Showing posts with label UCS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UCS. Show all posts

Monday, December 17, 2012

14 Reactor Safety Questions That Edison Needs To Answer Regarding San Onofre



The 14 most important questions that the DAB Safety Team feels must be answered before the NRC, Atomic Safety Licensing Board, NRC Offices of Nuclear Reactor Regulations and Nuclear Regulatory Research can complete their investigation regarding the reasonableness of the actions of SCE with respect to San Onofre steam generator replacements and their subsequent safe operation:

1 - According to some Newspaper Comments and Industry Reports in 2004, the going price for each of the four 620 Ton CE Replacement Steam Generator was estimated to be between 175-200 Million Dollars (Per Piece). How did SCE CNO/President in 2004 convince MHI to build such large, complicated, innovative and complex steam generators for 569 million dollars, which is almost 130 million dollars short of the market price and funds approved by CPCU? 
Note: The steam generator project execution began in 2004 after a SCE cost-benefit analysis, which revealed that replacement of major parts and components would save $1bn for Southern California Edison customers during the plant's license period. Instead, the ratepayers have lost $1bn in less than 2 years due to SCE’s in-house design teams mistakes.
2 - Since MHI only had experience building Fort Calhoun’s Generator of less than 320 tons, how did the SCE Engineers Technically Qualify MHI?
3 - Which other utilities’ QA Programs, did SCE take the credit for, to approve Mitsubishi’s quality assurance program. Fort Calhoun? French? Belgium? Japan?
4 – Why did SCE did not apply to NRC for increasing the plugging limit for the Old CE Generators, so they would have had more time to think, research and not rush according to Michael Peevey?
5 - Which CE Replacement Generator US Utilities did SCE benchmark to develop such detailed design and performance specifications or did they just modify the CE Old Generator Specifications with New Industry Information?  Were the SCE engineers, who wrote, checked and approved the specifications steam generator experts or was another steam generator expert in the background, who directed all the SCE work?
6 - Where did all the claims of challenges, reward, innovations and teamwork between SCE and MHI go wrong?
7 - Were the SCE Engineers sent to Japan to check MHI work and approve documents /test results qualified in that field, or they were just training/sight-seeing?
8 - Who at SCE made the decision to make all these numerous design changes and determined the changes were "Like for Like" and did not need a Licensing Amendment Process?
9 - Which SCE Engineer provided all these changes, information and documents to which NRC Engineer, who then made the decision that it was OK to proceed without a full Licensing Amendment Process?
10 - Which SCE engineer(s) approved/validated the MHI Thermal-Hydraulic FIT-III FIVATS code Inputs and Calculations?
11 - To get 10% heat transfer equivalent by switching from Alloy 600 To alloy 690, SCE needed to add 935 tubes, but they only added 377 tubes. What happened to the balance of 568 tubes? Did the SCE Engineers tell MHI to increase the length of 9727 tubes and by how much to make up for the 533 tubes?
12 – Why did the SCE Engineers did not question the MHI benchmarking, verification and validation of the FIT-III thermal-hydraulic model?
13 – Why did the SCE engineers did not contact their counter parts at PVNGS for information/advice, since PVNGS has the Largest CE Replacement Generators (800 Tons) in the world, were built in early 2001-2005 time frames and are running successfully?
14 - Were the original CE Steam Generators and new replacement generators exact in Thermal Output (MWe) or were their minor differences?

14 Reactor Safety Questions That Edison Needs To Answer Regarding San Onofre
14 Reactor Safety Questions
That Edison Needs To Answer
Regarding San Onofre 

The DAB Safety Team has transmitted the following report this morning to the Chairman of the NRC, Atomic Safety Licensing Board, NRC Offices of Nuclear Reactor Regulations and Nuclear Regulatory Research:
 SCE’s Embarrassing Technical Performance Trying To Justify A Restart
 Of Unit 2, To The NRC, At Their November 30, 2012 Public Meeting.”


The 78 page technical document includes 14 questions that affect US Reactor SAFETY, that the NRC, NRR and RES Regulators need to ask SCE to answer at their Dec 18, 2012 NRR/RES Meeting.

