ML17117A368

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Updated Final Safety Analysis Report, Revision 27, Chapter 3, Part 2
ML17117A368
Person / Time
Site: Farley  Southern Nuclear icon.png
Issue date: 04/20/2017
From:
Southern Nuclear Operating Co
To:
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
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ML17117A380 List:
References
NL-17-0534
Download: ML17117A368 (260)


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REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.05 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER 30-min. OPERATOR ACTION TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-1

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.2 ft 2 BREAK AT 70-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-2

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.2 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-3

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.4 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-4

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.6 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-5

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.8 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-6

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 1.2 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-7

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 1.1 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-8

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 4.6 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER TEMPERATURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-9

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT COMBINED TEMPERATURE PROFILE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-10

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.05 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER PRESSURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-11

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 0.2 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER PRESSURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-12

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 1.1 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER PRESSURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-13

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT 4.6 ft 2 BREAK AT 102-PERCENT POWER PRESSURE VS TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-14

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT COMBINED PRESSURE PROFILE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-15

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT COMBINED TEMPERATURE PROFILE FOR MODEL 54F CASES AT 102% POWER JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-16

REV 21 5/08 HELB OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT COMBINED TEMPERATURE PROFILE FOR MODEL 54F CASES AT 70% POWER JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3J-17

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-i REV 21 5/08 3K HIGH-ENERGY LINE PIPE BREAK (OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT)

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page

3K.

1.0 INTRODUCTION

.............................................................................................3K-1

3K.2.0 REPORT CRITERIA........................................................................................3K-1

3K.2.1 Analysis Criteria (General).......................................................3K-1

3K.2.1.1 Analysis Criteria for Systems Whose Operating Temperature and Pressure at Power Exceed 200°F and 275 psig............................................................................3K-2 3K.2.1.2 Analysis Criteria for Systems Whose Operating Temperature or Pressure at Power Exceed 200°F or 275 psig...................................................................................3K-3

3K.2.2 Single Active Failure Criteria....................................................3K-3

3K.3.0 EQUIPMENT NECESSARY FOR COLD SHUTDOWN OF THE REACTOR.......................................................................................................3K-4

3K.4.0 PIPE RUPTURE ANALYSIS .........................................................................3K-4

3K.4.1 Piping Systems with Temperatures Higher Than 200°F and Pressures Higher Than 275 psig.............................................3K-5

3K.4.1.1 Main Steam Line Rupture........................................................3K-5 3K.4.1.2 Feedwater and Auxiliary Feedwater Line Rupture.................3K-10 3K.4.1.3 Condensate or Extraction Line Rupture.................................3K-15 3K.4.1.4 Auxiliary Steam System Rupture (Auxiliary Feedwater Pump Turbine-Driven Steam Supply)...............................................3K-15 3K.4.1.5 Steam Generator Blowdown Line Rupture............................3K-19 3K.4.1.6 Chemical and Volume Control System (CVCS) Letdown Line Rupture............................................................3K-19 3K.4.1.7 Boron Thermal Regenerative System (BTRS) Line Rupture..........................................................................3K-22 3K.4.1.8 Steam Generator Blowdown Processing System (SGBD) Line Rupture..........................................................................3K-25

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-ii REV 21 5/08 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page 3K.4.2 Piping Systems With Power Operation Temperatures Higher Than 200°F or Pressures Higher Than 275 psig.................................................................................3K-26

3K.4.2.1 CVCS Charging Line Rupture................................................3K-26 3K.4.2.2 Auxiliary Feedwater System Rupture.....................................3K-28 3K.4.2.3 Auxiliary Steam and Condensate Recovery System Line Rupture..........................................................................3K-31 3K.4.2.4 Plant Heating System Line Rupture.......................................3K-32

3K.5.0 EMERGENCY SHUTDOWN PROCEDURE.................................................3K-33

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3K-iii REV 21 5/08 LIST OF ATTACHMENTS

Attachment A General Information Required for Consideration of Effects of a Piping System Break Outside Containment

Attachment B Pipe Whip Restraint Design

Attachment C Methods Used To Calculate Blowdown Rates for High-Energy Fluid Line Ruptures Attachment D Compartment Pressure Tem perature Analysis Computer Program Description

Attachment E Calculation Methods for Compartment Pressurization

Attachment F Methods Used To Calculate Pipe Whip Thrust Loads and Jet Impingement Forces

Attachment G Main Steam Room and Pipe Chase Structural Stress Analysis

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3K-iv REV 21 5/08 LIST OF TABLES

3K.2-1 Criteria for Identification of High-Energy Lines and Effects Considered

3K.3-1 Equipment Required Following a High-Energy Line Break - Unit 1 (Outside Containment)

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-1 REV 23 5/11 APPENDIX 3K HIGH-ENERGY LINE PIPE BREAK (OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT)

3K.

1.0 INTRODUCTION

This appendix was prepared in response to the NRC letter from A. Giambusso, Deputy Director

for Reactor Project - Directorate of Licensing, to the Alabama Power Company, dated

December 12, 1972. The Farley Nuclear Plant complies with the criteria set forth in

attachment A, parts 1 and II.

It describes the analyses performed to determine the effects of a high-energy line break outside

containment upon the Farley Nuclear Plant. The appendix applies to Units 1 and 2. Since the Unit 2 main steam room arrangement is similar to the Unit 1 main steam room arrangement, the

results and conclusions of these analyses are applicable to both units.

On December 7, 1984, the NRC issued Information Notice 84-90, "Main Steam Line Break

Effect on Environmental Qualification of Equipment." This notice raised the concern that a

large main steam line break may not be the most limiting with respect to peak compartment and

equipment temperature. In response to this notice, a new analysis was performed to determine

the main steam valve room temperature and pressure response to a spectrum of postulated

break sizes. This analysis supersedes the analysis included in this appendix with regard to

compartment environmental conditions for the postulated main steam line break inside the main

steam valve room. Details of the analysis are presented in appendix 3J. The main steam line

break analysis presented in this appendix remains in the FSAR for completeness and to retain

the original structural design basis for the main steam valve room.

