The following relates to the nuclear power reactor arts, nuclear reaction control apparatus arts, control rod assembly arts, and related arts.
Pressurized water reactors traditionally utilize neutron-absorbing control rods that are moved into or out of the nuclear reactor core in order to control the reactivity. The control rods are operated by control rod drive mechanisms (CRDMs) that are mounted on the reactor vessel head. Penetrations in the head allow connecting rods from the control rod cluster to extend outside of the reactor vessel and connect to the CRDMs. These CRDMs use magnets to latch the rods to the roller nut or mag jack assemblies in the CRDMs to pull the control rod clusters out of the core.
In some current reactor designs, the CRDMs are located inside the reactor vessel. See, e.g. U.S. Pub. No. 2010-0316177 A1 published Dec. 16, 2010 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety, and U.S. Pub. No. 2011-0222640 A1 published Sep. 15, 2011 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. In some such “internal” CRDM designs, the connecting rods are contemplated to be latched to the CRDM assembly by a hydraulic actuating mechanism that relies on hydraulic pressure to prevent the rods from dropping free from the CRDMs. That is, a hydraulic actuating mechanism is biased to a released or disengaged state and hydraulic pressure is supplied to the hydraulic actuating mechanism to maintain the actuating mechanism in an engaged state during normal operation of the reactor. This provides failsafe operation as loss of hydraulic power (either intentionally or due to some hydraulic system malfunction) would result in a SCRAM.
In accordance with one aspect, a valve for controlling flow of coolant to a hydraulic latching mechanism of an internal control rod drive mechanism (CRDM) disposed inside a nuclear reactor comprises a valve body having an inlet for receiving coolant, an outlet connectable to a hydraulic latching mechanism for supplying coolant thereto, and a dump port for dumping backflow coolant, a valve member movable within the valve body between a first position restricting flow between the outlet and the dump port such that coolant entering the valve body through the inlet exits the valve body through the outlet, and a second position whereat the dump port is in fluid communication with the outlet such that at least a portion of any backflow coolant flowing back into the valve body via the outlet exits the valve body via the dump port, a biasing element positioned to bias the valve member towards the second position, wherein coolant flowing into the valve body via the inlet acts on the valve member to urge the valve member towards the first position against the biasing element.
In accordance with another aspect, a nuclear reactor comprises a nuclear reactor core comprising fissile material, a pressure vessel containing the nuclear reactor core immersed in primary coolant disposed in the pressure vessel, and a valve mounted to the pressure vessel for controlling flow of coolant to a CRDM hydraulic latching mechanism. The valve comprises a valve body having a coolant inlet for receiving coolant from a coolant source, a coolant outlet connectable to a hydraulic latching mechanism for supplying coolant thereto, and a dump port for dumping coolant backflow, a valve member movable within the valve body between a first position restricting flow between the coolant outlet and the dump port such that coolant entering the valve body through the coolant inlet exits the valve body through the coolant outlet, and a second position whereat the dump port is in fluid communication with the coolant outlet such that at least a portion of any backflow fluid flowing back into the valve body via the coolant outlet exits the valve body via the dump port a biasing element positioned to bias the valve member towards the second position. The coolant flowing into the valve body via the coolant inlet acts on the valve member to urge the valve member towards the first position against the biasing element.
In accordance with another aspect, a valve comprises a valve body having a coolant outlet, a coolant inlet, a biasing element, and a flange configured to mount the valve on a pressure vessel of a nuclear reactor with the valve body including the coolant outlet disposed inside the pressure vessel and the coolant inlet and the biasing element disposed outside the pressure vessel, and a divert assembly disposed in or with the valve body and configured to be held in a flow position by coolant flow passing through the valve from the coolant inlet to the coolant outlet and biased by the biasing element toward a divert position that diverts the coolant outlet to discharge into the pressure vessel upon removal of the coolant flow.
The invention may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various process operations and arrangements of process operations. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.
When tripping a reactor that employs a CRDM with a hydraulic latch (for example, as described in U.S. Pub. No. 2011-0222640 A1 published Sep. 15, 2011 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety), or when release of the control rods from the hydraulic actuating mechanism is otherwise desired or warranted, the hydraulic pressure must be released and backflow must be initiated to allow water in the hydraulic latch cylinders to escape before the control rods can be released. In one approach, a separate pipe is provided to dump water from the hydraulic latch cylinder to an accumulator with sufficient free volume to accommodate the fluid. A set of valves is configured to close off the water from the supply pumps while simultaneously draining the water that is in the CRDM latching cylinders back to the reactor cooling system (RCS). This approach requires small bore piping to run from the mid-flange to the dump valve and back to the mid-flange. Since this is a safety-related operation, redundant dump valves are typically provided in case one dump valve fails. If the piping that supplies water to the latching cylinders breaks, the flow through that pipe is limited by the leakage rate past the latch cylinder seals. However, if the piping that returns the fluid to the RCS breaks, the result is a significant loss of cooling accident (LOCA).
As disclosed herein, the coolant from the CRDM can instead be dumped directly into the pressure vessel, e.g. into the downcomer region. Intuitively, this might seem to be problematic since the pressure vessel is at elevated pressure, which indeed may be increasing in an uncontrolled manner in the event of a reactor malfunction leading to a SCRAM. However, it is recognized herein that because the hydraulic latching cylinder of the internal CRDM is immersed in primary coolant contained in the pressure vessel, the pressure inside the cylinder is always higher than the pressure in the pressure vessel because of the weight supported by the hydraulic cylinder. Thus, there is always a positive differential pressure available to drive the water out of the cylinder and into the pressure vessel. Moreover, since the hydraulic latching cylinders typically cannot be guaranteed to be fully sealed against leakage, the working fluid in the hydraulic latching cylinders is typically taken from the reactor coolant inventory and purification system (RCI) system, and so dumping it into the pressure vessel does not introduce any coolant contamination issues. As disclosed herein, the hydraulic fluid supply line used to pressurize the cylinder can be modified to dump water from the cylinder into the pressure vessel when the hydraulic pressure is turned off. Thus, the disclosed approach does not add any additional external piping for discharging the cylinder (removing a potential LOCA source) and provides passive discharge of the cylinder without the use of dump valves (removing another potential failure mechanism).