 ==========
Snip From The Report:

Unit 2 now has hundreds of times more bad tubes and a thousand times more indications of wear on its tubes than the typical reactor in the country with a new steam generator, and nearly five times as many plugged tubes as the rest of the replacement steam generators, over a comparable operating period, in the country combined.  Therefore, the restart of Unit 2 with thousands of degraded tubes present a formidable challenge to the safe restart of Unit 2 plan by making it highly vulnerable to localized steam dry-outs, 100% void fractions, fluid elastic instability, flow-induced random vibrations, cascading tube ruptures during unanticipated operational occurrences and or Main Steam Line Breaks.  In short, SCE is trying to Restart Unit 2’s Degraded RSG’s, which are outside the NORM of the NRC Regulations.
The NRC Chairman has stated that SCE is responsible for the work of its vendors and contractors. Westinghouse states that none of the MHI fabrication issues were extensively analyzed in the SCE root cause evaluation.”  It is the DAB Safety Team’s opinion that SCE claims that insufficient contact forces in Unit 3 Tube-to-AVB Gaps ALONE caused tube "to" tube wear are misleading, erroneous and designed to put the blame on MHI for purposes of making SCE look good in the public’s eyes and for collecting insurance money from MHI’s manufacturing so called defects. 
=========

The full report will also be posted on the web at this link: San Onofre Papers
###
The DAB Safety Team: Don, Ace and a BATTERY of safety-conscious San Onofre insiders plus industry experts from around the world who wish to remain anonymous.  These volunteers assist the DAB Safety Team by sharing knowledge, opinions and insight but are in no way responsible for the contents of the DAB Safety Team's reports.  We continue to work together as a Safety Team to prepare additional San Onofre Papers, which explain in detail why a SONGS restart is unsafe at any power level.  For more information from The DAB Safety Team, please visit the link above.
Our Mission: To prevent a Trillion Dollar Eco-Disaster, like Fukushima, from happening in the USA.


Press Release

The DAB Safety Team: December 17, 2012
Media Contact: Don Leichtling (619) 296-9928 or Ace Hoffman (760) 720-7261 
Concerning SCE’s NRC Technical Presentation on 12-11-30
Copyright December 17, 2012 by The DAB Safety Team. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast or redistributed without crediting the DAB Safety Team. The contents cannot be altered without the Written Permission of the DAB Safety Team Leader and/or the DAB Safety Team’s Attorneys.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

San Onofre: Too Close To Having Two Nuclear Accidents


Decommission San Onofre

SONGS Insider Secret: Southern California came close to having a level 3 nuclear incident (or worse, a nuclear disaster), at both SONGS Unit 2 and Unit 3.
A radioactive disaster was narrowly averted because of the off chance discovery that one of Unit 2 SG tubes had experienced a loss of 90 % percent of its wall thickness!  This was discovered before the tube had a chance to fail (like the eight tubes that failed in-situ testing in Unit 3) because Unit 2 happened to be shut down for a scheduled refueling outage, so its SG tubing were also inspected after the radioactive SG tubing leakage problems were discovered in Unit 3. Note: These SG tubes have a wall thickness (wear) plugging limit of 35%, so this single tube remained in use long after its safety limitation had been exceeded by almost double (55%)!   A single tube failure does not sound important, unless you realize it contains highly radioactive reactor core coolant that is under both very high pressure and temperature; then any leak is very bad (think massive radioactive atmospheric releases). A single tube rupture can also lead to a cascade of tube ruptures.

A Perfect Example of highly radioactive reactor core coolant: in 1991, leakage of about 55 tons of primary coolant occurred due to the failure of one SG tube in a steam generator built by Mitsubishi in the No. 2 pressurized water reactor at the Mihama nuclear power station in Japan.  At the same time, water pressure in the core had dropped drastically and the ECCS kicked in, flooding the reactor and shutting it down.  If the core had been left exposed, a meltdown -- an overheating of the fuel that can, if uncontrolled, lead to a large release of radioactivity -- could have occurred. In the following week an estimated 7 million Bq was released into the sea and an estimated 5 billion Bq of radioactive gas was released into the atmosphere.  This tube rupture caused the first International Nuclear Events Scale (INES) level 3 nuclear incident in Japan and ignited social concerns all over Japan because it shattered the nuclear industry’s myth of 100% safe reactors! SONGS MSLB  Analysis + 12-11-19, page 14


To date, there have been too many guesses, too many probabilities built around gamed safety margins and too many already damaged tubes (thousands of which have not been visually inspected) that any one or combination of, could cause a major nuclear accident even without something like a Main Steam Line Break (MSLB) or a big quake!

