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1.
Abstract

Based on the German decision to minimise transport of spent fuel casks between nuclear power plants, reprocessing plants and central storage facilities several on-site storage facilities were licensed until the end of 2003. Because of the large amount of Type B(U) transport casks which are going to be used for long-term interim storage the question of timelimited Type B(U) licence maintenance during the storage period of up to 40 years has been discussed under different aspects. This paper describes present technical aspects of the discussion. A main aspect of qualification of transport casks for interim storage is the long-term behaviour of the metallic seal–lid system. Here results are presented from current long-term experimental tests with metallic 'Helicoflex' seals in which pool water is enclosed. This series of tests has been performed by the Federal Institute for Materials Research and Testing (BAM) on behalf of the Federal Office for Radiation Protection (BfS) since 2001. Finally, the paper presents a German concept for an exchange of experience, know-how and state-of-the-art between authorities and technical experts with regard to cask dispatch in nuclear facilities. BAM has taken over a central role in this so-called 'coordinating institution for cask dispatching information' ('KOBAF') which entails management of an online database of cask-specific documents and a technical working group meeting twice a year. The goal is to keep comparable technical standards for all nuclear sites and storage facilities which are going to load and dispatch casks of the same or similar types under the responsibility of different German state governments for the coming decades.  相似文献   

2.
Abstract

In transport casks for radioactive materials, significantly large axial and radial gaps between cask and internal content are often present because of certain specific geometrical dimensions of the content (e.g. spent fuel elements) or thermal reasons. The possibility of inner relative movement between content and cask will increase if the content is not fixed. During drop testing, these movements can lead to internal cask content collisions, causing significantly high loads on the cask components and the content itself. Especially in vertical drop test orientations onto a lid side of the cask, an internal collision induced by a delayed impact of the content onto the inner side of the lid can cause high stress peaks in the lid and the lid bolts with the risk of component failure as well as impairment of the leak tightness of the closure system. This paper reflects causes and effects of the phenomenon of internal impact on the basis of experimental results obtained from instrumented drop tests with transport casks and on the basis of analytical approaches. Furthermore, the paper concludes the importance of consideration of possible cask content collisions in the safety analysis of transport casks for radioactive materials under accident conditions of transport.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract

The determination of the inherent safety of casks under extreme impact conditions has been of increasing interest since the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001. For nearly three decades BAM has been investigating cask safety under severe accident conditionslike drop tests from more than 9 m onto different targets and without impact limiters as well as artificially damaged prototype casks. One of the most critical scenarios for a cask is the centric impact of a dynamic load onto the lid-seal system. This can be caused, for example, by a direct aircraft crash (or just its engine) as well as by an impact due to thecollapse of a building, e.g. a nuclear facility storage hall. In this context BAM is developing methods to calculate the deformation of cask components and — with respect to leak-tightness — relative displacements between the metallic seals and their counterparts. This paper presents reflections on modelling of cask structures for finite-element analyses and discusses calculated results of stresses and deformations. Another important aspect is the behaviour of a cask under a lateral impact by aircraft or fragments of a building. Examples of the kinetic reaction (cask acceleration due to the fragments, subsequent contact with neighbouring structures like the ground, buildings or casks) are shown and discussed in correlation to cask stresses which are to be expected.  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

The design assessment concerning the mechanical behaviour of transport and storage casks for radioactive material to fulfil nuclear safety criteria has to be based on two essential considerations: (1) Effective analysis of the stress–strain state of the cask components under both normal operational and test conditions including hypothetical accident scenarios with suitable accepted methods. (2) Economic estimation of the required properties and the structural state of the cask components with sufficient exactness. In an overview of the codes which are available at GNS/GNB for cask impact strength analyses (ANSYS, ADINA, VDI Codes), procedures and aspects of benchmarking and validation of calculation codes are described. The results of experimental full size cask drop test programs (CASTOR, POLLUX) and corresponding pre-test calculational analyses show the suitability of the codes used. The influence of dynamic effects on the mechanical properties of material (ductile cast iron, wood) has been investigated experimentally. By consideration of these dynamic values in strength analyses of casks at impact a good agreement between experimental and calculational results has been achieved.  相似文献   

5.
Abstract

The present paper gives an overview of Japanese experimental studies of dual-purpose metal casks. The studies included: cask drop without impact limiters, drop of a heavy weight onto a cask due to building collapse, burial of a cask in debris from building collapse, tipping over of a cask during an earthquake, long-term containment of metal gaskets and transportability of casks after long-term storage. Most of the studies employed full-scale casks for the experiments.  相似文献   