3K.2.0 REPORT CRITERIA This section describes the criteria considered in assessing the effects of a full area pipe rupture

or pipe crack in a high-energy line outside the c ontainment. These criteria were developed from the December 1972 NRC document entitled "General Information Required for Consideration of

the Effects of a Piping System Break Outside Containment," the Branch Technical Positions

APCSB 3-1 and MEB 3-1 as attached to Standard Review Plans 3.6.1 and 3.6.2, and

subsequent discussions with the NRC. These criteria are included as attachment A, parts I and

II.

3K.2.1 ANALYSIS CRITERIA (GENERAL)

The systems analyzed were those piping system s whose operating temperature exceeds 200°F or whose operating pressure exceeds 275 psig. The effects of pipe whip were considered only for those piping systems whose operating pressure and temperature exceed 275 psig and

200°F, respectively. For piping systems w hose pressure exceeds 275 psig, but whose temperature does not exceed 200°F, or whose te mperature exceeds 200°F, but whose pressure does not exceed 275 psig, the effects of a critical crack only were considered. Piping systems FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-2 REV 23 5/11 whose temperatures were less than 200°F and whose pressures were less than 275 psig were

not considered.

As discussed in attachment A, double ended breaks were not assumed for pipe sizes equal to

or less than 1 in., longitudinal breaks were not assumed for pipe sizes less than 4 in., and

critical cracks were not assumed for pipe sizes equal to or less than 1 in.

Plant conditions prior to rupture were assumed to be power operation or hot shutdown. (Power

operation and hot shutdown conditions are described in chapter 15.0.)

No other accident was assumed to occur concurrently with the pipe failure.

Pipe whip forces and jet impingement loads were derived using the methods outlined in

attachment F.

The worst case effects of jet impingement from a break or critical crack, as defined in later

sections, were analyzed as to their consequences on mechanical or electrical equipment that

must be available to bring the plant to hot shutdown and eventually to a cold shutdown

condition.

Concurrent loss of both preferred offsite pow er and auxiliary power from the generator was assumed for those accidents that cause a turbine trip.

3K.2.1.1 Analysis Criteria for System s Whose Operating Temperature and Pressure at Power Exceed 200º F and 275 psig The following systems were analyzed for the effects listed in table 3K.2-1:

System Break Type and Effects Considered Main steam B Main feedwater B

Auxiliary feedwater (from junction with main feedwater line to first isolation valve)

B Auxiliary steam (To st eam driven auxiliary feedwater pump)

B Steam generator blowdown B

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3K-3 REV 23 5/11 System Break Type and Effects Considered CVCS (letdown line from containment penetration to pressure control valve)

B BTRS (supply and return lines for the tube side of the letdown reheat

heat exchanger)

B In Seismic Category I piping systems, or Seismic Category II piping systems which were

seismically analyzed, the pipe breaks are assumed to occur at the terminal ends and at high

stress locations as described in attachment A. The magnitudes of the circumferential and

longitudinal stresses were used to define either a double ended or a longitudinal break at each

break location. Both break types were not postulated to occur at a single location.

3K.2.1.2 Analysis Criteria for System s Whose Operating Temperature or Pressure at Power Exceed 200°F or 275 psig The following systems were analyzed for effects listed in table 3K.2-1:

System Break Type and Effects Considered CVCS charging line (including reactor coolant pump seal water)A

Auxiliary feedwater (from the three auxiliary feedwater pumps to last isolation valve connecting with main feedwater line)

A Auxiliary Steam and Condensate Recovery C and note 1 of System (inside the Auxiliary Building) table 3K.2-1

Plant Heating System (PHS) (inside the Auxiliary Building) C and note 1 of table 3K.2-1

Critical crack breaks were assumed to occur in these systems at any location. They were located to maximize the consequences on required safe shutdown equipment or on structures.

The crack length used was one-half the pipe diameter and the width used was one-half the wall

thickness of the failed pipe.

3K.2.2 SINGLE ACTIVE FAILURE CRITERIA An occurrence which results in the loss of capability of an active component to perform its

intended function is an active failure. Multiple failures resulting from a single occurrence are

considered to be a single failure. Fluid and electric systems are considered to be designed to

accommodate an assumed single active failure if such a failure does not result in the loss of the

capability of the system to perform its safety function.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-4 REV 23 5/11 The analysis in this appendix considers a single active failure within the combined systems

required to effect the cold-shutdown condition. The following fluid systems were designed to

perform their required functions to bring the plant to a cold shutdown assuming a single failure

concurrent with a high-energy line break outside containment:

A. Reactor coolant system (RCS).

B. Low-head/high-head safety injection system.

C. Residual heat removal system (RHRS).

D. Auxiliary feedwater system (AFS).

E. Service water system (SWS).

F. Component cooling water system (CCWS).

G. Chemical and volume control system (CVCS).

H. Diesel fuel oil system.

I. Main steam system (MSS) from steam generators to and including main steam line isolation valves.

J. Main feedwater system (MFS) from steam generators to and including feedwater isolation valves.

3K.3.0 EQUIPMENT NECESSARY FOR COLD SHUTDOWN OF THE REACTOR Table 3K.3-1 lists the equipment required to mitigate the consequences of a high-energy line

rupture outside the containment and obtain a cold shutdown condition. This equipment, as well

as any equipment necessary to mitigate the consequences of a high-energy line break, is

protected so as not to be adversely affected by the effects of a high-energy line break outside containment.

3K.4.0 PIPE RUPTURE ANALYSIS This section describes, on a system-by-system basis, how Farley Nuclear Plant safety considerations will be implemented. Attachment A, Parts I and II, provides the information

required for consideration of a piping system break outside containment.