Given the documented UNSAFE condition of Unit 2, there is no excuse for SCE to even consider seeking a restart of Unit 2 except greed.  The NRC needs to make that crystal clear to SCE, otherwise they, like SCE, have failed the public’s trust! – The DAB Safety Team

=================================================================================   

Nuclear Safety Is No Accident

The DAB Safety Team along with the support of an ever-growing number of SONGS Concerned Insiders and Whistleblowers have prepared this analysis, which is consistent with the conclusions presented in the publicly available reports provided earlier on this subject by:
·       Internationally Known Nuclear Consultant Arnie Gundersen and his team of Anonymous Industry insiders, who had lengthy careers in the design, fabrication, and operation of nuclear steam generators.
·       Professor Daniel Hirsch and Internationally Known Nuclear Consultant Dale Bridenbaugh.
·       Publicly available posted documentation by Dr. Joram Hopenfeld, a retired engineer from the Office of Nuclear Regulatory Research and NRC's Advisory Committee, and
·       David A. Lochbaum, Director of the Nuclear Safety Project for the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS).
Background

Quote No 1: SCE is ultimately responsible for the work done by their vendors and contractors.  NRC Chairman Allison Macfarlane
Quote No 2: Both San Onofre units will remain shut down until repairs are made and we and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission are satisfied it is safe to operate. Pete Dietrich
Quote No 3:  Running the reactor at a 30 percent reduction in power may not fix the problems but rather make them worse or shift the damage to another part of the generators. It’s a real gamble to restart either unit without undertaking repairs or replacing the damaged equipment. Arnie Gundersen
Quote No 4: AREVA States, "The nominal distance between extrados and intrados locations of neighboring U-bends in the same plane ranges from 0.25 inches to 0.325 inches due to the tube indexing. There are 36 U-bends in Unit 2 SG E-088 and 34 in SG E-089 with a separation less than or equal to 0.050 inches. The U-bends with the smaller separation distances are much better candidates for wear by rubbing yet do not exhibit TTW.”
Based on SONGS Unit 3 experience, this behavior can change because of plugged/staked tubes due to shifting of localized steam-dry out regions in the hot leg U-Tube Bundle region of these U-bends with these extremely low clearances.  These extremely low clearances can cause very high steam velocities, which can then result in fluid elastic instability, EVEN during the proposed 150-day monitoring period EVEN at reduced power levels and EVEN  at higher steam pressures.


The DAB Safety Team Solve the Big Mystery Behind The Destruction of SONGS Unit 3 Replacement Steam Generators (RSG’s) And The Limited Damage to Unit 2 RSG’s:

Start With Some Basic Thermodynamics: At lower steam pressures (~833 psi), steam-water mixture has a saturation temperature of 5230F and more internal energy aka HEAT (1198.2 Btu/lb.) as compared with higher steam pressure (~942 psi), steam-water mixture has saturation temperature of 537.50F and less internal energy aka HEAT (1194.7 Btu/lb.).  Therefore, you can generate more Megawatts out of the steam generator running it at lower steam pressure, if you supply more reactor thermal power (HEAT) to the steam generator tubes from the reactor.  Lower steam pressures combined with high reactor thermal power (HEAT), high steam velocities and narrow tube clearances also promotes bad things, like localized steam dry-out regions (vapor fraction >99%) in the hot leg side of the U-Tube bundle, which can cause fluid elastic instability, flow-induced random and severe vibrations, and excessive hydrodynamic pressures (aka Mitsubishi Flowering Effect).  These adverse effects can, in turn cause excessive tube-to-tube fretting wear leading to cascading tube leakages and or ruptures, increased tube support clearances and/or tube-to-AVB gaps, and even deformation of the anti-vibration bar structure.  Tube-tube/AVB wear and deformation (aka Mitsubishi Flowering Effect) of the floating anti-vibration bar structure without structural beams and lateral/mid-span supports causes redistribution of tube-to-tube/AVB gaps and clearances, when the steam generator reverts back from hot operating to cold conditions.  This redistribution of gaps can lead to differences in measurements during steam generator refueling inspections compared with the original manufacturing/design gaps in the cold condition and can lead to wrong projections and misleading conclusions regarding past and future cycles operating conditions.

