ML15222A833
| ML15222A833 | |
| Person / Time | |
|---|---|
| Site: | Indian Point |
| Issue date: | 02/19/2015 |
| From: | Entergy Nuclear Operations |
| To: | Atomic Safety and Licensing Board Panel |
| SECY RAS | |
| References | |
| RAS 28133, ASLBP 07-858-03-LR-BD01, 50-247-LR, 50-286-LR | |
| Download: ML15222A833 (45) | |
Text
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Global Expertise
- One Voice Westinghouse Non-Proprietary Class 3
© 2015 Westinghouse Electric Company LLC All Rights Reserved Material Orientation Toughness Assessment (MOTA) for the Purpose of Mitigating Branch Technical Position (BTP) 5-3 Uncertainties Chris Koehler - Xcel Energy, Chairman PWROG MSC Elliot Long/Brian Hall - Westinghouse Date: February 19, 2015 ENT000620 Submitted: August 10, 2015
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P AREVA published a paper and sent an official letter to the U.S. NRC on January 30, 2014 identifying potential problems with Branch Technical Position (BTP) 5-3
- Position 1.1(4) of BTP 5-3 sometimes non-conservative in the determination of the initial Reference Nil-Ductility Transition Temperature (RTNDT) material property for reactor vessel materials made from SA-508, Class 2 forgings.
The BTP 5-3 methods to estimate initial RTNDT were invoked for reactor pressure vessels fabricated to an ASME Boiler & Pressure Vessel Code earlier than the Summer 1972 Addenda of the 1971 Edition because the RTNDT concept did not exist before that time.
BTP 5-3 provides estimation methods for conversion of measured Strong-Direction Charpy data, which was required pre-Summer 72, into Weak-Direction materials data, which was required afterwards AREVAs finding calls into question the baseline RTNDT values of reactor vessels whose materials used this particular method Introduction 2
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P NRC Response to AREVA Letter
- The U.S. NRC actively began investigating this issue further in response to the AREVA letter.
- The NRC technical evaluation included both forging and plate materials
- This analysis confirmed non-conservatism of several BTP 5-3 Positions for estimation of initial RTNDT and initial Upper-Shelf Energy (USE) values.
- The NRC presentation to various utility representatives on June 4, 2014 prompted the industry to request that EPRI continue addressing this issue on their behalf.
3
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P EPRI Quantification of BTP 5-3 Uncertainties
- EPRI had already issued a survey on May 27, 2014 to utilities requesting additional information related to how RTNDT was determined for the plants in the U. S. Fleet.
- The results of this work are documented in, Assessment of Potential Non-Conservatisms of NUREG-0800 Branch Technical Position 5-3 Estimation Methods for Initial Fracture Toughness Properties of Reactor Pressure Vessel Steels.
- Based on the EPRI Probabilistic Fracture Mechanics (PFM) evaluations, there is negligible safety benefit to changing BTP 5-3 B1.1(3) or its application
- The uncertainty in BTP 5-3, Position 1.3 (a) and (b) can be further addressed by the PWROG MOTA project 4
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P The PWROG recognized that existing deterministic margin is potentially available in ASME Code Section XI, Appendix G and other NRC approved sources
- Regulatory Guide (RG) 1.161 is the NRC guidance on performing an Equivalent Margins Assessment (EMA) related to Upper Shelf Energy limited plants (< 50 ft-lbs at EOL)
- Current Pressure-Temperature limits, using the ASME Code, postulate axial flaws in plates/forgings and therefore, use Weak-Direction material properties
- ASME Code Case N-588 introduced methodology specifying that only circumferential flaws are required to be postulated in circumferential welds Code provides stress intensity factor equation for circumferential (circ.) flaws
- As previously
- noted, BTP 5-3 provides estimation methods for conversion of measured Strong-Direction Charpy data, into Weak-Direction materials data The following slides provide additional details on this approach PWROG Approach 5
By using the EMA RG and Code Case N-588 precedents, we can show significant inherent margin in Appendix G methodology sufficient to mitigate the uncertainties associated with use of BTP 5-3 methods used for vessel shell plates and forgings
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Regulatory Guide 1.161 Text
- RG 1.161 states the following:
The CVN value should be for the proper orientation of the plate material (see Figure 2 [recreated in the next slide]). For example, for axial flaws the CVN value for the L-T (strong) orientation in the vessel wall should be used. Similarly, for circumferential flaws the CVN value for the T-L (weak) orientation should be used.
