ON-LINE NDE FOR ADVANCED REACTOR DESIGNS N. Nakagawa1, F. Inane1, R. B. Thompson1, W. R. Junker2, F. H. Ruddy2, J. M. Beatty2, andN.G.Arlia 2 ^mes Laboratory and Center for NDE, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50011 Science & Technology Department, Westinghouse Electric, Pittsburgh, PA 15235 2 ABSTRACT. This expository paper introduces the concept of on-line sensor methodologies for monitoring the integrity of components in next generation power systems, and explains general benefits of the approach, while describing early conceptual developments of suitable NDE methodologies. The paper first explains the philosophy behind this approach (i.e. the design-forinspectability concept). Specifically, we describe where and how decades of accumulated knowledge and experience in nuclear power system maintenance are utilized in Generation IV power system designs, as the designs are being actively developed, in order to advance their safety and economy. Second, we explain that Generation IV reactor design features call for the replacement of the current outage-based maintenance by on-line inspection and monitoring. Third, the model-based approach toward design and performance optimization of on-line sensor systems, using electromagnetic, ultrasonic, and radiation detectors, will be explained. Fourth, general types of NDE inspections that are considered amenable to on-line health monitoring will be listed. Fifth, we will describe specific modeling developments to be used for radiography, EMAT UT, and EC detector design studies. INTRODUCTION The purpose of this paper is to outline a recently initiated project, funded by the DOE as a part of the Nuclear Energy Research Initiative (NERI). The project involves the design and development of an on-line health-monitoring system, incorporating NDE sensors, applicable to next-generation nuclear power system design. Decades of maintenance and NDE experience have been accumulated from existing commercial reactors. The project aims to advance nuclear power system safety and economy by the proactive use of this experience to impact future reactor designs while they are being developed. Here, the design-for-inspectability concept is put into practice; namely, by identifying the potential failure modes for each of the critical reactor components, we can affect the design to ensure that any component failure can be reliably detected and addressed before it reaches the critical stage. Among various Generation IV reactor designs, we pay particular attention to the International Reactor Innovative and Secure (IRIS). IRIS is a scale-up version of IRIS-50 [1] that uses the same basic design principles, and is currently under development for commercial use by an international collaboration. In what follows, we will review briefly the IRIS design targets and features, and show that on-line monitoring systems are indispensable in meeting the design goals, particularly for safe and continuous long-term reactor operations. We will subsequently present a current list of on-line monitoring needs and candidate NDE methodologies, and describe model-based studies in the areas of electromagnetic, EMAT UT, and radiography methods. Finally, we draw conclusions CP657, Review of Quantitative Nondestructive Evaluation Vol. 22, ed. by D. O. Thompson and D. E. Chimenti © 2003 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0117-9/03/S20.00 1728 about our on-line NDE concept for health monitoring of next generation nuclear power systems. REACTOR DESIGN AND ON-LINE MONITORING IRIS Design Features Generation IV reactors have several general design goals in common; a) passive safety features, b) increased availability and economy, c) long-term, uninterrupted operation, d) environmental friendliness, and e) proliferation resistance. To meet these design requirements, most Generation IV reactors use compact, integrated designs, and are made compatible to operating with extended refueling cycles. IRIS, for example, is a descendant of the pressurized water reactor (PWR), but integrates the reactor core, steam generators (SG), and pumps in a single reactor pressure vessel (RPV) [1]. By design, the IRIS reactor is compact and cost-effective, and requires less maintenance because it has no large primary-water loop piping outside RPV. In addition, there is less likelihood that the SG tubes will develop stress-corrosion cracking (SSC) since they operate in compression. However, the long refueling cycle (every 4 years for IRIS-based design) poses a maintenance challenge because there will be fewer opportunities for periodic outage-based maintenance, as has been practiced for existing commercial reactors. Call for Oil-Line Maintenance Strategy In our view, the key design features of future reactors such as IRIS, namely the long-term, uninterrupted, and safe operations, call for a new maintenance strategy, not relying solely on outage-based maintenance, but also actively performing on-line inspection and monitoring. The advantages of on-line health monitoring are multi-fold: 1) It is done while the reactor is in operation, not requiring shutdown for inspection/monitoring activities. 2) It is done remotely, thus greatly reducing exposure levels. 3) It allows us to perform continuous or on-demand system integrity verification, meaning that deviation from normal operation can be detected in real time, thus maximizing potential options for issue resolution. We have, therefore, initiated this project with the objective to develop conceptual on-line sensor systems that will replace/augment outage-based maintenance. Technically, we review the IRIS design to identify critical inspection needs, and then conceive on-line monitoring systems that can address monitoring needs. This is followed by model-based performance analyses. Among usual electromagnetic, ultrasonic, and radiation sensors and detectors, we select those which are potentially compatible with on-line use in the reactor environment. MONITORING NEEDS AND ON-LINE NDE In order to be specific to a Generation IV reactor system of significant maturity, we examined a version of the IRIS design and identified