High-energy piping systems within the plant, as described in table 3K.2-1, are classified into two

groups for this purpose. Group 1 (subsection 3K.4.1) contains those systems whose operating

temperature and pressure will exceed 200°F and 275 psig during power operation or while at

hot standby; they are outlined in subsection 3K.4.1. The analysis criteria for all Group 1 piping

systems are given in paragraph 3K.2.1.1. Group 2 (subsection 3K.4.2) consists of those

systems whose temperature or pressure exceeds either 200°F or 275 psig; they are outlined in FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-5 REV 23 5/11 subsection 3K.4.2. The analysis criteria for Group 2 piping systems are given in

paragraph 3K.2.1.2.

Stress analysis results utilized in the criteria for determining pipe break locations are

documented in the applicable piping stress calculation for each piping system. Whip restraint

locations based on postulated pipe break locations are shown on applicable civil design

drawings.

3K.4.1 PIPING SYSTEMS WITH TEMPERATURES HIGHER THAN 200°F AND PRESSURES HIGHER THAN 275 psig 3K.4.1.1 Main Steam Line Rupture The three main steam lines carry saturated steam at 547°F and 1005 psig for no-load hot

standby and 516°F and 775 psig for 100-percent load operation. Since the main steam piping is

greater than 4-in. nominal pipe size, both longitudinal and/or double-ended ruptures were

considered at the break locations. Critical cracks were also considered.

Additional information regarding a balance of plant accident analysis of the consequences of a

rupture in the main steam lines is given in subsection 3K.5.0.

3K.4.1.1.1 Main Steam System (MSS) Design The portion of the MSS located in the auxiliary building is designed to carry steam from the three steam generators to the turbine-generator and associated equipment located in the

turbine building and to the TDAFWP located in the auxiliary building.

Drawings D-175033, sheet 1; D-175033, sheet 2; D-170114, sheet 1; D-170114, sheet 2;

D-205033, sheet 1; D-205033, sheet 2; and D-200007 show the schematic arrangement of the

MSS piping in the auxiliary building. The main steam piping from the steam generators, up to and including the second isolation valve in each main steam line, and the main steam supply to

the TDAFWP have safety-related functions. Thos e portions of the system are classified as Safety Class 2A and are designed as Seismic Category I. Main steam piping downstream of

the main steam line isolation valves is designed in accordance with ANSI B31.1.0 and is

Seismic Category II. The design pressure rating of the MSS piping is based on the maximum

pressure and temperature that occur at no-load conditions.

Saturated steam is generated in the three steam generators and flows out through the

containment wall in three 32-in. main steam lines to the main steam isolation valves.

Downstream from the main steam isolation valv es, the three main steam lines form a common header from which two 36-in. lines conduct steam to the turbine-generator. A flow restrictor, integral with each steam generator, is provided inside the containment to limit steam generator

blowdown in the event of a steam line break.

The main steam line from each steam generator is provided with five spring loaded safety

valves and one power-operated atmospheric relief valve. These valves, which are Safety FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-6 REV 23 5/11 Class 2A and Seismic Category I, are located between the containment penetration and the first

main steam isolation valve on a section of main steam line which has a 34.55-in. outside

diameter.

The safety valves are direct spring loaded. Each valve is set at a different incremental opening

pressure between 1075 psig and 1129 psig. Umbre lla-type vent stacks route safety valve discharge through penetrations in the auxiliary building roof.

The power-operated atmospheric relief valves are air-operated diaphragm type; they are set to discharge before the first spring loaded safety valve opens. Discharge from the power-operated

atmospheric relief valves is piped to the atmosphere through penetrations in the auxiliary

building roof. The discharge piping has been analyzed for thermal, seismic, and normal

operating loadings.

Two pneumatic cylinder operated, swing disc trip, ma in steam line isolation valves are installed in series in each main steam line outside t he containment and downstream from the safety valves. Each pair of isolation valves is bypassed by a 3-in. warming and pressure equalizing

line which contains two air-operated isolation valves. The main steam line isolation valves and

bypass valves are of a fail close design, are classified as Safety Class 2A, and are designed to

meet Seismic Category I requirements.

On two of the three main steam lines outside the containment and downstream from the safety

valves, and upstream of the main steam line isolation valves, there is a 3-in. takeoff that

supplies steam to the TDAFWP.

The main steam piping outside the auxiliary buildi ng is routed from the auxiliary building across an open area, into the turbine building, and on to the turbine stop and control valves.

3K.4.1.1.2 Main Steam System Piping The MSS piping outside containment was analyzed in accordance with the criteria described in

subsection 3K.2.0 and the methods outlined in attachment F.

The Seismic Category II portions of the main steam line were analyzed seismically to determine

the high stress points and postulated break locations.

3K.4.1.1.3 Areas Affected by a Steam Line Rupture The main steam system piping penetrates the containment wall just above the 127-ft floor level, runs through the main steam room to a pipe c hase, runs up the chase, and exits the auxiliary

building at el 179 ft 8 in. From the auxiliary building, the two main steam headers proceed

across the yard to the turbine building. Each of the three main steam lines between the

containment penetrations and the main steam header inside the auxiliary building is separated

by a jet impingement wall. Jet impingement barri ers are provided where necessary to preclude damage to feedwater control valves and outboar d stop-check valves from high-energy line breaks at postulated breakpoints in the main steam and feedwater valve room.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-7 REV 23 5/11 The main steam system inside the turbine building is not located near any safety-related

equipment whose safety function would be impaired by a line rupture. Jet and pipe whip forces resulting from a ruptured main steam line cannot cause the loss of the turbine building.

3K.4.1.1.4 Pipe Whip The methods outlined in attachment F were used to analyze full area pipe breaks for pipe whip.