Turning now to the drawings, and initially to
As noted above, one type of internal control rod drive mechanism (internal CRDM) utilizes hydraulic pressure to maintain latching force on the control rod drive connecting rods. In
The hydraulic trip divert valve 12 is shown in
Turning to
The divert valve 12 generally includes a valve body 20 having an axially extending central bore 24 defining a passageway between an inlet, hereinafter referred to as a high pressure inlet 28, for receiving high pressure fluid, such as coolant, from a high pressure fluid source, and an outlet, hereinafter referred to as high pressure outlet 32, connectable to a hydraulic latching mechanism for supplying the pressurized fluid thereto. As will be appreciated, the fluid may typically be a coolant such as the type commonly used in nuclear reactors, but other types of fluid can be used. A plurality of dump ports 36 open to an external surface of the valve body 20 and, as will be described, allow fluid to dump directly to a downcomer 5 of the reactor vessel 2 during a reactor shutdown. An attachment or mounting flange 38 is provided for bolting or otherwise securing the valve 12 to a pressure vessel such that the high pressure outlet 32 is disposed within the pressure vessel and the high pressure inlet 28 is disposed outside the pressure vessel. It should be appreciated that other mounting configurations are possible, and that in some instances both the high pressure inlet 28 and the high pressure outlet 32 may be disposed within the pressure vessel.
With further reference to
Returning to
It should be appreciated that the rod support member 44, valve member including piston 40 and rod portion 42, and the spring 68 can be inserted into the central bore 24 of the valve body 20 as a unit. To this end, these components can be part of a valve member assembly that can be assembled outside of the valve body 20, and can inserted therein and bolted or otherwise secured to a base flange 72 of the valve body 20. Accordingly, the piston 40 and/or spring 68 etc. can be easily replaced or swapped out without removal of the valve body 20 from its position within a pressure vessel or the like.
In operation, high pressure fluid is supplied to the high pressure inlet 28. Fluid flows into the central bore of the valve body 20 in the annular space between the rod support member 44 and the valve body 20. The fluid passing through the flow passages 50 of the flange 48 acts upon the piston 40, forcing the piston 40 to the position shown in
In the first position shown in
When high pressure fluid is no longer supplied to the high pressure inlet 28, such as during a SCRAM or other shutdown of a reactor where it is desired to release the latching mechanism(s) holding the control rods to the CRDM, the spring 68 acts to shift the piston 40 to the second position shown in
Accordingly, the piston 40 shifts to the position of
In an illustrative embodiment, the valve body can be approximately three inches in outside diameter and configured to bolt onto the outside of a reactor. The valve can be configured to penetrate the pressure vessel and can be connected to piping that transports high pressure water to the one or more CRDM latching mechanisms. High pressure fluid received from redundant pumps, for example, enters the valve outside of the pressure vessel and flows through an annular region as described until it reaches the divert piston. There, the fluid is forced to turn and pass through one or more orifices to reach the flow path in the center of the piston, for example as seen in the valve of
If the pump flow is interrupted by a fast acting block valve, for example, the hydraulic pressure on the face of the piston is lost. The spring will accelerate the piston to the open position (
The flow divert valve disclosed herein automatically opens when the hydraulic pumps are de-activated to provide a short path for water to flow from the CRDM latching cylinders to the RCS inside the vessel. The divert valve eliminates the need for pipe to direct flow back into the vessel or to an alternative reservoir. When the divert valve opens to allow CRDMs flow to the RCS, it also isolates the RCS from flow paths outside of the reactor, preventing significant LOCA flow in the event of a pipe break outside of the reactor vessel.
The valve arrangement shown and described in
The divert valve is described with illustrative reference to the CRDM 8 with a hydraulic latch (for example, as described in U.S. Pub. No. 2011-0222640 A1 published Sep. 15, 2011 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety). More generally, the divert valve can be used in conjunction with any type of CRDM employing a hydraulic cylinder designed to initiate a scram upon removal of hydraulic power. For example, the disclosed divert valves can be used in conjunction with a CRDM that employs a separable coupling to the lead screw that is maintained in the engaged state by positive hydraulic pressure. The disclosed divert valve can also be used in conjunction with a dedicated shutdown rod assembly that employs a pressurized hydraulic cylinder to keep the shutdown rods withdrawn from the reactor core. See, e.g. U.S. Pub. No. 2010-0316177 A1 published Dec. 16, 2010 which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety. Still more generally, the disclosed divert valve is suitably used in any context in which a hydraulic piston is disposed inside a pressure vessel of a nuclear reactor and is advantageously discharged of hydraulic fluid upon removal of hydraulic power. In addition to the disclosed application in conjunction with an internal CRDM with hydraulic latching, other contemplated applications include hydraulic cylinders operating other systems disposed in the pressure vessel, such as a failsafe internal valve in which loss of positive hydraulic pressure causes a piston to fall under gravity so as to close the valve.
The preferred embodiments have been illustrated and described. Obviously, modifications and alterations will occur to others upon reading and understanding the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61625212 | Apr 2012 | US |