6.
Abstract

The results are presented of 9 m (30 ft) drop simulations of three different types of transport casks, a monolithic ductile iron (DI) cask, a monolithic stainless steel (SS) cask, and a lead-shielded stainless steel (SS/Pb) sandwich cask. Each simulation involves two casks, one lying horizontally on an unyielding surface and the other positioned 9 m (30 ft) above the top surface of the lower cask. The top cask then free falls onto the lower cask, resulting in a more severe impact than the standard drop test required by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). The drop tests were simulated using DYNA3D, a non-linear, explicit, three-dimensional finite element code for solid and structural mechanics. The results show that the monolithic casks are much stiffer than the stainless steel/lead sandwich cask. The largest difference was observed between the DI cask and the SS/Pb sandwich cask. Although the SS/Pb cask experiences considerable plastic deformation, none of them experiences failure by rupture, and they all perform within the requirements of Regulatory Guide 7.6, Revision 1 and IOCFR71. The better to compare the results, stress- and strain-based factors of safety were calculated for all of the simulations. These calculations show that the DI cask has a larger margin of safety than the SS/Pb sandwich cask, while the monolithic SS cask has a larger margin of safety than the monolithic DI cask. Finally, to address the concern over the brittleness of the DI casks, critical flaw sizes were calculated. All flaws required for crack propagation were larger than those detectable by current inspection techniques. Overall, the results of this study indicate that DI has sufficient strength, ductility, and fracture toughness to be considered as a structural material for transport casks.  相似文献   

7.
Abstract

In order to achieve higher heat dissipation, the outer surface area of a transport and storage cask for radioactive material can be increased by the use of cooling fins. CASTOR® casks are fitted with cooling fins machined into the cask body, which run circumferentially around the outer surface of the cask. The first-generation CONSTOR® casks have a smooth outer surface without fins, which is made from a steel plate. This is possible because the heat capacity of their contents is relatively low. For CONSTOR® casks to have a higher heat capacity it is necessary to develop a special solution to allow heat to be dissipated from the outer surface of the cask. For the CASTOR® cask series it is also desirable to achieve higher rates of heat dissipation. From an economic point of view, a solution whereby separate cooling fins are attached to a smooth outer surface would be preferable to the currently machined fins. Several possible solutions are available for achieving this and one of the ideas has been investigated in detail. This concept comprises a series of aluminium profiles which are strapped to the smooth outer cask surface. This in effect provides a cask with axial fins. This solution also allows for the inclusion of moderator material within certain areas of the aluminium profiles. Several experiments have been performed to investigate this concept. A test specimen was investigated, consisting of a 2 m by 0.4 m segment of the finned profile attached to a heating plate. In order to simulate various cask orientations during transport and storage, measurements were taken for different test-piece orientations. Computational fluid dynamics simulations of the various tests were also performed.  相似文献   

8.
Abstract

There are basically two main technologies for the intermediate storage of spent nuclear fuel in Europe: dry storage in casks or vaults and wet storage in pools. The advantage of casks is their modularity and hence investment can be phased to suit the planned dates of loading individual casks, pools and vaults usually provide longer term capacity and thus require a greater initial investment for operators. Transnucléaire has developed a range of modular dry cask solutions for customers and more than 100 examples of the TN 24 type cask have been licensed for transport and storage in Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, the United States of America and Japan. This paper compares the requirements for cask licensing in Europe and the USA and shows how two particular BWR cask designs were developed by Transnucléaire. (1) The TN 97 L cask was designed primarily for the European market and the first use is foreseen at the Leibstadt nuclear power station in Switzerland. (2) The TN 68 cask was designed by Transnuclear Inc. and its first use is foreseen at the Philadelphia Electric Company's Peach Bottom Atomic Power Station.  相似文献   

9.
Abstract

The safety of spent fuel transport casks in severe accident conditions is always a matter of concern. This paper surveys German missile impact tests that have been carried out in the past to demonstrate that German cask designs for transport and interim storage are safe even under conditions of an aircraft crash impact. A fire test with a cask beside an exploding propane vessel and temperature calculations concerning prolonged fires also show that the casks have reasonably good safety margins in thermal accidents beyond regulatory fire test conditions.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

