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发表于 2011-3-3 15:44
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UNIT 10 REACTOR SAFETY
1. In general, the goals of reactor safety are to reduce the probability of an accident and to limit the extent of the radiological hazard.
2. Nuclear reactor systems are designed with a number of barriers to the release of radioactivity, namely, fuel pellets, fuel-rod cladding, primary coolant boundary and containment.
3. The basic philosophy of the design of nuclear power plants has been described as defense in depth, expressed in terms of five levels of safety.
4. The first level of safety is to design of reactor and other components of the system so that they will operate with a high degree of reliability and the chances of a malfunction are very small.
5. The purpose of safety is to design the reactor and other components of the system so that they will operate with a high degree of reliability and the chances of a malfunction are very small.
6. The third level of safety is to provide engineered safety features, such as emergency core cooling system, containment spray system, and emergency eclectic power.
7. Plants are now being required to develop accident management programs, which should reduce the likelihood of uncontrolled radioactivity releases during accident.
8. Finally, emergency planes are developed that include provisions for sheltering and evacuation to further reduce potential doses to the public.
9. Suitable redundancy shall be provided to assure that the safety system function can be accomplished assuming a single failure.
10. One way to minimize common-mode failure is by diversity, that is by the use of two or more independent and different methods for achieving the same result, e.g., reactor shutdown in an emergency.
11. The evaluation of the safety of a nuclear power plant should include analyses of the response of the plant to postulated disturbance in process variables and to postulated malfunctions of equipment.
12. An electric utility desiring to operate a nuclear power must first apply to the NNNA for a construction permit and then for an operating license.
UNIT 11 QYALITY ASSURANCES
1. Quality Assurance (QA) is referred to as planned and systematic actions necessary to provide adequate confidence that an item or facility will perform satisfactorily in service.
2. Quality Control (QC) includes such as actions that provide a means to control and measure the characteristics of an item, process or facility in accordance with established requirements.
3. Reliability is the probability that a device, system or facility will perform its intended function satisfactorily for a specified time under stated operating conditions.
4. An overall quality assurance program shall be established to provide for control of the constitute activities associated with a nuclear power plant, such as design, construction, manufacturing, commissioning and operation.
5. All programs shall provide that the activities affecting quality are accomplished in accordance with written procedures, instructions or drawings.
6. Activity affecting quality includes designing, purchasing, fabricating, manufacturing, handling, shipping, storing, cleaning, erecting, installing, testing, commissioning, operating, inspecting, maintaining, repairing, refueling, modifying and decommissioning.
7. A documented organization structure, with clearly defined functional responsibilities, level of authority and lines of internal and external communication for management, direction and execution of the quality assurance program shall be established.
8. The preparation, review, approval and issue of documents essential to the performance and verification of the work shall be subject to control.
9. Design control measures shall be applied to items such as the following: radiation protection; physics and stress analysis, thermal, hydraulic, seismic and accident analysis; compatibility of materials; accessibility of in-service inspection, maintenance and repair and delineation of acceptance criteria for inspection and tests.
10. Hold-points beyond which work shall not proceed without the approval of a designated organization, if such inspection or witnessing of the inspection is required, shall be indicated in appropriate documents.
11. Measures shall be established to control items which do not conform to requirements, in order to prevent their inadvertent use or installation.
12. Quality assurance records shall represent objective evidence of quality and should include the results of review, inspections, tests, audits, monitoring of work performance, material analysis and power plant operation logs, as well as closely related data, such as qualification of personnel, procedures and equipment, repairs, required and other appropriate documents.
UNIT 12 INTRODUCTION TO PWR NPP
1. A pressurized water reactor (PWR) generating system is a dual cycle plant consisting of a closed, pressurized, reactor coolant system (primary) and a separate power conversion system (secondary) for the generation electricity.
2. The use of a dual cycle design minimizes the quantities of fission products released to the power conversion system components and subsequent release of fission products to the atmosphere.
3. The primary system consists of a pressure vessel containing the nuclear fuel and reactor coolant loops connected in parallel to the reactor vessel.
4. Each reactor coolant loop contains a reactor coolant pump, a steam generator, loop piping and instrumentation.
5. The reactor coolant system also contains a pressurizer connected to one of the loops for system pressure control.
6. During operation, the reactor coolant system transfers the heat produced in the reactor to the steam generator where steam is produced to supply the turbine generator to produce electricity.
7. The entire reactor coolant system is located in containment (reactor building) which isolates the radioactive reactor coolant system from the environment in the event of a leak.
8. The turbine building contains all the power conversion system, including turbines, moisture-separator/reheaters, feedwater heaters, condenser etc.
9. The control building contains the central control room with its console and control panels, as well as the relay room.
10. A fuel storage area is provided for handling and storage of new and spent fuel.
11. Auxiliary building contains safety related and potentially radioactive auxiliary system, such as residual heat removal system, the safety injection system, the component cooling system etc.
12. The safety injection system is an emergency system that provides for the injection of borated water from the refueling water storage tank into reactor coolant sytem in the event of LOCA.
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