Add Some Operational History: The original SONGS CE Model 3410 steam generators (OSG’s) were rated for 1705 MWt reactor thermal power.  Over the years of operation of the SONGS OSG’s, it became evident that the steam generator tubes, made predominantly of Alloy 600, were susceptible to primary water stress corrosion cracking (PWSSC). This corrosion mechanism resulted in tube degradation necessitating plugging large numbers of tubes after each tube inspection. In addition, the SONGS OSG’s design had shown to be susceptible to tube through-wall wear and severe corrosion of the tube supports. Continuing to operate with these highly degraded steam generators involved substantial economic risks from forced outages, extended refueling outages, as well as the direct costs of inspections and repairs.  SCE’s bid specification required that the stay cylinder feature of the original steam generators be eliminated to maximize the number of tubes that could be installed in the replacement steam generators and to mitigate past problems with tube wear at tube supports caused by relatively cool water and high flow velocities in the central part of the tube bundle. Mitsubishi employed broached trefoil tube support plates instead of the egg crate supports in the original design. In addition to providing for better control of tube to support plate gaps and easier assembly, the broached tube support plates were intended to address past problems with the egg crate supports by providing less line of contact and faster flow between the tubes and support plates, reducing the potential for deposit buildup and corrosion.  Mitsubishi selected a u-bend configuration for the upper part of the tube bundle instead of the square bend design of the original steam generators based on its experience that u-bends were easier to fabricate and support and were easier to inspect.

The original steam generators installed throughout the domestic fleet of pressurized water  reactors, including SONGS, experienced widespread corrosion of the tubes and tube support plates, stress corrosion cracking of the tubes, and wear at tube supports.  These problems led to the replacement of nearly all of the original steam generators, in most cases well before the end of their design lifetime.  For SONGS, the design of the replacement steam generators included a number of design changes to correct life limiting problems with the original steam generators, based in part on consideration of SONGS-specific and industry-wide operating experience. This included use of more corrosion resistant materials for the tubing and tube support plates to mitigate corrosion. The tubes in the new Replacement Steam Generators (RSGs) were fabricated with thermally treated Alloy 690, which has superior corrosion resistance.  The only drawback the new Alloy 690 has, is that it has a 10% less thermal conductivity/heat transfer rate compared with old tube alloy 600. 

Therefore, to achieve the thermal output of 1729 MWt from the new RSGs as approved by the NRC in 2001 SONGS Power Uprate Application, SCE engineers needed to install 11% more tubes in the new RSGs.  By removal of the stay cylinder from the OSGs, there was enough space to add only 4% (377) more tubes. Since there was no room to add the additional 7% tubes, SCE increased the length of each tube in the U-Tube Bundle (Outside the Industry NORM and is partially responsible for Mitsubishi Flowering effect) by more than 7 inches to obtain 1729 MWt out of the RSGs.  The Unit 2 RSGs were built with bigger tube-to-AVB Gaps and no in-plane protection from vibrations caused by potential fluid elastic instability conditions, because the OSGs did not experience that phenomena.

Based on information from anonymous SONGS operations personal, the root cause team of concerned insiders, a cursory review of plant records (plant procedures, system descriptions and plant daily briefing sheets), engineering calculations performed using SONGS procedures and review of NRC AIT Report, SCE Operators were running Unit 2 RSGs at higher steam pressures (~863-942 psi) and lower reactor thermal power (HEAT 1715-1725 MWt) for almost 22 months with no reported and detected abnormality (6 tubes with 28 to 90 percent wear of the tube wall thickness due to retainer bar vibrations).  Because of the short measured lengths of these flaws, only the 90 percent indication was in-situ pressure tested as part of condition monitoring. The affected tube was successfully pressurized to 5300 psi with no leakage (Southern Californians were saved from another nuclear accident). 

