05000298/LER-2012-003

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LER-2012-003, Reactor Building Doors Opened Simultaneously Causes Loss of Safety Function
Docket Number
Event date:
Report date:
Reporting criterion: 10 CFR 50.73(a)(2)(v), Loss of Safety Function
Initial Reporting
ENS 48295 10 CFR 50.72(b)(3)(v)(D), Loss of Safety Function - Mitigate the Consequences of an Accident
2982012003R00 - NRC Website

PLANT STATUS

Cooper Nuclear Station (CNS) was in Mode 1, Power Operation, at 100 percent power at the time of the event on September 10, 2012.

BACKGROUND

Secondary containment serves as a barrier to confine and monitor potential releases during fuel handling operations and is a system that limits the release of radioactive materials to the environment and consists of four subsystems. One of these subsystems is the Reactor Building [EllS: NG], which encloses the Reactor Pressure Vessel [EllS: RPV] and Primary containment [EllS: NH].

The Reactor Building is designed to provide protection for the engineered safeguards and nuclear safety systems located in the building from postulated environmental events.

Sets of sealed doors [El IS: DR] (inner and outer doors) are provided for personnel and equipment access. One set of doors in each penetration [EllS: PEN] is required to be closed to maintain secondary containment. In addition, the personnel access airlock doors are equipped with interlocks [El IS: IEL] so that one door cannot be opened unless the second door is closed.

The interlocked door can be "by-passed" by actuating the Interlock Bypass Switch or by using the panic bar to open the adjacent inactive leaf.

Reactor Building personnel airlock doors R101 and R102 form part of the secondary containment boundary.

EVENT DESCRIPTION

On September 10, 2012, at 14:43, the inner and outer airlock doors (R101 and R102) to the Reactor Building were inadvertently opened simultaneously, breaching the secondary containment boundary.

Personnel were attempting to exit the Reactor Building through the inner personnel airlock while personnel were also entering the Reactor Building through the outer personnel airlock. This condition resulted in the two airlock doors being open simultaneously for approximately two minutes. Consequently, an indication was received in the Control Room and Limiting Condition for Operation (LCO) 3.6.4.1, Condition A, was entered to restore secondary containment. An operator was dispatched to the Reactor Building airlock to investigate the indication and subsequently reset the door interlocks.

At 14:51, the doors were declared operable and LCO 3.6.4.1, Condition A was exited.

Event Notification 48295 was made to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Justification existed in 2007 to replace the Reactor Building personnel airlock doors R101 and R102, noting in part that the interlock system was incapable of preventing simultaneous door opening causing entry into LCOs. Based upon this justification, new doors were procured and delivered; however, the priority given for installation was low and the doors remain in storage.

As part of the Root Cause Evaluation of this event, a similar instance was found to have occurred within the past three years. On April 16, 2012, a technician was entering the Reactor Building personnel airlock through the outer door. Another technician was exiting the Reactor Building through the inner door. The interlock failed and both personnel airlock doors were opened simultaneously. An operator was dispatched to the Reactor Building airlock and the doors were successfully closed. Secondary containment was declared inoperable during the time both doors were open.

BASIS FOR REPORT

The event is reportable as a loss of safety function under 10 CFR 50.73(a)(2)(v)(C and D) — An event or condition that could have prevented the fulfillment of the safety function of structures or systems that are needed to control the release of radioactive material or mitigate the consequences of an accident.

SAFETY SIGNIFICANCE

This event is considered to have low safety significance. Having Reactor Building personnel airlock doors R101 and R102 open simultaneously does not have a direct or indirect impact on the frequency of core damage. Additionally, the short duration breach of secondary containment due to these doors being open simultaneously has a negligible impact on Large Early Release Frequency.

This event is considered a safety system functional failure.

CAUSE

CNS determined the root cause to be previous reportability practices minimized the significance of having both airlock doors open which caused CNS to defer installing equipment that would have precluded this event.

CORRECTIVE ACTION

Corrective actions have been established that include posting individuals to serve as door monitors until CNS assesses, recommends, and installs an automated warning device or system (non-human activated) that provides warning to persons about to use the airlock doors that the opposite door has already been opened.

To prevent recurrence of this event, a change in the reportability guidance has been adopted and the doors with the different interlock system will be installed during Refueling Outage 28, scheduled for 2014.

PREVIOUS EVENTS

A review of CNS records revealed five different occurrences of the Reactor Building airlock doors being open simultaneously that meet the reporting criteria of 10 CFR 50.72 and 10 CFR 50.73; however, none of these events were reported. Specifically, these events occurred on:

May 31, 2002; July 19, 2002; February 14, 2003; February 17, 2005; April 2, 2009.