1. Field of the Invention
The present invention is generally drawn to welding techniques used in pressure vessel replacement or repair and more particularly to such welding techniques using a weld pad on the outside of the pressure vessel in the nozzle area for nozzle repair.
2. Description of the Prior Art
A typical nuclear power generating facility includes in part a reactor vessel, steam generator, pressurizer vessel, and a reactor coolant piping system, all of which operate under high pressure. Nozzles are attached to the vessels and/or piping for a number of purposes such as for connecting piping and instrumentation, vents, and to secure control element drive mechanisms and heater elements. A typical pressurizer vessel (10) is shown in
As shown in
Nozzle failures and leakage in nuclear power facilities is mainly due to SCC (stress corrosion cracking) phenomenon, which occurs on components having a susceptible material, high tensile stresses, high temperature and which are in a corrosive environment, conditions which primarily exist on nozzle penetration in the pressurizer vessel, reactor coolant piping, and the reactor vessel. Such failures are manifested by cracking. Such cracking occurs at the grain boundaries on the inside diameter of the nozzle material (alloy 600) at or near the heat affected zone of the weld and propagates radially outward through the thickness of the nozzle which eventually leads to small leakage of the reactor coolant supply. Failures have also occurred on stainless steel pressurizer nozzles.
As indicated, nozzles of these types have failed over time and have had to be replaced or repaired, either because of a failure in the nozzle or the weld attaching and sealing the nozzle to the vessel. A typical replacement procedure in a nuclear power plant environment requires shutting down the nuclear power plant and removing the nozzle in part or entirely. This typically requires machining operations to remove the nozzle and welding a replacement nozzle to the vessel or piping. The welded replacement nozzles closely duplicate the original welded nozzle they replace, except that they may be made of a different alloy, e.g., Alloy 690 which is less susceptible to SCC instead of Alloy 600.
In order to accomplish the new structural weld on replacement nozzles without the use of high preheat temperatures and to avoid the necessity for a bi-metallic weld, a weld pad is first deposited on the OD of the pressure vessel around a nozzle penetration. A J-groove weld prep is machined or ground into the weld pad into which the new pressure boundary structural weld is formed between the replacement nozzle and the weld pad. The current state-of-the-art repair equipment requires complete or partial removal of the existing nozzle in order to deposit the weld pad. The weld pad is deposited about an axis that is normal to the penetration tangent plane. An ambient temperature temper bead (ATTB) weld pad is deposited on the OD of the pressure vessel around the nozzle penetration using the machine Gas Tungsten Arc Welding (GTAW) process. No preheating or post weld heat treating (PWHT) is required. A J-groove weld prep is machined or ground into the weld pad into which the new pressure boundary structure weld is deposited between the replacement nozzle and the weld pad (similar metal welding).
The ASME Code requires the ATTB weld pad process to include a 48-hour hold at the completion of the weld to allow for the manifestation of potential hydrogen diffusion cracking phenomenon. This adds significant impact to the duration of outage schedules especially if multiple repairs are required. A new repair approach was needed to minimize this impact.
The present invention changes the known use of a weld pad and allows the weld pad to be deposited while the existing nozzle is not defective and remains in place. When the nozzle becomes defective a new pressure boundary weld is used only when one is required. Thus utilities can apply the weld pad during normal outages such as refueling well in advance of a nozzle repair without breaching the primary system pressure boundary.
This deposition of the weld pads can be scheduled into plant outages as part of routine maintenance. When the plant has required nozzle repair the weld pad is already in place and the plant is faced with simpler, shorter nozzle repair duration. The impact on the outage schedule is thus minimized.
Early weld pad deposition also requires less weld metal by virtue of its tool path which is about the vertical axis of the nozzle and the weld pad is deposited without breaching the pressure boundary. This approach called the Pad-Around-the nozzle (PAN) repair provides an alternative that would reduce this impact. Significant is that here is a clearance annular gap between the weld pad and the nozzle. This methodology promotes less weld residual stress and eliminates the axial thermal stresses imposed since the nozzle is now free ended and allowed to grow thermally when the vessel heats up.
In view of the foregoing it will be seen that one aspect of the present invention is to minimize plant outage due to nozzle repair.
Another aspect is to minimize the use of weld metal for a weld pad nozzle repair.
These and other aspects will be more fully understood after a review of the following description of the preferred embodiment in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
In the drawings wherein:
Referring now to the drawings generally and particularly to
Now when any of the PAD weld pad prepared nozzles become defective, either a partial or full nozzle replacement may be in order and the following nozzle replacement steps are performed.
For a partial replacement shown in
Referring now to
The fillet structure pressure boundary weld requires the same analytical justification as the J-groove/fillet weld, but may require subjective securitization against the rigid requirements of the ASME code.
Certain details and obvious modification have been deleted herein for the sake of conciseness and readability but are properly intended to fall within the scope of the following claims. As an example, it will be understood that either a manual J-groove weld or a manual fillet structural weld could be used for both the partial and full nozzle replacements.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60536147 | Jan 2004 | US |