The purpose of this invention is a method for inspecting a nuclear fuel rod.
Some nuclear fuel rods comprise a cladding containing a stack of fuel pellets closed at one open end by a plug that is subsequently welded. A spring is compressed between the plug and the stack of pellets to hold the stack in place.
Non-destructive tests are carried out to check some characteristics of the assembled rod. Thus, an electromagnetic detector is used to check that the spring is present and the length of the chamber that contains it between the plug and the fuel pellets. The rod is moved in front of the detector, and the detector output signal, which is stronger when the magnetic coupling is locally higher, includes a plateau corresponding to the length of the spring and is limited by two peaks corresponding to the ends of the spring, in which the compressed turns are therefore accumulated and the magnetic coupling is greater. The existence of this characteristic curve proves that the spring has not been forgotten.
The process in question here uses a measurement of this type to determine the quality of the plug weld, based on an innovative reasoning.
It has been observed that the weld quality is strongly dependent on the input energy. If the input energy is excessive, molten metal droplets can be deposited on the spring and affect its state or make it stick to the plug. One particular problem that could arise is that the metallurgical structure of the spring, the cladding or the plug could be modified due to overheating. A rod with a damaged spring must be rejected, in the same way as a rod with a missing spring.
To summarise, the invention relates to a method for the inspection of a nuclear fuel rod with an end plug welded to a cladding, a coil spring being compressed between the plug and the fuel, using an electromagnetic induction detector along which the rod is moved, by measuring a detector output signal, characterised in that it consists of recording a value of the signal at a base portion, obtained at the side of the rod and in the absence of any magnetic coupling with the rod, and another value of the signal and with a peak adjacent to the base portion, where the plug and one end of the spring adjacent to the plug apply maximum magnetic coupling, calculating a ratio of the values of the signal and accepting or rejecting the rod depending on whether the ratio is more than or less than a threshold.
The invention will now be described with reference to the following figures:
The process according to the invention consists of recording values S4, S5 and S3 and determining the ratio
It has been observed that if excess energy is used to weld the plug 3, the value of S4 is lower. Therefore the inspection process consists of comparing the value of the ratio
with a threshold, that may be −10% in the example considered but must be determined empirically in other cases, and to appraise whether or not the rods 1 comply with the manufacturing requirements, depending on whether this ratio is greater than or less than the threshold (in the example, less than the threshold). This curve is also used to determine the compressed length of spring 5 or the length of the chamber that contains it, by measuring the distance between the two peaks, and the presence of the spring 5, since no peak is observed if it is missing, and the measurement curve changes directly from the value S1 to the value S2.
The choice of the ratio
as the acceptance criterion is based on the fact that the values of the peaks S4 and S5 do not depend only on the magnetic coupling of the rod 1 at the location sensitive to manufacturing defects, but also characteristics of the environment, the spring length and the detector itself. Therefore, it is better to weight these values S4 and S5 by the plateau value S3 that gives a sort of reference signal.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02/01557 | Feb 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/FR03/00375 | 2/6/2003 | WO |