The Unit 3 SG manufacturing process used more accurate and tighter tolerances, which improved tube-to-AVB alignment such that tubes had more contact forces with AVB's and provided an effective “zero” tube-to-AVB gap under operating (hot) conditions. According to trusted SONGS operation insiders, SCE Engineers were convinced that Unit 3 RSGs were built better than Unit 2 RSGs in terms of providing in-plane protection due to better control of tube-to-AVB gap. Therefore, SCE Engineers decide to operate Unit 3 RSGs at lower steam pressures (~833 psi) to get more Megawatts out of the RSGs by supplying more reactor thermal power (HEAT ~1729 -1739 MWt) to the RSG’s tubes from the Unit 3 reactor.  This was unfortunately their biggest miscalculation.  What happened next is well known, because of the low steam pressures (~833 psi), combined with low tube clearances (SONGS design:  0.250 inches; some found as low as 0.050 inches) and no effective in-plane tube support protection, the high reactor power (HEAT) resulted in fluid elastic instability, flow-induced random vibrations, excessive hydrodynamic pressures and localized steam dry-out regions (vapor fraction >99.6%) which resulted in the destruction of SONGS Unit 3 RSGs (1 tube leak, 8 tubes failures at MSLB conditions, 1800 tubes with tube-to-tube /anti-vibrations bars/support plates wear – this amount of damage is unprecedented in the history of the US Operating Nuclear “fleet”).   Fluid elastic instability and Mitsubishi Flowering Effects increased the tube-to-AVB gaps, decreased tube-to-tube clearances and created lower and insufficient contact forces in Unit 3, which were described inaccurately by the NRC and SCE as a MHI manufacturing defect , presumably due to political and/or financial reasons. 

After 22 months of operation the severity of wear in Unit 2 was determined to be similar to that experienced by Unit 3 after 11 months of operation.  The steam generator in Unit 2 had about 2600 wear indications at AVB’s compared to about 3400 wear indications in Unit 3. Without an effective in-plane support system, these high fluid velocities and localized steam dry-out regions resulted in very large or uncontrolled vibrations (amplitudes) of tubes in the in-plane direction and caused fluid elastic instability, flow-induced random vibrations, excessive hydrodynamic pressures and increased tube-to-AVB gaps and created insufficient contact forces in Unit 3 


Analysis Solves The Mystery: High steam pressures (~863-933 psi) and lower reactor thermal power (HEAT 1715-1725 MWt), coupled with low tube clearances and no in-plane tube support design accompanied with high steam velocities caused flow-induced random vibrations and excessive hydrodynamic pressures, which resulted in SONGS Unit 2 RSGs damage (high tube-to-anti-vibrations bars/support plates wear).  Since the steam pressures were higher, the void fractions were less than 98.5% and no fluid elastic instability occurred in Unit 2, which is consistent with the Westinghouse finding.  The NRC, AREVA, Westinghouse, MHI and SCE all missed this key operational observation in the NRC AIT Report, SCE Unit 3 Root Cause Evaluation and SCE Unit 2 restart Plan.  MHI indirectly alluded to this fact in their technical report but did not say it publicly for reasons unknown to the DAB Safety Team -- perhaps they were afraid of backlash from SCE and NRC.  At least one person working at SONGS discussed this fact about operational differences with other personnel between Units 2 and 3, but nobody listened to him.  His findings were intentionally or unintentionally ignored because everybody inside SCE was focused on blaming MHI in order to recover the insurance money and/or absolving themselves of all blame.  The DAB Safety Team is sure that MHI will pursue this fact during arbitration proceeding to absolve them of this blame and protect their reputation as a builder of high quality RSG’s.


Public Expectations: The public expects that the NRC complies with President Barack Obama, Senator Barbara Boxer and the NRC Chairman’s Open Government Initiative by using the Reactor Oversight Process, when it audits SCE’s Licensing Basis Documents, facility procedures/records, 10 CFR 50.59 Safety Evaluations, Unit 2 Restart Documents and issues/approves Safety Evaluation, License Amendment Applications and Inspection Reports, Responses to Confirmatory Action Letters and other enforcement violations, as appropriate.   The NRC must complete its mission of ensuring public safety with transparency and public involvement by issuing all documents, emails, telephone records along with holding open and trial-like public hearings without any time limitations from SCE, its vendors and/or contractors.


