Software development for accident analysis of VVER and RMBK reactors in Russia (parts A & B)
Software development for accident analysis of VVER and RMBK reactors in Russia (parts A & B)
Description
Part A. Development of Accident management procedures on the test facility PSB-VVER-1000 at Electrogorsk
Objective
The PSB test facility is the only existing large-scale test facility intended to address the thermal hydraulic behaviour of the coolant system of VVER-1000 plant design.
The OECD support group visited the facility and recommended the completion of the PSB construction in order to perform the experiments needed for thermal hydraulic analysis of relevant VVER-1000 transients and/or accidents and codes validation. PSB facility completion and experiments performance has been requested by Russian Regulatory Authority, Gosatomnadsor.
The specific objectives envisaged in the conception and elaboration of the present project were:
- Execution of experiments in the PSB test facility for the identification/verification of thermal-hydraulic phenomena relevant to the evolution of accidents in VVER-1000/V320 reactors and, in particular, to the performance of engineered safety systems and accident management measures;
- Application of thermal-hydraulic system codes such as RELAP, CATHARE and KORSAR for pre- and post-test analysis of the PSB experimental results and verification of their predictive capabilities for the simulation of VVER-1000/V320 accident management measures;
- Provision of information for the development and/or modification of guidelines for the implementation of VVER-1000/V320 accident management measures.
Results
The Part A of the contract dealt with the subject ‘Accident Management (AM) in VVER-1000 reactors’ and was finalized
to the availability of suitable computational tools for AM optimization studies in those reactor types. This was
achieved by planning and executing experiments in the PSB-VVER test facility also addressing the scaling issue and by
definitely confirming the capabilities of current system codes. The understanding of the current AM technology in
Russian NPP, namely in the Balakovo Unit 3 (chosen as reference NPP) and the critical appraisal of the connected
methods were part of the Project activities. Contractors and Sub-contractors for the Part A were UNIPI, EREC, Kurchatov
and Gidropress that constitute the technical partners for the conduct of activities.
Part B. Development of a code system for severe accident analysis in RBMK reactors.
Objective
- Thermal, mechanical and neutronics behavior of the degraded fuel, and degradation mechanisms of the pressure tube;
- Mechanical response of the graphite stacks and of the core during multiple pressure tube rupture;
- Thermal hydraulics in the reactor core cavity under severe conditions;
- Chemical reactions and other physical phenomena occurring in the core cavity when tube rupture;
- Calculation of post accident hydrogen distribution;
- Mechanistic fission product transport and retention codes.
conditions in RBMK. The attention was focused toward the consequences of individual fuel channel rupture and
resistance of the graphite stack to the catastrophic propagation of the rupture through the overall core, addressing the
MPTR (Multiple Pressure Tube Rupture) issue. Key expected products from the Project were the demonstration of
suitability and the availability from the Project partners of applicable chains of computation tools. These include the
codes, the input decks (i.e. the nodalisations) and the boundary and initial conditions. Reference NPP for the activity was the Smolensk Unit 3 NPP. Contractors and Sub-contractors for the Part B are UNIPI and NIKIET that constitute the
technical partners for the conduct of activities.