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- Xref: sparky sci.environment:14356 sci.energy:6722
- Newsgroups: sci.environment,sci.energy
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!emory!rsiatl!jgd
- From: jgd@dixie.com (John De Armond)
- Subject: Neutron embrittlement (was Re: Nuclear Power and Climate Change)
- Message-ID: <5lzr5f+@dixie.com>
- Date: Thu, 07 Jan 93 20:30:05 GMT
- Organization: Dixie Communications Public Access. The Mouth of the South.
- Lines: 91
-
- kevin@nuchat.sccsi.com (Kevin Brown) writes:
-
- >What's the current state of university research into nuclear power? It
- >seems to me that a university with a nuclear reactor would be a perfect
- >candidate to perform a number of the required experiments needed to get
- >the answers to these questions.
-
- There are two problems. One, many US universities have shut down or
- are thinking of shutting down their NucE programs. Sad. Second and
- more directly applicable to the problem, none of the typical University
- research reactors can generate the sustained neutron flux needed for this
- kind of testing. A gross oversimplification is that neutron flux and
- power output track. Some specialized reactors such as DOE's Fast Flux
- Test Reactor (FFTF) can and does do the job.
-
- >If we don't know the answers to the questions you raise above, would it
- >not be a good idea to get those answers?
-
- The short answer is that neutron enbrittlement is well characterized
- and has been for a long time. I quote from a Westinghouse systems
- overview book copyrighted in 1968:
-
- The effects of neutron irradiation on the physical properties of the
- vessel materials is of primary concern in reactor vessel operation.
- The reactor vessel is provided with specimen capsules, located
- between the thermal shield (heavy metal designed to absorb
- much of the gamma radiation and prevent gamma heating of ex-vessel
- components) and vessel wall opposite the center of the core.
- The capsules contain tensile Charpy V-notch and wedge-opening-loading
- specimens taken from hte reactor vessel shell plates and associated
- weld materials and heat-affected zone. Dosimeters and thermal
- monitors are included to permit evaluation of the neutron flux
- and temperatures experienced by the specimens. By comparing
- test data from the specimens removed periodically during refueling
- shutdowns with the unirradiated specimen data provided, the
- effects of neutron irradiation on the material properties can
- be determined.
-
- This describes the system installed in all Westinghouse PWRs. Other
- reactor brands use similar systems. Note that these capsules are
- located next to the core where they receive significantly more irradiation
- than the reactor pot. It is from these very specimens that it was
- extrapolated that neutron embrittlement MIGHT be a problem toward the
- design life of the pot. Several steps have been taken to mitigate the
- problem. But first a little review of what the problem really is.
-
- Steel exhibits a property called the Nil Ductility Transition (NDI). Below
- the transition temperature, steel loses its ductility and becomes brittle.
- The temperature varies with allow but is usually fairly low, below
- the freezing point of water. Long term neutron irradiation causes
- crystal lattice defects in the steel which raises the NDT temperature.
- The concern is that if the NDT temperature rises above that of cooling
- water, in the event of an accident, cold cooling water could shock
- the reactor while it was below NDT and thus cause it to fracture.
- Under no scenario of irradiation is the NDT predicted rise above
- approximately ambient temperature.
-
- Several simple steps have been taken to address the problem. Because
- the rise in NDT is directly related to the total integrated fast neutron
- flux dose, the first simple step was reduce the enrichment of the fuel
- in peripheral fuel channels. This reduces the generation of fast
- neutrons AND provides shielding from fast neutrons in the interior
- of the core. Next, for reactors whose capsules show the possibility
- of problems, they have been derated, typically to 95% full power.
- Again this markedly reduces the fast flux impinging on the pot.
- Lastly and most expensively, the sources of emergency cooling water
- now have heaters installed so that the cooling water is hotter than
- any possible NDT temperature. At Sequoyah in Chattanooga, TN, the
- first plant I worked at, for example, we installed heaters during
- construction in the mid 70s.
-
- The other important fact is that neutron embrittlement is completely
- reversed by annealing. The high temperature allows displaced
- atoms in the crystal lattice to snap back into place. If embrittlement
- becomes a problem, the reactor can be annealed in place. The process
- will involve adapting the same equipment used to anneal the reactor
- after fabrication to a radiation environment. Not particularly
- pleasant for the workers but certainly doable. Massive literature
- on the subject is available. Reports of work at the FFTF on the
- subject are of great interest. Much work has been done on neutron
- embrittlement in relation to hot fusion research because most of the
- energy from a hot fusion reaction is postulated to come from fast
- neutrons that will heavily irradiate the reactor components.
-
- John
- --
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