Because of the large resultant jet thrust forces, pipe whip restraints are located at various

places along the piping system to prevent any whipping of the pipe due to a rupture at the

postulated break locations. A description of pipe restraint design is given in attachment B. The forces that the pipe would exert in the event of a full area rupture are given in attachment F.

The forces are assumed to be instantaneous.

3K.4.1.1.5 Jet Impingement The jet impingement force, caused by the momentum change of fluid striking a target, is a

function of the upstream fluid condition, fluid enthalpy, source pressure, break dimensions, distance from the target, and jet geometry. The jet forces were calculated using the methods

outlined in attachment 3-F. The jet forces caused by the escaping fluid are assumed to develop

instantaneously (with zero rise time).

The following were analyzed for the effects of jet impingement from a longitudinal or

circumferential break and critical crack inside the auxiliary building.

  • Adjacent containment wall.
  • Pipe chase structure.
  • Equipment contained in the main steam room listed in table 3K.3-1.

The results of the analysis are as follows:

Each of the above-referenced structural elements was analyzed for a force corresponding to the

jet force dispersed over the impingement area. Each structure is sufficient to withstand the jet

forces as described in attachment G.

All piping systems and their components listed in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.3 are so supported or protected by barriers as to withstand the effects of all jet impingement forces from all postulated

break locations and from critical cracks. Sa fety-related instrumentation that would have been adversely affected by jet impingement has been removed from the main steam room to a

nonaffected area.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-8 REV 23 5/11 For safety and design conservatism, cable tr ays have been eliminated from the main steam room. The cables have been routed in conduits far removed from the pipe break locations so as

to ensure no damage to the conduit or its supports, except for cables serving the main steam

isolation valves. Of necessity, these cables serv ing the main steam isolation valves are in close proximity to the main steam lines. In this case, a pipe break damaging both redundant valve

circuits in the broken line would be equivalent to a rupture in the main steam line upstream of

the isolation valves, as analyzed in section 3K.5.0 and paragraph 3K.4.1.1.9. In view of the

separation wall between steam lines, a pipe break on a steam line will not affect the redundant

isolation valves and associated circuits on the other steam lines.

3K.4.1.1.6 Compartment Pressurization The postulated main steam line ruptures in the main steam room and adjacent pipe chase

structure were analyzed to determine the effects of the resulting compartment pressurization.

Because of the similarity of the steam and feedwater piping, which runs through the main steam

room and pipe chase, the various postulated breaks in these two piping runs were analyzed to

determine the worst case break in the main steam room and the worst case break in the pipe

chase structure. The methods outlined in attachment C were used to calculate steam and

feedwater mass and energy blowdown rates for full area pipe ruptures.

The analysis outlined in attachment E was used to predict the compartment pressure in the

main steam room and pipe chase structure. A description of the program used is given in

attachment D. The compartmentation used for the worst case line rupture in the main steam

room is given in figure E-3 (in attachment E). The compartmentation used to evaluate the worst break in the pipe chase is shown in figures E-6 and E-6A. The worst case pressures of 5.8 psig

and 28.8 psig were used along with the maximum pressures of the other compartments for the

structural analysis of the main steam room and the pipe chase, respectively, after the structural

modifications described below. See figures E-1, E-1A, E-2, and E-2A for time

pressure/temperature curves.

The criteria used to evaluate the pressurization analysis were that the effects of a steam line

rupture would not propagate to areas other than those where the rupture occurred and that the

walls separating the three main steam lines must remain intact. Using the peak pressures

given in attachment E and the analytical methods outlined in attachment G, the main steam

room and the pipe chase were analyzed for structural adequacy during and after a main steam

line rupture.

Initial results indicated that the configuration of the main steam room and the exterior pipe

chase as originally envisioned was not viable. Compartment pressures were higher than could

be tolerated and structural walls and slabs were overloaded. This situation was corrected by

deleting intermediate floors and walls to provide increased free volume and to provide additional

vent paths to atmosphere for any steam discharging from a break. In the pipe chase the

intermediate wall was removed and replaced by horizontal structural steel props; also, the pipe

chase roof was raised from el 161 ft 8 in. to el 175 ft. Protection from external missiles was

provided in the form of heavy steel grating, and structural integrity was preserved by the

addition of structural steel.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-9 REV 23 5/11 In the main steam room the main steam room r oof was raised from el 155 to el 205 to form a penthouse structure. This new roof is supported on structural steel. The north, south, and west

faces of the penthouse are open to allow venting to the atmosphere. A grating for protection

against tornado missiles has been installed. Flame retardant polyethylene or a similar

flame-retardant plastic sheeting may be applied to the outside of the exterior grating of the

MSVR in winter to prevent freeze damage to crit ical instruments. This sheeting will be applied such that, in the event of a pipe break accident, the sheeting will tear away so that the pressure

in the MSVR will not exceed its design pressure.

Structural integrity of these Category I structures has been retained throughout the revised

structures by keeping stresses below the allowable working stresses permitted in Codes

ACI 318-69 and AISC, 1969 edition. In addition, an analysis using finite element methods was

performed to verify the manual calculations. The details and results of this analysis are

described in attachment G.

3K.4.1.1.7 Flooding from a Steam Line Break The most critical flooding condition for the main steam room and the pipe chase structure is

from a break in the main feedwater lines, as discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.2.7.

3K.4.1.1.8 Environmental Effects The environmental effects considered as a result of a high-energy fluid line break were as

follows:

  • Pressure (its effect on equipment).
  • Temperature.
  • Humidity.

There is no safety-related equipment in the main steam room or the pipe chase structure that

will be affected by the pressures described in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.6.

The peak temperatures and pressures (predicted by the computer code, reference

paragraph 3K.4.1.1.6) for the worst case steam or feedwater line rupture in the main steam

room at break Location 57 are 308°F and 5.8 psig, respectively. The pressure and temperature/time curves for break Location 57 are given in figures E1 and E2, respectively. As

a result of the high temperatures predicted, the safety-related sensing instrumentation that

could have been affected in the main steam room has been removed to a nonaffected area.

