, NC, US)
- Colin F. Kelemen (Wilmington, NC, US)
- Tyler Hull (Wilmington, NC, US)
- Brandon Novak (Wilmington, NC, US)
Cpc classification
G21C19/19
PHYSICS
B25J11/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B25J19/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
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
G21C19/10
PHYSICS
G21C17/08
PHYSICS
G21C19/20
PHYSICS
International classification
G21C19/10
PHYSICS
G21C17/08
PHYSICS
G21C19/19
PHYSICS
Abstract
Systems and methods position tools about a flooded nuclear reactor during maintenance outages without overhead support or alignment structures being necessary. systems may include annular clamps for support from a reactor steam dam, a telescoping mast, a motor or other drive to extend or retract the mast, and/or an articulator to hold the payload and move the same about any degree of freedom. The telescoping mast may include several nested sections joined to a drive motor. Several different articulators are useable, including those with separate gearings for rotation about perpendicular axes and self-leveling wrists to orient tools in confirmed positions. Systems can be locally or remotely powered and controlled through powered and communicative connections to move about any position in a reactor annulus or core.
Claims
1. An assembly for positioning a payload in a nuclear reactor annulus, wherein the assembly comprises: an extendible shaft configured to join to an annular vehicle; a motor coupled to the shaft and configured to drive extension and retraction in the shaft; and an articulator secured to an end of the shaft and configured to hold a tool, wherein the assembly lacks any weight support or alignment structure vertically above the shaft and motor.
2. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the articulator is configured to rotate the tool independently about two axes.
3. The assembly of claim 2, wherein the articulator includes a central axis about witch the articulator can rotate itself and the tool, and wherein the articulator includes a horizontal axis perpendicular to the central axis about which the articulator can rotate itself and the tool.
4. The assembly of claim 2, wherein the articulator includes a center post rotatably coupled to a center gear, and wherein the articulator includes a bevel carrier rotatable coupled to the center post.
5. The assembly of claim 4, wherein the articulator further includes an offset plate rotatable with respect to a center post of the articulator.
6. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the extendible shaft includes a plurality of nested tubes.
7. The assembly of claim 1, wherein the motor includes a spool and belt attached to an end of the extendible shaft to move the extendible shaft in a vertical direction.
8. A system for complete underwater operations, the machine comprising: an extendible shaft configured to extend in a vertical direction; a motor configured to extend and/or retract the shaft, wherein at least one of the shaft and the motor are configured to join to a clamp traversing about a nuclear reactor perimeter; and an articulator secured to the shaft and configured to secure to a tool and rotate the tool about at least two perpendicular axes, wherein the system is configured to operate when completely submerged about the reactor.
9. The system of claim 8, further comprising: the clamp, wherein the clamp allows circumferential movement of the system along a steam dam about the nuclear reactor perimeter and prevents radial and vertical movement of the clamp relative to the steam dam, and wherein the clamp includes an arm extendible from the clamp, wherein the arm holds at least one of the shaft and the motor.
10. The system of claim 9, wherein the clamp includes at least two rollers configured to roll against opposite sides of the steam dam.
11. The system of claim 10, wherein the clamp includes a plurality of rotatable arms, each of the arms including at least two of the rollers, wherein a first roller of the two rollers is positioned at a pivot point of the rotatable arm, and wherein a second roller of the two rollers is positioned away of the pivot point so as to permit the second roller to rotate against an opposite side of the steam dam from the first roller.
12. The system of claim 11, wherein the clamp includes a frame to which the plurality of rotatable arms rotatably join each at the pivot point, and a plurality of pneumatic cylinders each connected between one of the rotatable arms and the frame.
13. The system of claim 9, wherein the articulator is configured to lock the tool in a horizontal position.
14. The system of claim 9, wherein the shaft is a mast including a plurality of telescoping tubes.
15. The system of claim 14, wherein the motor attaches via a belt to an innermost of the plurality of telescoping tubes.
16. The system of claim 14, wherein the articulator is directly attached to an innermost tube of telescoping tubes making up the mast.
17. A method of inspecting a nuclear reactor internal underwater area, the method comprising: vertically extending a shaft entirely underwater with a motor configured to extend and/or retract the shaft, wherein at least one of the shaft and the motor are configured to join to a clamp traversing about a nuclear reactor perimeter and include no other support; and rotating a tool connected to the shaft underwater about at least two perpendicular axes.
18. The method of claim 17, wherein the tool is a camera is offset from the shaft and rotated at the offset position from the shaft during the inspecting.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the shaft is a mast including a plurality of telescoping sections.
20. The method of claim 19, wherein the camera is in a horizontal orientation and the mast is skewed or offset from a vertical orientation during the inspecting.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTIONS OF THE DRAWINGS
[0006] Example embodiments will become more apparent by describing, in detail, the attached drawings, wherein like elements are represented by like reference numerals, which are given by way of illustration only and thus do not limit the example embodiments herein.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0016] Because this is a patent document, general broad rules of construction should be applied when reading it. Everything described and shown in this document is an example of subject matter falling within the scope of the claims, appended below. Any specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are merely for purposes of describing how to make and use examples. Several different embodiments and methods not specifically disclosed herein may fall within the claim scope; as such, the claims may be embodied in many alternate forms and should not be construed as limited to only examples set forth herein.