Questions which must be answered by NRC and SCE prior to any Unit 2 restart: The questions which NRC in its 95 page AIT Report the SCE and its vendors in their 1200 page San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station Unit 2 Return to Service Report have not answered completely, convincingly and unanimously are as follows:

(1)  Whether fluid elastic instability occurred, occurred for a limited time or did not occur at all in the SONGS Unit 2 Replacement Steam Generators (RSG’s)?


(2)  What was the contribution of fluid elastic instability and “Mitsubishi flowering effect” in increasing the Unit 3 Tube-to-AVB gaps, which were built better than Unit 2 and designed to provide an effective “zero” tube-to-AVB gap under operating (hot) conditions?

(3)  How were the SONGS RSG’s specified, designed and fabricated as comparable replacements on a like-for-like basis for the original steam generators in terms of fit, form and function with such numerous untested and unanalyzed design changes under the 10CFR50.59 rule?


(4)  Were these numerous untested and unanalyzed design changes responsible for damage to SONGS RSG’s?

(5)  Were SONGS RSG’s operating beyond their design basis or Industry NORMs and if so, how did that impact the degradation of RSGs?
 
(6)  Was this degradation the fault of SCE’s in-house design team, their Performance Specifications coupled with their numerous design changes and/or the MHI Fabrication/Testing Technology combined with Faulty Thermal-Hydraulic Computer Codes, which caused the unprecedented damage to SONGS RSG’s

(7)  Are the Unit 2 RSG’s qualified in the “As-designed and Degraded Condition” for a MSLB or other Anticipated Operational transients?



The DAB Safety Team and the Public expects that SCE and their three NEI Qualified, “US Nuclear Power Plant Designers”, Westinghouse, AREVA and MHI will revise their reports and arrive at concise and clear answers (meeting the NRC Quality Assurance requirements as stated by NRC Chairman Allison Macfarlane) to the puzzling public safety questions in the Unit 2 Return to Service Report.

SONGS Poor RSG’s Design: Due to unsubstantiated claims, complacency, challenges and rewards of innovative steam generators, time and financial pressures, both inexperienced Southern California Edison (SCE) and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) Engineers did a very poor job of Industry Benchmarking and keeping up with the Academic Research Papers on the basic lessons of steam generator design (how to prevent the adverse effects of fluid elastic instability, flow-induced random vibrations, excessive hydrodynamic pressures and preventing localized steam dry-out regions observed in SONGS Units 2 and 3 RSG’s with high steam flows to produce more megawatts than the original steam generators (1729 MWt vs. 1705 Mwt)).  In addition, SCE made numerous untested and unanalyzed design changes under the pretense of 10 CFR 50.59 process (like for like change) and intentionally (Public Perception) avoided the NRC 50.90 License Amendment Process.  These factors contributed to the catastrophic failure of a 570 million dollars piece of equipment vital to the safety of Southern California.

SCE Restart Report for SONGS Unit 2: To address the tube leak and its causes, SCE assembled a technical team from MPR Associates, AREVA, Babcock & Wilcox Canada, PVNGS, EPRI, INPO, Westinghouse, Intertek APTECH and MHI, as well as experienced consultants including former NRC executives and a research scientist.  On October 3, 2012, SCE submitted a 1200 page report prepared by these experts (Under the closed Scrutiny, Guidance and Leadership of SCE Managers) to NRC Region IV. The SCE Root Cause Evaluation Report, Operational Assessments reports prepared by SCE, AREVA and Westinghouse, and MHI Technical reports conflict and contradict with each other on the causes and extent of degradation pertaining to the fluid elastic instability in SONGS Unit 2 Replacement Steam Generators (RSGs) and Tube-to-AVB gaps in both Unit 3 and Unit 2 RSG’s.  MHI truly states that specific causes that resulted in tubes being susceptible to fluid-elastic excitation are not yet completely known.  


PRESS RELEASE 
The DAB Safety Team: November 28, 2012

Media Contact: Don Leichtling (619) 296-9928 or Ace Hoffman (760) 720-7261
Copyright November 28, 2012 by The DAB Safety Team. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast or redistributed without crediting the DAB Safety Team. The contents cannot be altered without the Written Permission of the DAB Safety Team Leader and/or the DAB Safety Team’s Attorneys.