- It is our contention that this approach, as defined in RG. 1.161, is technically valid for assessing BTP 5-3 uncertainty 6
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P RG 1.161 Material Orientation Figure 7
Match up Flaw to Material Orientation Properties in EMA is Allowed
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P EPRI MRP Report Figure with Flaws Added 8
Axial Flaw Circumferential Flaw
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P WRC-175 PVRC Recommendations on Toughness Requirements for Ferritic Materials
- WRC-175 is basis for 1972 changes to ASME Section III, which brought in the requirements for flaw tolerance in Appendix G
- With respect to shells:
- ASME required transverse properties for all components, which is conservative 9
Transverse properties for shells was not recommended by PVRC
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P ASME Code Case N-588
- Implemented in 1997 time frame to add a more realistic methodology for the use of circumferential flaws when considering circumferential welds for P-T limit curves
- Postulated that any flaws in a circumferential weld would be in the circumferential direction
- ASME Code stress intensity factor (SIF) values for Axial Flaws are ~2 times the Circumferential Flaw results due to the higher pressure stresses (more details to come)
- This Code case has been endorsed per RG 1.147 10
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Pressure-Temperature Limit Curve Methodology Governing equation for P-T Limit Curve analysis:
C*Klm + Klt < Klc
- where, Klm =
stress intensity factor caused by membrane (pressure) stress [ksi]
Klt =
stress intensity factor caused by thermal stress [ksi]
Klc =
fracture toughness, a function of the RTNDT of the material [ksi]
C
=
Safety Factor on membrane stress 11
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Pressure-Temperature Limit Curve Margins
- Appendix G
allowable limits are established using the following three required margins
- Postulate 1/4 thickness reference flaw with semi-elliptical (6:1) shape
- Lower bound crack initiation (KIc curve) fracture toughness
- Material RTNDT and metal temperature
- Safety factor, C, of 2 on membrane pressure stress 12
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P MOTA Margin Definition The MOTA Margin is defined as the ART difference between an Axial Flaw based P-T limit curve and a Circumferential Flaw based P-T limit curve
- It is calculated by subtracting the Circumferential Flaw ART value (weak direction properties) from the original Axial Flaw ART value (strong direction properties) at the point of intersection MOTA Margin is applicable to all base metal cylindrical shell sections away from discontinuities The MOTA Margin compensates for the uncertainty that have been summarized in the EPRI BTP 5-3 assessment
- Applies to the full range of reactor vessel dimensions in the domestic PWR fleet 13 This demonstration determines the margin that circumferential flaw (weak property) P-T curves have before they would become governing relative to the axial flaw (strong property) Appendix G curves
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P How to Determine MOTA Margin
- Combine the methodologies of Regulatory Guide 1.161 and Code Case N-588 to:
- match up material property orientations to appropriate flaws
- provide a
Circumferential Flaw stress intensity factor correlation
- Extrapolation to P-T Limits:
- Use Strong Direction Axial Flaw ART with standard ASME Section XI Appendix G Pressure stress
- Use Weak Direction Circumferential Flaw ART with Code Case N-588
- Increase Circumferential Flaw ART value to force Circumferential Flaw curve to just intersect the Axial Flaw Curve
- The MOTA Margin can then be determined between the two flaw orientations 14
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Parameters for Analysis
- Plants selected to cover the geometries of the entire PWROG Fleet
- Utilized ASME Appendix G, KIc for Axial Flaws (Strong Properties) and Code Case N-588 for Circumferential Flaws (Weak Properties)
- Bounding cases were performed for Steady-State Case and all heat-up and cooldown rates 15
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P General Plant Information and Geometries Utilized for MOTA Investigation 16 Information Dimensions (in.)
Plant Design Rated Power (MW)
Vessel Manufacturer Plate /
Forging Vessel ID Vessel Wall Cladding A
W -
2-Loop 585 B&W Forging 132 6.5 0.156 B
W -
3-Loop 855 CE Plate 157 7.875 0.156 C
W -
4-Loop 1060 RDM Forging 173 8.465 0.156 D
CE 805 CE Plate 172.7 8.79 0.1875 E
CE 1333 CE Plate 183.9 11.19 0.16 F
W -
4 -Loop 1048 CE Plate 173.375 8.625 0.21875 G
B&W-177 870 B&W Plate 171 8.44 0.1875
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Input Values to P-T Curve Determination Information Dimensions (in.)