In response to IE Information Notice 84-90, a new MSLB analysis was performed for the main

steam valve room. The results of this analysis supersede the appendix 3K analysis with regard

to main steam valve room pressure and temperature conditions. The details of the new

analysis and the corresponding pressure and temperature curves are presented in appendix

3J.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-10 REV 23 5/11 In that the post-LOCA environment is more seve re than that of the main steam valve room, these units will be able to perform their design function in the event of a steam line break in this

room.

3K.4.1.1.9 Emergency Shutdown With a Main Steam Line Rupture The equipment necessary for cold shutdown of the reactor is given in table 3K.3-1. The effect

of a main steam line break upstream of the isolation valves on plant shutdown is the loss of one

steam generator for reactor decay heat removal immediately after reactor trip.

For a large steam line break downstream of the isolation valves the redundant main steam

isolation valves will ensure isolation of the steam generators from the break. Following this

break all steam generators will be available for decay heat removal.

For large steam line breaks the equipment that must be available to accomplish a cold

shutdown is listed in table 3K.3-1.

3K.4.1.2 Feedwater and Auxiliary Feedwater Line Rupture The three 14-in. feedwater lines carry water at 437°F and 923 psig at 100-percent load.

Feedwater temperatures and pressures do not exceed 440°F and 1055 psig under any load

conditions. The pipe break criteria as described in paragraph 3K.2.1.1 were used for the

analysis. Since the main feedwater piping is greater than 4-in. nominal pipe size, longitudinal

and/or double-ended circumferential ruptures were considered at the break locations. Critical

cracks were also considered. Additional information regarding a balance-of-plant accident

analysis of the consequences of a rupture in the main feedwater line is given in

subsection 3K.5.0.

The auxiliary feedwater piping considered in this section of the appendix was that portion of

piping from its junction with each main feedwater line back to the first auxiliary feedwater

isolation valve. The remaining portion of the auxiliary feedwater piping is discussed in

paragraph 3K.4.2.2. The effects of a pipe rupture in that portion of the auxiliary feedwater

piping described above were analyzed using the same criteria and system temperatures and

pressures as that used for the main feedwater system.

3K.4.1.2.1 Feedwater and Auxiliary Feedwater System Design The portion of the feedwater system located in the auxiliary building is designed to carry feedwater from the turbine building into the containment to the three steam generators.

Drawings D-170117, sheet 1; D-170117, sheet 2; D-170117, sheet 3; D-170117, sheet 4;

D-175073; D-200011, sheet 1; D-200011, sheet 2; D-200011, sheet 3; and D-205073 show the

schematic arrangement of the main feedwater piping in the auxiliary building and yard area.

The main feedwater piping from the three steam generators up to and including the feedwater

isolation valve located outside containment are classified as Safety Class 2A and are designed FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-11 REV 23 5/11 as Seismic Category I. Main feedwater piping upstream from the feedwater isolation valves is

designed in accordance with ANSI B31.1.0.

Feedwater flow enters the auxiliary building th rough three 14-in. lines. Inside the auxiliary

building each line contains an air-operated feedwater flow control valve that, for maintenance

purposes, has a manually-operated gate valve installed on either side. The feedwater flow in

each line passes through a containment penetration and continues to the corresponding steam

generator. Between the feedwater isolation valve and the containment penetration, each

feedwater line has a 4-in. connection for flow fr om the auxiliary feedwater system and a 1-in.

connection for flow from the chemical injection system.

The auxiliary feedwater system is designed to s upply feedwater to the steam generators during

plant startup, cooldown, and emergency conditions when the normal feedwater supply is not

available. The system contains two motor-d riven pumps, one turbine-driven pump, associated

piping, valves, and instrumentation. Each of the motor-driven pumps or the turbine-driven pump

is designed to supply the steam generators with the required flow for a normal safe shutdown of

the reactor coolant system, as described in subsection 6.5.1. The steam supply piping to the

turbine-driven pump is discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.4.1.

The auxiliary feedwater system is an engineered sa fety feature (ESF) and is designed to meet Seismic Category I requirements. The pumps are normally aligned to take suction from the

condensate storage tank. One 8-in. suction header supplies condensate to the two

motor-driven pumps and a separate 8-in. suction line supplies condensate to the turbine-driven

pump. Each pump's individual suction line contains a locked open isolation valve and a

nonreturn valve.

A backup source of water for the pumps is provided from the safety-related portion of the

service water system. The service water is is olated from the normal suction piping by two normally closed motor-operated gate valves. Each of the three pumps can be supplied with

water from either of the two redundant service water headers.

Each of the two motor-driven pumps discharges through a nonreturn valve and an isolation

valve into a common header. From this header, individual lines feed each steam generator

through a control valve station, consisting of an air-operated control valve, locked-open manual

block valves, and a nonreturn valve.

The turbine-driven pump discharges through a nonreturn valve and branches into three lines, each containing a control valve station. Downstream of the control valve station, each of these

three lines joins with the corresponding line from the motor-driven pumps. A single supply line

then connects to each of the three main feedwater lines downstream of the main feedwater stop

valve. The single auxiliary feedwater line for each steam generator contains a remote manual stop-check valve. This normally open valve can be us ed to isolate auxiliary feedwater flow to a faulty steam generator. The swing check valve nor mally functions to prevent backflow of main feedwater into the auxiliary feedwater syst em. In addition, normally open motor-operated isolation valves are provided in the pump discharge header and supply piping. These valves

can be operated from the control room to isolate failures in the steam and feedwater systems.