The Swiss Gösgen nuclear power plant (NPP) has decided to use two different methods for the disposal of its spent fuel. (1) To reprocess some of its spent fuel in dedicated facilities. Some of the vitrified waste from the reprocessing plant will be shipped back to Switzerland using the new COGEMA Logistics, TN81 cask. (2) To ship the other part of its spent fuel to the central interim storage facility at Zwilag (Switzerland) using a COGEMA Logistics dual-purpose TN24G cask. The TN24G is the heaviest and largest dual-purpose cask manufactured so far by COGEMA Logistics in Europe. It is intended for the transport and storage of 37 pressurised water-reactor (PWR) spent fuel assemblies. Four casks were delivered by COGEMA Logistics to Gösgen NPP. Three transports of loaded TN24G casks between Gösgen and Zwilag were successfully pelformed at the beginning of 2002 using the new COGEMA Logistics Q76 wagon specifically designed to transport heavy casks. This article describes the procedure of operations and shipments for the first TN24G casks up to storage at Zwilag. The fourth shipment of loaded TN24G was due to take place in October 2002. The TN24G cask, as part of the TN24 cask family, proved to be a very efficient solution for Kemkraftwerk Gösgen spent fuel management.  相似文献   

11.
Abstract

An important problem of the handling of casks intended for spent nuclear fuel transport and storage is providing safety during all operations. In particular the safety requirements should be fulfilled during the cask cooling that precedes the discharge of spent nuclear fuel from the cask. An analysis has been performed for the CASTOR RBMK cask heat removal system. This provides forced cooling of the cask with the spent fuel assemblies in it, by water delivery into the cask inner cavity. As a result of analyses performed for the different flow rates of the cooling water, the maximum pressure in the cask cavity caused by water evaporation has been estimated and compared with the maximum permissible value and the time taken by the cask in cooling to the given temperature limit has been determined. On the basis of the analysis results the most preferable regime for CASTOR RBMK cask cooling is suggested.  相似文献   

12.
Abstract

Admissible limits for activity release from type B(U) packages for spent fuel transport specified in the International Atomic Energy Agency regulations (10?6 A2 h?1 for normal conditions of transport and A2 per week for accidental conditions of transport) have to be kept by an appropriate function of the cask body and its sealing system. Direct measurements of activity release from the transport casks are not feasible. Therefore, the most common method for the specification of leak tightness is to relate the admissible limits of activity release to equivalent standardised leakage rates. Applicable procedure and calculation methods are summarised in the International Standard ISO 12807 and the US standard ANSI N14·5. BAM as the German competent authority for mechanical, thermal and containment assessment of packages liable for approval verifies the activity release compliance with the regulatory limits. Two fundamental aspects in the assessment are the specification of conservative design leakage rates for normal and accidental conditions of transport and the determination of release fractions of radioactive gases, volatiles and particles from spent fuel rods. Design leakage rates identify the efficiency limits of the sealing system under normal and accidental transport conditions and are deduced from tests with real casks, cask models or components. The releasable radioactive content is primarily determined by the fraction of rods developing cladding breaches and the release fractions of radionuclides due to cladding breaches. The influence of higher burn-ups on the failure probability of the rods and on the release fractions are important questions. This paper gives an overview about methodology of activity release calculation and correlated boundary conditions for assessment.  相似文献   

13.
Abstract

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) has recently completed an updated Spent Fuel Transportation Risk Assessment, NUREG-2125. This assessment considered the response of three certified casks to a range of impact accidents in order to determine whether or not they would lose their ability to contain the spent fuel or maintain effective shielding. The casks consisted of a lead shielded rail cask that can be transported either with or without an inner welded canister, an all-steel rail cask that is transported with an inner welded canister, and a DU shielded truck cask that is transported with directly loaded fuel. Finite element analyses were performed for impacts at speeds of 48, 97, 145 and 193 kilometres per hour into a rigid target. Impacts in end-on, side-on, and CG-over-corner orientations were analysed for each cask and impact speed. Calculations were performed to equate these impacts onto rigid targets with higher speed impacts onto the yielding targets that exist in the real world. These analyses indicated that a cask with an inner welded canister or a truck cask would not release radioactive material in any impact accident and that only very high-speed impacts onto hard rock targets could result in either release of material or significant degradation of shielding for rail casks without an inner canister. Impacts other than those onto flat unyielding targets were also considered. Analyses show that an impact that bypasses the impact limiters on the ends of the casks does not result in seal failure and neither does an impact by a locomotive also between the impact limiters.  相似文献   