Initial (Axial) ART Values (°F)
Plant Inside Radius (in)
Outside Radius (in) 1/4 T 3/4 T A
66.156 72.656 262 231 B
78.656 86.531 200 165 C
86.656 95.121 205.7 171.2 D
86.35 95.14 252.7 185.8 E
92.11 103.3 200 175 F
86.906 95.531 245 198.2 G
85.5 93.94 180 146 17
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Steady-State Assessment Existing Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. Curve - Plant C 18 Purple = Axial Flaw and Weak Initial RTNDT Red = Circ. Flaw and Weak Initial RTNDT (As Measured)
MOTA Margin
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Steady-State Assessment Existing Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect - Plant C 19 Purple = Axial Flaw and Weak Initial RTNDT (As Measured)
Green = Circ. Flaw and ART MOVED to Match Existing Axial Curve (Raised Initial RTNDT
)
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P 1/4T MOTA Margin Calculation -
Plant C
- Axial Flaw ART = 205.7°F (Purple Curves)
- Circumferential Flaw ART Comparison =
205.7°F (Red Curve)
- Increased Circumferential Flaw ART to Just Intersect Axial Curve = 265°F (Green Curve)
- MOTA Margin = 265°F - 205.7°F = 59°F 20
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Cooldown - All Rates - Plant C Same ART Value 21 Solid Lines - Circ. Flaw Only Dashed Lines - Existing Axial only Axial Flaw Circ. Flaw
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Heat-up - All Rates - Plant C Same ART Value 22 Solid Lines - Circ. Flaw Only Dashed Lines - Existing Axial only Axial Flaw Circ. Flaw
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Final MOTA Margin (1/4T) Results 23 Plant Design Plant Vessel Mfr.
Plate /
Forging MOTA Margin (°F)
Westinghouse 2-Loop A
B&W Forging 66 3-Loop B
CE Plate 61 4-Loop C
RDM Forging 59 F
CE Plate 60 Sys. 80 E
B&W Plate 60
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Effect of Heatup Curve (3/4T)
- Flaw Orientation Limiting Locations
- Axial - Low Temperature/Pressure
- Circumferential - High Temperature/Pressure
- 1/4T ART values dominate the steady-state curve
- High Temperature/Pressure, Steady-State is limiting as shown previously
- 3/4T Value dominates the heatup curves
- Still applicable at high temperature and pressure regions
See slides below 24
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P 100°F/hr Assessment (3/4T Limiting) Existing Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. Curve - Plant C 25 Purple = Axial Flaw and Weak Initial RTNDT Red = Circ. Flaw and Weak Initial RTNDT (As Measured)
MOTA Margin
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P 100°F/hr Assessment Existing Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect - Plant C 26 Purple = Axial Flaw and Weak Initial RTNDT (As Measured)
Green = Circ. Flaw and ART MOVED to Match Existing Axial Curve (Raised Initial RTNDT
)
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P 3/4T MOTA Margin Calculation -
Plant C
- Axial Flaw ART = 171.2°F (Purple Curves)
- Circumferential Flaw ART Comparison =
171.2°F (Red Curve)
- Increased Circumferential Flaw ART to Just Intersect Axial Curve
=
217.5°F (Green Curve)
- MOTA Margin = 217.5°F - 171.2°F = 46°F 27
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Governing MOTA Margin (3/4T)
Results 28 Plant Design Plant Vessel Mfr.