several potential needs for on-line integrity monitoring. Although the monitoring needs identified are from this specific design, we believe that they are common among most of the advanced water-cooled reactor designs. Typical examples of monitoring needs and potential on-line approaches are listed in Table 1. Experience shows that the maintenance of steam generator (SG) tubing is critical for long-term safe operation of nuclear power systems. Similar requirements are expected to exist in the new designs as well. For instance, magnetite 1729 TABLE 1. Identified monitoring needs and applicable on-line NDE methods: pressure vessel, EC=eddy current, EMAT=electromagnetic acoustic transducer. Component RPV=reactor Monitoring Needs NDE Method Magnetite deposits (inside tubes) EC,EMATUT Tube/tube sheet integrity EMATUT Tube integrity (tubes themselves) EC, EMAT UT RPV Cracking EMAT UT Reactor core Fuel activity anomaly y-ray radiography Steam Generator deposit build-up is anticipated where the secondary coolant evaporates. For the IRIS design, the problem will occur on the inner-diameter (ID) tube surface. Existing outagebased maintenance experience indicates that eddy current (EC) inspection and guidedwave ultrasonic testing (UT) will be effective tools for deposit detection. The attachment of the tubes to the headers another area anticipated to require monitoring, for which UT has been demonstrated as effective. The EC and UT methods will also be applicable to monitoring of tube integrity itself. Experience has shown that the UT method can address issues of degradation in reactor pressure vessels (RPV), as well as attachments to RPV. The y-ray radiography will be most effective to monitor potential fuel activity anomaly and other reactor-core integrity. EC Monitoring Sensors Eddy current sensors are known to work well for detecting magnetite deposits in SG tubing, as well as for SCC detection. On-line extension of this NDE modality is expected to work equally well. Eddy current coils are suitable for on-line usage because they are sufficiently robust to survive the reactor environment. Conventional EC inspection, done during reactor shutdown with EC probes inserted into the tubes to scan the interior wall, may be applicable while the reactor is in operation. However, for on-line monitoring, it is more practical to build fixed-site coil arrays into the structure itself at critical locations. Figure 1 illustrates a conceptual design example. The inspection is designed to monitor potential deposit buildup in regions where the secondary water evaporates, i.e., in the middle of tubes in the axial direction. An encircling solenoid coil may be placed to surround several tubes, selected by sampling. To estimate EC coil impedance responses, we considered a simple 2D model (Fig. IB), with a single-layer coil encircling an infinitely long tube coaxially, while the magnetite deposit is modeled as a uniform layer on the ID surface. The calculated impedance results are shown in Figs. 2 and 3, where we used a conductivity of 250 £Tlcm~l and a relative permeability of 130 at 327°C for the magnetite (Fe3O4) crystal [2]. The coil was assumed to have 50 turns in the length of 10 mm. The tube cross section is similar in dimensions to the existing SG tubes in the version of IRIS design examined. 1730 (B) FIGURE 1. Conceptual encircling-coil design of an on-line EC inspection for magnetite deposit detection: (A) A specific design uses an encircling solenoid coil surrounding several tubes chosen by sampling. (B) A simple schematic model for analytical signal estimation, involving (1) a SG tube, (2) a deposit layer on the ID wall, and (3) a coaxial solenoid coil. The results in Fig. 2 show that the impedance shift peaks at approximately 20 kHz. The existence of the peak is expected because the induction vanishes in low frequencies, while, in high frequencies, the interrogating fields fail to reach the deposit layer due to the skin effect. This peak frequency value is favorable because it is sufficiently low that background lift-off signals are suppressed. The signal discrimination is further simplified by the fact that the phase difference approaches 90° near the peak. Indeed, Figure 3 shows the detailed 27kHz result that exhibits 90° phase difference, while still having significant signal magnitudes. The fact that the magnetite permeability is twice as high at 327°C as the room-temperature value [2] is also helpful. UT Monitoring Sensors We consider the use of electromagnetic acoustic transducers (EMATs; see Ref. [3] 20-i Lift-off signal 1 1.0E+3 1.0E+4 1.0E+5 1.0E+6 Frequency [Hz] FIGURE 2. Calculated deposit signal magnitude and phase vs. EC frequency. The plotted phase signals are actually the phase difference between deposit and lift-off (diameter variation) signals. The deposit layer thickness was assumed 1% of the tube wall thickness. 1731 Deposit signal 0,0 -0.5 0,0 1 0.5 ' 1" 1.0 I I 1,5 2.0 Resistance [Ohm] FIGURE 3. Impedance plane plot of the EC deposit signals, calculated at the fixed frequency of 21 kHz, while the deposit layer thickness was varied from 0% to 1% of the tube wall thickness. Also shown is the phase separation by 90° from the lift-off (diameter-variation) phase. and the references cited therein) for UT monitoring sensors in order to meet the requirements posed by the reactor environment. Like EC sensors, EMATs are made of coils that are generally robust and easily ruggedized to survive the environment. A variety of applications are conceivable. For SG tubing inspections, EMAT-generated UT guided waves can be used for magnetite deposit detection, for monitoring the integrity of tube mounts, and perhaps for determination of liquid-gas phase transition location. The reactor pressure vessel is another system component for EMAT UT applications. The principal monitoring targets are various welded attachments where sensors may be mounted for online monitoring. The guided-wave modes for a straight tube have been known for decades [4]. For SG tubing applications, the torsional modes are the most practical to use. The challenge is to generate such modes by EMATs of all-coil designs (i.e., the quasi-static magnetic bias is produced by passing a pulsed current through an appropriate coil), in order to survive reactor environment. In Fig. 4, we present one such design concept: the asymmetrical Helmholtz coil pair is placed to contain the tube in cross section, so that it creates the bias DC field B pointing approximately perpendicular to the tube wall. A conventional RFdriven meandering coil placed parallel to the tube length will induce eddy current in the axial direction. The external DC field B will act on the EC density j in the tube wall with the force density / according to the Lorentz force relation (1) FIGURE 4. Schematics of an EMAT system designed to generate torsional modes in tubing. This conceptual design uses a combination of an asymmetrical Helmholtz coil pair (1) with a meandering coil (2). 