Each pump has a minimum flow recirculation line with a pressure reducing orifice or a locked manually operated anticavitation pressure reducing flow control valve, a nonreturn valve, and a FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-12 REV 23 5/11 locked open manual block valve. In addition to the minimum flow recirculation line, each pump

has a manual locked closed recirculation system and a breakdown orifice for testing of the

pump at the design point. The minimum flow recirculation line and the test line for the three

pumps are joined together and routed to the condensate storage tank.

3K.4.1.2.2 Feedwater and Auxiliary Feedwater System Piping The main feedwater piping outside containment and inside the auxiliary building and that portion

of the auxiliary feedwater piping inside the aux iliary building described in paragraph 3K.4.1.2 were analyzed in accordance with the criteria described in section 3K.2.0.

Main feedwater and auxiliary feedwater lines, including the Seismic Category II piping, were

seismically analyzed to obtain seismic loading in order to determine the high stress locations.

Using this analysis, the pipe break locations were postulated.

3K.4.1.2.3 Areas Affected by a Feedwater or Auxiliary Feedwater Line Rupture The three main feedwater lines penetrate the containment at el 141 ft 6 in. and follow

approximately the same path as the main steam lines, as described in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.3.

The areas in the auxiliary building affected by a rupture in the main feedwater system and the auxiliary feedwater system will be the same as the main steam system; therefore, the

environmental consequences will be limited to the main steam room and the pipe chase, as outlined in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.3.

The areas inside the turbine building that would be affected by a feedwater line rupture contain

no safety-related equipment whose safety function would be impaired by a line rupture. The

forces and flooding resulting from a feedwater line rupture cannot cause the loss of the building.

Safety-related equipment and available equipment nec essary for a cold shutdown located in the main steam room and the pipe chase are listed in table 3K.3-1.

3K.4.1.2.4 Pipe Whip The methods outlined in attachment F were used to analyze full area pipe breaks for pipe whip

and the resultant jet thrust forces. The forces experienced in the event of a full area break are

given in attachment F.

Because of the large resultant jet thrust forces, pipe whip restraints are located at various

places along the pipe system to prevent whipping of the pipe due to rupture at the postulated

break locations. A description of pipe restraint design is given in attachment B.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-13 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.1.2.5 Jet Impingement The jet impingement force, caused by the momentum change of fluid striking a target, is a

function of the upstream fluid conditions, fluid enthalphy, source pressure, break dimensions, distance from the target and jetgeometry; for conser vatism, pipe fiction effects from the pressure source to any break in the line were neglected. The jet forces were calculated using the method

outlined in attachment F. The jet forces caused by the escaping fluid are assumed to develop

instantaneously (with zero rise time).

The effects of jet impingement on the structures and equipment listed in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.5

were analyzed. The results were the same as those outlined in that section.

The closest line-of-sight distance from postulated breakpoints to valve actuation elements in the

main steam room is 11 ft 8 in. Impingement pressu re from the break falls to < 1.3 psig at a

distance of 5 ft; therefore, no damage will be done to the actuation element.

3K.4.1.2.6 Compartment Pressurization Because of the lower energy release rate associated with a feedwater line break, the

compartment pressurization would be less than al ready presented in the main steam pressure analysis for the main steam room and the pipe chase structure as discussed in

paragraph 3K.4.1.1.6.

3K.4.1.2.7 Flooding The main steam room and the pipe chase structure contain equipment available for hot standby

and eventual cooldown. Postulated flooding due to a main feedwater line rupture in the main

steam room and pipe chase structure was conservatively analyzed using the following

assumptions:

A. A full circumferential break was assumed in the No. 3 main feedwater line.

B. Main feedwater pumps are initially operating, with a portion of the flow flashing to steam upon exiting the break. The net flow of water to the floor of the main steam room is 24,100 gal/min, based on system resistances between the pump

discharges and the break location.

C. All three of the auxiliary feedwater pumps are assumed to be operating at the time of the break. The net flow of water to the floor of the main steam room is

initially a total of 900 gal/min, the flow being based on system resistances

between the pump discharges and the break location.

D. The main feedwater pumps and auxiliary feedwater pumps contribute a total initial combined flow of 25,000 gal/min to the floor. Six redundant

level sensors, set to activate at a level not to exceed 6 in. off the 127-ft floor

elevation, initiate signals to trip the feedwater pumps and close the feedwater

isolation valves. During the 30-s interval required for these isolation valves to FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-14 REV 23 5/11 close, the combined pumps are conservatively assumed to continue to

contribute at their maximum net rate of 25,000 gal/min. The two motor-driven

auxiliary feedwater pumps (MDAFWPs) ar e assumed to contribute through the break for a total of 10 min after the main feedwater isolation signals are

initiated, at which time the break is remote manually isolated using the motor-

operated valves provided. The turbine-driven pump continues to contribute

through the break at a flow rate of 348 gal/min until isolated from the break

using manual valves which are located below the main steam room and

isolated from the effects of a feedwater or steam line break.

E. The affected steam generator is assumed to be at maximum water level, and blows down its entire inventory of water to the main steam room with a portion

of the water flashing to steam as it exits the break. Total net contribution of

water to the main steam room from this source is 2800 ft

3.

F. All feedwater lines and heaters between the feedwater pumps and the break are assumed to drain their entire 1200 ft 3 inventory to the main steam room.

The net free volume of the pipe chase and main steam room up to the

elevation of the lowest safety-related equipment (the solenoid valves

associated with MDAFW and TDAFW discharge valves HV-3227A, B, and C

and HV-3228A, B, and C located at el 131 ft. 0 in.) is 15,710 ft

3. The maximum calculated water level, using the assumptions above and including auxiliary

feedwater flow through the break until the MDAFWPs are isolated at 10 min, is

2 ft. 10 in. above the 127-ft elevation. Plant personnel have approximately

2-1/2 additional h to isolate the turbine-driven pump discharge from the break

before water levels in the main steam room would approach the bottom of the

solenoid valves on the AFW pump discharge valves. Additional time would be

available before water levels would approach the critical portions of the valve

operators, located on top of the valve.