Plate /
Forging MOTA Margin (°F) 1/4T 3/4T Westinghouse 2-Loop A
B&W Forging 66 61 3-Loop B
CE Plate 61 50 4-Loop C
RDM Forging 59 46 F
CE Plate 60 62 Sys. 80 E
B&W Plate 60 48
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Effect of Varying 1/4T ART Values
- Selected Plant F for first sensitivity study as it had the lowest MOTA (1/4T) Margin
- Investigated effect on MOTA Margin
- Low ART values (1/4T = 100°F)
- High ART values (1/4T = 390°F)
- Analysis showed that 1/4T ART magnitude has no effect on the MOTA margin
- Temperature point where Circumferential flaw curve intersected Axial flaw curve = the change in ART value, as shown on the following figures 29
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Steady-State Assessment Nominal ART Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect - Plant F 30
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Steady-State Assessment Low ART Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect - Plant F 31
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Steady-State Assessment High ART Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect - Plant F 32
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Effect of Varying 3/4T ART Values
- Selected Plant E for second sensitivity study as it had the lowest MOTA (3/4T) Margin and the thickest reactor vessel
- Investigated effect on MOTA Margin
- Low ART values (3/4T = 75°F)
- High ART values (3/4T = 275°F)
- Analysis shows that 3/4T ART magnitude has negligible effect on the MOTA margin
- The largest variation is +/- 1.5°F across all RV thicknesses 33
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P 100°F/hr Assessment Nominal ART Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect - Plant E 34
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P 100°F/hr Assessment Low ART Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect -
Plant E 35
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P 100°F/hr Assessment High ART Axial KIc P-T Curve vs. Circ. ART to Intersect -
Plant E 36
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Final MOTA Margin Analysis Results Minimum MOTA Margin Values Maximum - Plant A (Forging)
- 1/4T of 66°F, 3/4T of 61°F The analysis demonstrated that there is:
- no effect of the reactor vessel ART values on the MOTA Margin at the 1/4T location
- negligible effect of the reactor vessel ART values on the MOTA Margin at the 3/4T location.
MOTA Margin covers the entire US PWROG Fleet, with consistent results across all three plant designs 37 Plant Plate/Forging Margin (°F) 1/4T 3/4T C
Forging 59 46 F
Plate 58.5 48 E
Plate 61 40
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P MOTA Conclusions
- The axial flaw fracture behavior is governed by strong direction properties in both plates and forgings in the RPV cylindrical shell sections.
- The issue of the conservatism of BTP 5-3 estimation methods pertains primarily with the uncertainty in the ability to estimate the weak Charpy impact properties from measured strong Charpy properties.
- Since the forging and plate measured strong properties are coincident with the assessed 10 CFR 50, Appendix G axial flaw, the use of an RTNDT based on weak properties contains inherent margin.
38
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P MOTA Conclusions The BTP 5-3 uncertainty in estimating RTNDT in the weak direction (circumferential flaw) identified by the industry should be compared to the margin identified herein for the circumferential flaw.
Plate and High USE Forging (>140 ft-lb) Plant Conclusion
- The minimum MOTA Margin (40°F) exceeds the maximum BTP 5-3 uncertainty effect on ART of 26°F Low USE Forging (<140 ft-lb) Plant Conclusions
- The minimum MOTA Margin at 1/4T (59°F) exceeds the BTP 5-3 uncertainty effect on ART of 54°F
- The minimum MOTA Margin at 3/4T (46°F) is on par with the BTP 5-3 uncertainty effect on ART of 54°F The current methods for developing P-T curves are acceptable in light of the identified BTP 5-3 estimation uncertainties.
39
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Questions?
The Materials Subcommittee is established to provide a forum for the identification and resolution of materials issues including their development, modification and implementation to enhance the safe, efficient operation of PWR plants.
40 The Materials Committee is established to provide a forum for the identification and resolution of materials issues including their development, modification and implementation to enhance the safe, efficient operation of PWR plants.
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P DRAFT Back-Up Slide 41
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P EMA Visual Example: J-Applied vs.
J-Material for Axial and Circ. Flaws 42 Solid Lines = Material Fracture Toughness Dashed Lines = Applied Stress Intensity Factor (SIF)
Red = Axial Flaw and Strong Material Property Green = Circ. Flaw and Weak Material Property Stress intensity is much lower for circ. flaws than for axial flaws Weak direction properties are compared to circ. flaw stress intensity factor Strong direction properties are compared to axial flaw stress intensity factor
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Steady-State Assessment KIc vs. KIR Control - Plant C 43 Equivalent ART values (205.7°F) show improved margin comparing KIR vs. KIc as a control step
P R E S S U R I Z E D W A T E R R E A C T O R O W N E R S G R O U P Lower MOTA Margin for 3/4T?
- Which ART Value Dominates at Axial-Circumferential Flaw Cross-Over Point, i.e.
top of the P-T curve?
- 1/4T, Steady-State Limited
- 3/4T, Heatup Transient Limited
- Since 3/4T values are limiting at cross-over point for heat-up, the KIt thermal SIF component of P-T limit curves is non-zero
- This higher stress state leads to a lower MOTA Margin 44
Global Expertise
- One Voice www.pwrog.com