1732 f = j*B. (1) Thus, the force density / approximately points in the circular direction, launching the torsional-mode waves predominantly. It should be noted that there are several potential complications in actual SG designs because the tubes will be wound in spiral and immersed into the primary coolant while their interior will be filled partially with the secondary coolant. The tube curvature, for instance, creates mode mixing between torsional and general flexural modes, where the latter have tendency to leak their energy into the surrounding water. The tube bend also has a potential to modify the ovality of the tube cross section, which will cause mode mixing as well. In addition, it has been pointed out that there may be caustic issues because of the curved tube geometry. Generally, these potential effects are expected to be small and may not modify the unloaded straight tube results significantly; the modification is, at most, on the order of the ratio between the tube diameter and the spiral radius. This ratio is small for the practical designs. However, near the tube mounts, the curvature may become especially tight, and the effects may become significant. It may, therefore, become necessary at the later stage of the project to estimate the amount of these effects. Radiation-based Integrity Monitor By nature, the reactor core generates abundant penetrating radiation. It is our view that there are potential on-line applications of radiation detectors, such as monitoring reactor-fuel activities and their anomalies. It may even be possible to monitor the in-vessel structural integrity, utilizing the penetrating radiation. For these types of applications, robust, reactor-compatible detectors that can measure radiation intensities at in-core, excore, and perhaps ex-vessel locations are needed. Recent radiation detector developments have produced y-ray and neutron detectors that are compatible with in-situ use inside RPV. Specifically, we consider the use of proprietary on-chip detectors based on silicon carbide (SiC) technology [Fig. 5]. They have been developed by Westinghouse for a, |3, y, X-ray, and neutron (thermal, epithermal, and fast) measurements. They are not only operable at elevated temperatures (up to 700°C), but also much more resistant to radiation damage than conventional semiconductor detectors. Given such in-vessel capabilities, the use of radiation detectors becomes practical in several on-line monitoring applications, such as reactor core integrity, FIGURE 5. Photograph of a patented radiation detector fabricated on SiC semiconductor chip. 1733 fuel activity anomalies, and fuel rod integrity. To estimate in-vessel radiation intensities as functions of locations over the reactor life, radiation propagation models are needed. There exist both Monte Carlo and deterministic codes, available in the public domain, to perform some of the needed numerical calculations. However, for our considerations on in-core and near-core detector placement, it is important to account for hard y-rays, i.e. the spectrum itself as well as their effect on soft y-ray spectra. The hard y-rays affect the soft y-ray spectra through photon interactions with charged particles (electrons and positrons). The photon spectrum calculation, therefore, must be coupled with the charged-particle sector to estimate photon spectra accurately at various locations of interest. Development of a deterministic transport-equation model including the charged-particle sector is a part of this project, and the progress is reported in a companion paper to describe the above and related issues concerning hard y-rays [5]. CONCLUSIONS In this paper we address maintenance issues associated with next-generation nuclear power systems that aim to achieve specific design goals, including safety and economy, by the use of compact, integrated designs and extended refueling cycles. Our first conclusion is that on-line integrity monitoring systems are indispensable elements of next-generation reactors for safe and long-term operations without interruption, and they can be conceived as built-in devices based on known NDE technologies. Second? through a case study of a next-generation design (IRIS), we found several specific on-line inspection needs (cf. Table 1). We believe that these are generic among various lightwater Generation IV reactor designs in order to ensure long-term integrity and safety while allowing reduction of excessive system redundancy. We also have made preliminary conceptual designs and model-based studies of on-line NDE monitoring devices for each of the perceived monitoring needs, based on eddy current, EMAT ultrasonic, and radiography techniques. ACKNOWLEDGMENT This work is supported by the US DOE Nuclear Energy Research Initiative (NERI) Program, Project Number 2001-076. REFERENCES 1. "Study outlines reactor designs that may be ready for deployment by decade's end," Nuclear News 44,25-33 (2001). 2. J. L. Snoek, New developments in ferromagnetic materials, Elsevier, Amsterdam, 1947. 3. R. B. Thompson, Physical Acoustics 19, 157 (1990). 4. D. C. Gazis, J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 31, 568 (1959). 5. F. Inane, "Issues with the High Energy Radiography Simulations," in this Volume. 1734
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