14.
Abstract

Within the decommissioning programmes of the Italian nuclear power plants, the Italian multi-utility company ENEL decided to rely on on-site dry storage while waiting for the availability of the national interim storage site. SOGIN (Società Gestione Impianti Nucleari SpA, Rome, Italy), now in charge of all nuclear power plant (NPP) decommissioning activities was created in the ENEL group but is now owned by the Italian government. In 2000 it ordered 30 CASTOR® casks for the storage of its spent fuel not covered by existing or future reprocessing contracts. Ten CASTOR X/A17 casks will contain the Trino pressurised water reactor (PWR) fuel and the Garigliano boiling water reactor (BWR) fuel currently stored in pools at the nuclear power plant Trino and the Avogadro nuclear facility at Saluggia. Additionally 20 CASTOR X/B52 casks will contain the BWR fuel assemblies, which are stored in the pool at the Caorso nuclear power plant. GNB (Gesellschaft fuer Nuklear-Behaelter mbH, Essen, Germany) has completed detailed studies for the design of both types of cask. The tailored cask design is based on the well-established and proven design features of CASTOR reference casks and is responsive to the needs and requirements of the Italian fuel and handling conditions. The design of the CASTOR X/A17 for up to 17 Trino PWR fuel assemblies or 17 Garigliano BWR fuel assemblies and the CASTOR X/B52 cask holding up to 52 Caorso BWR fuel assemblies is suitable for the following conditions of use: loading of the casks in the fuel pools of the nuclear installations at Trino, Caorso and Avogadro; no upgrading of the Current on-site crane capacities; transport of the fuel assemblies, which are currently stored at the Saluggia facility to the nuclear power plant Trino; on-site storage in a vertical or horizontal position with the possibility of transfer to another temporary storage or a final repository, even after a number of years; the partial loading of mixed oxide (MOX) and failed fuel; loading and drying of bottled Garigliano fuel assemblies. On the basis of the CASTOR V/19 and CASTOR V/52 cask lines, the design of the CASTOR X/A17 and X/B52 casks aims at optimising safety and economics under the given boundary conditions. The long time for which fuel is kept in intermediate wet storage results in a reduced shielding and thermal-conduction requirement. This is used to meet the tight mass and geometry restrictions while allowing for the largest cask capacity possible.  相似文献   

15.
Abstract

Cylindrical fuel casks often have impact limiters surrounding the ends of the cask shaft in a typical 'dumbbell' arrangement. The primary purpose of these impact limiters is to absorb energy to reduce loads on the cask structure during impacts associated with a severe accident. Impact limiters are also credited in many packages with protecting closure seals and reducing peak temperatures during fire events. For this credit to be taken in safety analyses, the impact limiter attachment system must be shown to retain the impact limiter following normal conditions of transport (NCT) and hypothetical accident conditions (HAC) impacts. Large casks are often certified by analysis only because of the cost associated with testing. Therefore, some cask impact limiter attachment systems have not been tested in real impacts. A recent structural analysis of the T-3 spent fuel containment cask found problems with the design of the impact limiter attachment system. Assumptions in the original safety analysis for packaging (SARP) concerning the loading in the attachment bolts were found to be inaccurate in certain drop orientations. This paper documents the lessons learned and their applicability to impact limiter attachment system designs.  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

Aluminium honeycombs have been extensively used as impact limiters in nuclear waste transport casks. The mechanical behaviour of these shock absorbing materials was studied to develop an extensive experimental database. A series of tests were performed along various loading paths. Different densities of aluminium honeycombs were tested in different orientations. Static tests included uniaxial tension, uniaxial compression and torsion. Dynamic tests were conducted at different strain rates of up to 100 S?1, to generate experimental data relevant to accident situations. Dynamic studies included the effects of specimen size and confinement. The purpose of using different loading paths was to generate an extensive experimental database which may also be used to develop constitutive models for these materials. Design charts were constructed which can be accessed by various cask designers to optimise and economise on cask development.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract

In 2001 the Swiss nuclear utilities started to store spent fuel in dry metallic dual purpose casks at ZWILAG, the Swiss interim storage facility. BKW FMB Energy Ltd, as the owner of the Mühleberg nuclear power plant, is involved in this process and has selected to store the spent fuel in a new high capacity dual purpose cask, the TN24BH. For the transport Cogema Logistics has developed a new medium size cask, the TN9/4, to replace the NTL9 cask, which has performed numerous shipments of BWR spent fuel in past decades. Licensed by the IAEA 1996, the TN9/4 is a 40 t transport cask, for seven BWR high burnup spent fuel assemblies. The spent fuel assemblies can be transferred to the ZWILAG hot cell in the TN24BH cask. These casks were first used in 2003. Ten TN9/4 shipments were made, and one TN24BH was loaded. After a brief presentation of the operational aspects, the paper will focus on the TN24BH high capacity dual purpose cask and the TN9/4 transport cask and describe in detail their characteristics and possibilities.  相似文献   