3K.4.1.2.8 Environmental Effects Environmental effects from a feedwater pipe break in the main steam room and pipe chase

structure are included in the analysis in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.8.

3K.4.1.2.9 Emergency Shutdown with a Feedwater or Auxiliary Feedwater Rupture A feedwater rupture between the containment and the feedwater check valve is considered to

be the worst case feedwater rupture because of the complete blowdown of one steam

generator, in addition to almost unrestricted flow out of the break from the feedwater pumps.

The equipment necessary for cold shutdown of the reactor is given in table 3K.3-1. For this

rupture the following must be available to accomplish their respective safety functions:

A. Safety injection to inject borated water into the core and thereby limit the core power transient following the break.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-15 REV 23 5/11 B. For a large feedline break, there will be considerable water carryover from the affected steam generator. The water loss out of the steam generator lessens

the plant's ability to dissipate decay heat. The auxiliary feedwater pumps will

automatically start and deliver flow through the auxiliary feedwater flow restriction orifices. The orifices limit flow to the faulted steam generator and

establish flow to the intact steam generators. After 10 min, operator action is

taken to decrease flow to the faulted steam generator and increase flow to the

intact steam generators.

C. Closure of main steam isolation valves.

In order to cool the plant down to the residual heat removal system (RHRS) operating

temperature and pressure, auxiliary feedwater fr om at least one auxiliary feedwater pump must be available and the steam generator power-operated relief valves must be accessible for

manual local operation.

For a large break between the main feedwater pump and the main feedwater check valve, the

feedline check valve will prevent water or st eam release from any of the steam generators

through the break. A large break at this point is, thus, essentially a loss of normal feedwater. In

this case, the equipment that must be available to accomplish the safety shutdown is given in

table 3K.3-1. Safety injection is not required. This case covers all lesser feedwater and

condensate system high-energy line breaks.

3K.4.1.3 Condensate or Extraction Line Rupture The condensate and extraction lines are located in the turbine building. There is no

safety-related equipment located in the vicinity of these lines whose safety function would be

impaired by a line rupture, and the flooding or forces created by the rupture of these lines are

incapable of compromising the integrity of the turbine building.

3K.4.1.4 Auxiliary Steam System Rupture (Auxiliary Feedwater Pump Turbine-Driven Steam Supply)

The auxiliary steam system supplies steam to the auxiliary feedwat er pump turbine driver from the No. 2 and No. 3 steam headers upstream of the main steam isolation valves at main steam

pressures and temperatures given in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.

Where the piping is < 4-in. nominal pipe size, only full area circumferential breaks were

considered at the break locations. The analysis criteria used are outlined in

paragraph 3K.2.1.1.

3K.4.1.4.1 Auxiliary Steam System Design The steam turbine which drives one of the three auxiliary feedwater pumps is a single stage

noncondensing turbine that operates on steam extr acted from the main steam system (MSS).

Drawing D-175033, sheet 2 shows the schematic arrangement of the supply piping.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-16 REV 23 5/11 Three-inch connections for the steam supply to the auxiliary feedwater turbine driver are

provided on two of the three main steam lines between the containment penetrations and the

main steam isolation valves. Each line is provided with a normally open manual gate valve, a normally closed air-operated isolation valve, and a normally open manual gate valve installed in series. Between the two normally open gate valv es, there is a 1-in. normally open bypass line that keeps the supply piping at main steam temperature. The 3-in. lines penetrate the 127 ft

elevation floor, increase to 4-in., and then combine to form a single 4-in. line that runs to a

control station and trip and throttle valve located at the turbine inlet. Each 3-in. line contains a

check valve below el 127 ft.

The system piping is Seismic Category I from the main steam line to the turbine.

3K.4.1.4.2 Auxiliary Steam System Piping The auxiliary steam system pi ping from the No. 2 and No. 3 MSS headers to the auxiliary

feedwater pump turbine was analyzed in accordance with the criteria described in

paragraph 3K.2.1.1. Each 3-in. auxiliary steam branch line from the main steam line header is

increased to a 4-in. line downstream from the air-operated isolation valves. These 4-in. lines

then join into a common 4-in. header to the auxiliary feedwater pump turbine driver.

3K.4.1.4.3 Areas Affected by an Auxiliary Steam System Line Rupture The auxiliary steam system provi des steam from the No. 2 and No. 3 main steam headers in the

main steam room through the floor level at el 127 to the equipment room area at el 100 directly

below the main steam room. From the point at which the two lines join in the equipment room, a single 4-in. header proceeds through the ceiling of the steam driven auxiliary feedwater pump room to the turbine driver. The only other room that would be affected at el 100 besides the

turbine pump room and equipment room would be t he chemical storage room adjacent to motor pump room 1. The areas affected by an auxilia ry steam line rupture above el 127 are outlined

in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.3.

In order to prevent the adverse environmental consequences (i.e., temperature and pressure) of

a rupture in the auxiliary steam line at the el 100-ft level from propagating to other areas of the

auxiliary building containing available shutdown equipment, and at the same time allowing the

adverse environmental effects to vent to the atmosphere, the following structural design

changes were initiated: the rollup door to the equipment access shaft on the south wall of the

auxiliary building was removed (this allowed di scharging steam to vent up the shaft to the atmosphere); and the area containing the TDAFWP was isolated from safety-related equipment

by the addition of walls and watertight doors to protect nearby equipment from flooding.

3K.4.1.4.4 Pipe Whip The methods and analyses used for full area pipe breaks for pipe whip are the same as those

outlined in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.4.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-17 REV 23 5/11 Pipe whip restraints have been so located at the postulated break locations as to prevent

whipping of the pipe due to a full area break at those locations. The thrust forces that the pipe

would exert in the event of a full area break are given in attachment F.