[0017] Modifiers first, second, another, etc. may be used herein to describe various items, but they do not confine modified items to any order. These terms are used only to distinguish one element from another; where there are second or higher ordinals, there merely must be that many number of elements, without necessarily any difference or other relationship. For example, a first element could be termed a second element, and, similarly, a second element could be termed a first element unless an order or difference is separately stated. In listing items, the conjunction and/or includes all combinations of one or more of the associated listed items. The use of etc. is defined as et cetera and indicates the inclusion of all other elements belonging to the same group of the preceding items, in any and/or combination(s).
[0018] When an element is related, such as by being connected, coupled, mated, attached, fixed, etc., to another element, it can be directly connected to the other element, or intervening elements may be present. In contrast, when an element is referred to as being directly connected, directly coupled, etc. to another element, there are no intervening elements present. Other words used to describe the relationship between elements should be interpreted in a like fashion (e.g., between versus directly between, adjacent versus directly adjacent, etc.). Similarly, a term such as communicatively connected includes all variations of information exchange and routing between two devices, including intermediary devices, networks, etc., connected wirelessly or not.
[0019] As used herein, axial and vertical directions are the same up or down directions oriented along the major axis of a nuclear reactor, often in a direction oriented with gravity. Transverse directions are perpendicular to the axial and are side-to-side directions at a particular axial height, while radial or circumferential directions are also perpendicular to the axial in an angular direction, such as about a perimeter of a cylindrical nuclear reactor pressure vessel.
[0020] As used herein, singular forms like a, an, and the are intended to include both the singular and plural forms, unless the language explicitly indicates otherwise. Indefinite articles like a and an introduce or refer to any modified term, both previously-introduced and not, while definite articles like the refer to the same previously-introduced term. Possessive terms like comprises, includes, has, or with when used herein, specify the presence of stated features, characteristics, steps, operations, elements, and/or components, but do not themselves preclude the presence or addition of one or more other features, characteristics, steps, operations, elements, components, and/or groups thereof. Rather, exclusive modifiers like only or singular may preclude presence or addition of other subject matter in modified terms.
[0021] The structures and operations discussed below may occur out of the order described and/or noted in the figures. For example, two operations and/or figures shown in succession may in fact be executed concurrently or may sometimes be executed in the reverse order, depending upon the functionality/acts involved. Similarly, individual operations within example methods described below may be executed repetitively, individually or sequentially, so as to provide looping or other series of operations aside from single operations described below. It should be presumed that any embodiment or method having features and functionality described below, in any workable combination, falls within the scope of example embodiments.
[0022] The inventors have recognized that inspections and maintenance operations in a nuclear reactor core consume valuable above-core, and often above-water, space to support and align systems that connect to the actual tools below. This space above the reactor may be shared with a refueling bridge or trolley as well as cranes for core fuel moves and other maintenance during an outage. As such, the inventors have newly recognized a need for tooling that can be operated and supported outside this above-reactor space that is needed for other refueling and maintenance activities, while still allowing alignment and positioning verification, movement across a reactor inner and outer diameter, and support and powering not from this above reactor space. The inventors have developed example embodiments and methods described below to address these and other problems recognized by the Inventors with unique solutions enabled by example embodiments.
[0023] The present invention is systems and methods for no-overhead reactor maintenance and inspection. In contrast to the present invention, the few example embodiments and example methods discussed below illustrate just a subset of the variety of different configurations that can be used as and/or in connection with the present invention.
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[0028] Although mast 150 is shown as the vertical-extending portion of example embodiment system in
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[0033] Any tool or other device, including cameras, ultrasonic testers, welders, hydrolazers, jets, etc. may be attached to any articulator 160A-C and/or wrist 170 for desired powering and positioning without using space above the reactor for the same. Power and control signals may be provided through local batteries and/or motors as well as wireless connections, as well as the power and control wiring discussed above. Although power and control wiring my extend vertically above example embodiment system 100, these are no weight-bearing or aligning and thus require minimal space above the reactor.
[0034] Example embodiment system 100 may be fabricated of resilient materials that are compatible with a nuclear reactor environment without substantially changing in physical properties, such as becoming substantially radioactive, melting, brittling, or retaining/adsorbing radioactive particulates. For example, several known structural materials, including austenitic stainless steels 304 or 316, XM-19, zirconium alloys, nickel alloys, Alloy 600, etc. may be chosen for any element of components of example system 100. Joining structures and directly-touching elements may be chosen of different and compatible materials to prevent fouling.
[0035] Given the variety of example functions described herein, example embodiment systems may be used in several methods to provide desired functionality. It will be appreciated by one skilled in the art that example embodiments may be varied through routine experimentation and without further inventive activity. For example, distinct articulators and wrists may be useable together in some examples, through device placement in examples. Variations are not to be regarded as departure from the spirit and scope of the exemplary embodiments, and all such modifications as would be obvious to one skilled in the art are intended to be included within the scope of the following claims.