18.
Abstract

The use of spent fuel shipping and storage casks made of ductile cast iron (DCI) has been common practice for about 15 years when the development of such casks started in Germany where qualified foundries are able to produce these heavy section castings at the high quality level needed for this kind of application. To promote the discussion on safety against brittle failure a lot of research had been carried out in different countries. The two test programmes in Germany on casks with big artificial flaws under severe impact conditions is summarised in this paper. The first test object was a thick walled DCI ‘pipe’ (150 mm wall thickness) with dimensions equivalent to a 1:2.5 scale cask model. It was dropped with a 40 mm deep laser sharpended flaw from heights of up to 9 m onto rails. As a second test object a full scale CASTOR VHLW cask was used. This specimen had a flaw with a depth of 120 mm in a 260 mm thick wall. With increasing drop heights (up to 14 m) and stress intensity factors (up to material fracture toughness) this object was also dropped onto rails. For both cases the measured data (decelerations, crack opening displacement, strains, material properties) are presented. No brittle failure occurred, although in the 14 m drop of the CASTOR VHLW Cask the impact was 6.5 times higher than the impact measured in the mechanical test of the type B package design. The results demonstrate that DCI casks have significantly high safety margins even in the hypothetical case of an impact beyond type B package design requirements.  相似文献   

19.
Abstract

The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission has recently completed an updated Spent Fuel Transportation Risk Assessment, NUREG-2125. This assessment considered the response of three certified casks to a range of fire accidents in order to determine whether or not they would lose their ability to contain the spent fuel or maintain effective shielding. The casks consisted of a lead shielded rail cask that can be transported either with or without an inner welded canister, an all steel rail cask that is transported with an inner welded canister, and a DU shielded truck cask that is transported with directly loaded fuel. For the two rail casks, large pool fires that were concentric (fully engulfing), offset from the casks by 3 m, and offset from the cask by 18 m were analysed using the computational fluid dynamics CAFE-3D fire modelling code coupled with the finite element analysis PATRAN-Thermal heat transfer code. All of the fires were assumed to last for 3 h. In addition to these extraregulatory fires, the regulatory 30 min fire was analysed using both the regulatory uniform 800°C boundary condition and the more realistic CAFE-3D fire modelling code. For the truck cask, only the engulfing fire case was analysed using a 1 h fire duration. In all of the fire analyses, the seal region of the cask stayed below the failure temperature; therefore, there would be no release of radioactive material. In addition, the temperature of the fuel rods stayed below their burst rupture temperature, providing another barrier to release. For the lead shielded cask, very severe fires cause some of the lead to melt. There is no leak path for this molten lead to exit the shield region, but its expansion during the melting and subsequent contraction due to solidification during cool down results in a reduction in gamma shielding effectiveness.  相似文献   

20.
Abstract

The regulatory driven design of radioactive material transportation packages leads package vendors to perform analyses that demonstrate the ability of packages to meet the regulatory requirements. For risk assessment and communication, the analysis of package response to thermal environments that are more severe than those described in the regulations is required. In general, experimental and analytical assessments of casks exposed to thermal insults other than the regulatory environment are performed in the USA by the Department of Energy national laboratories. This paper provides a brief summary of some recent thermal analyses of spent fuel transportation packages exposed to thermal environments different from regulatory standards. The analyses were performed by Sandia National Laboratories under several different projects for multiple customers. These analyses examined the response of spent fuel packages exposed to severe thermal environments different from the regulatory hypothetical accident condition. One assessment determined the response of four generic casks to very long duration engulfing fires. The results from these analyses included fire durations necessary to reach critical temperatures of the fuel and seals. In another assessment, two certified spent fuel casks were analysed for exposure to 1 h pool fires. The height of the cask above the pool was varied to study the effect of the vapour dome on the heating of the casks. Another assessment investigated the effect of offset long duration fires on rail cask performance, which showed that casks can withstand offset fires of much longer duration than the regulatory fire. Other assessments examined the response of packages to thermal environments resulting from propane fires and realistic liquid hydrocarbon fires that included various positions of the transportation rail car in the simulation.  相似文献   

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