Supplementary
inspections of Electrabel’s Doel-3 reactor pressure vessel have
confirmed the presence of a large number of cracks, initially indicated
by inspections in June and July, according to an official report issued
September 3.
The
confirmation of a large amount of cracking raises the bar significantly
for Electrabel to prove the 30-year-old reactor is safe to return to
service.
A
spokeswoman for the Belgian Federal Authority for Nuclear Control
(FANC) said September 4 that Doel-3 could not return to service before
October at the earliest.
Studies
are currently under way to confirm the structural integrity of the
vessel and a pressurised thermal shock (PTS) study will be required to
see how the vessel would respond to an overcooling, high-pressure event,
according to the report.
For
the time being it is believed that the cracks did not evolve during
plant operation as a result of irradiation or other mechanisms, but have
been present since fabrication of the reactor vessel by the now-defunct
Dutch company Rotterdam Dry Dock (Rotterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij)
or RDM.
RDM was accredited with a nuclear stamp from the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME N-stamp).
The
reactor pressure vessel contains the nuclear fuel core and is typically
made of thick steel forgings and plates welded together.
In
the case of Doel-3, the raw materials for the reactor shells was
supplied by Krupp, the forging by RDM, the cladding and assembling by
Cockerill for the lower part (two core shells, transition ring and
bottom plate) and by Framatome (now Areva NP) for the upper part
comprising the RPV head, nozzle shell, and the final assembly.
The 1,006-MW Doel-3 is owned by France’s GDF Suez and operated by Belgium’s Electrabel.
The
confirmation of reactor vessel cracks at Doel-3 also threatens the
operation of the Electrabel’s 1,055-MW Tihange-2 reactor, currently in
an outage, because parts of its vessel were manufactured by RDM under
the same contract.
According to
Nuclear Energy Agency, 21 reactors worldwide had parts of their reactor vessels manufactured by RDM.
In
addition to Doel-3 and Tihange, the other European reactors potentially
affected are the permanently shutdown Brunsbuettel and Philippsburg-1
in Germany; Borssele and Dodewaard (permanently shut) in the
Netherlands; Garoña and Cofrentes in Spain; Ringhals-2 in Sweden and
Leibstadt and Mühleberg in Switzerland.
In
the US, the reactors with parts of their reactor pressure vessels
manufactured by RDM are: Catawba-1, McGuire-2, North Anna-1 and -2, Quad
Cities-2, Sequoyah-1, and-2, Surry-1 and -2, Watts Bar-1, according to
the NEA.
In its
report
released September 3, the FANC said the preliminary results of the
supplementary inspections on Doel-3 “confirmed the presence of a large
amount of quasi-laminar indications in the upper and lower shell rings”
of the reactor vessel.
The
FANC report said the core lower shell ring was the most affected at
Doel-3 with a total of 7,776 crack indications, with 931 in the core
upper shell.
The
bulk of the crack indications are located in the base material, outside
the weld regions, throughout a zone extending from about 30 mm from the
inner wall surface to one-half of the thickness of the vessel wall, the
FANC report said.—David Stellfox
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