3K.4.1.4.5 Jet Impingement The methods and analysis used in considering the effects of jet impingement caused by a

rupture in the auxiliary steam system are the sa me as those outlined in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.5.

The effects of jet impingement forces on the following structures and equipment were analyzed:

A. Main steam room.

B. The structural areas at el 100 described in paragraph 3K.4.1.4.3.

C. Electrical cables servicing safety-related equipment at el 100.

D. Auxiliary feedwater lines

E. Service water lines at el 100.

F. Safety-related instrumentations at el 100.

The results are as follows:

The auxiliary feedwater lines and service water li nes are supported or protected by appropriate

barriers so as to withstand the effects of all jet impingement forces from all postulated break

locations and from critical cracks.

Each of the above referenced structural elements was investigated for a force corresponding to

the jet force dispersed over the impingement area. The capacity of the structures has been

shown to be sufficient to safely withstand the jet forces in combination with the static pressure

loadings associated with a high-energy line break.

Cable trays have been relocated away from break locations so as to reduce jet impingement loads to acceptable levels.

Safety-related instrumentation that could be adversely affected by jet impingement has been removed from the areas at el 100 to a nonaffected area.

3K.4.1.4.6 Compartment Pressurization Overpressurization of the compartments outlined in paragraph 3K.4.1.4.3 due to a full area

rupture in the auxiliary steam line was considered using the methods and analyses of

paragraph 3K.4.1.1.6.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-18 REV 23 5/11 A rupture in the main steam line at el 127 is the worst case break for the main steam room, and

is discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.6.

After making the structural modifications for the areas at el 100 described in

paragraph 3K.4.1.4.3, the peak pressure at el 100 in the TDAFWP area was found to be 15.25

psia as shown on figure E-7; this amounts to a differential pressure across walls and slabs of

approximately 0.55 psi, which is well within the design strength of the structure.

The computer model flow diagram for the above pr essure analysis is given on figure E-8, in

attachment E, along with the blowdown table E-1.

3K.4.1.4.7 Flooding Flooding accompanying a break in the line carryi ng auxiliary steam to the TDAFWP at el 100 will affect the steam-driven auxiliary, feedwater pump room, adjacent corridors, equipment

room, and chemical storage room. The combined net floor area is calculated to be 1,615 ft

2. (For conservatism, for calculating a flood height the floor area for the chemical storage room

was neglected.) Flooding is calculated assuming the entire inventory (3,250 ft 3 water, 2508 ft 3 steam) of one steam generator to empty into the area. The flooding level is calculated at 2 ft

above the 100 ft floor elevation throughout the affected areas.

The two MDAFWPs will be unaffected since their respective rooms are equipped with watertight

doors. Auxiliary feedwater crossconnect valving is located outside the affected space, and

required auxiliary feedwater flow can be main tained with the two motor-driven pumps.

Indication of flooding would be provided by the equipment room sump high-level alarm. No

safety-related equipment is adversely affected, and safe shutdown capability is unimpaired.

A rupture in an auxiliary steam line in the main steam room at el 127 ft leads to a less severe

case of flooding than does a rupture in the main feedwater system, as outlined in

paragraph 3K.4.1.2.7.

3K.4.1.4.8 Environmental Effects Pressure and temperature due to a rupture in the auxiliary steam system at el 100 ft (turbine-driven pump room) are given in figures E-7 and E-7A, respectively. No safety-related

equipment in these areas will be affected by the pressures shown in figure E-7. The

temperatures shown in figure E-7A approach an asymptotic value of 300°F. The electric cable

to safety-related equipment in this area has the same characteristics as that discussed in

paragraph 3K.4.1.1.8 and will not be adversely a ffected by these temperatures. The operators will terminate the transient by closing the appropriate isolation valves located at el 127 ft within

10 min.

Environmental effects at el 127 are less than those discussed for the main steam system. See

paragraph 3K.4.1.1.8.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-19 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.1.4.9 Emergency Shutdown with an Auxiliary Steam System Rupture A rupture of the auxiliary feedwater pump st eam supply line between the main steam line and the normally closed air-operated valve is considered a less severe main steam line rupture. The

necessary emergency shutdown equipment is discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.9. The

MDAFWPs remain operable in this condition.

In case of a high-energy line break downstream of the normally closed air-operated stop check

valves, the TDAFWP will be lost. Considering a single failure in the electrical train which would

render one of the two MDAFWPs inoperable, safe shutdown can be accomplished by one

MDAFWP providing at least 285 gal/min to two steam generators.

3K.4.1.5 Steam Generator Blowdown Line Rupture Steam generator blowdown piping is field installed. The analysis of this system is provided in

paragraph 3K.4.1.8.

3K.4.1.6 Chemical and Volume Control System (CVCS) Letdown Line Rupture The 3-in. letdown line carries water at a maximum temperature and pressure of 380°F and

550 psig from the containment penetration through the letdown heat exchanger to a control

valve where the temperature and pressure are reduced to 115°F and 75 psig. The pipe break

criteria described in paragraph 3K.2.1.1 were used for the analysis of the piping from

containment penetration to the letdown heat exchanger. The criteria described in

paragraph 3K.2.1.2 were used for the analysis of the piping from the heat exchanger to the flow

control valve, where the temperature and pressure are 115°F and 500 psig, respectively.

3K.4.1.6.1 CVCS Letdown and Charging System Design During normal power operation, a continuous stream of letdown water is bled from the reactor

coolant loop No. 1 upstream from the reactor coolant pump. The high temperature water flows

through the shell side of the regenerative heat exchanger where it heats the charging flow in the

tubes being returned to the reactor coolant system. The letdown water then flows through the

letdown orifices where the pressure is reduced. The water continues through a temperature

control valve before passing through the tubes of the letdown heat exchanger, where it gives up

its heat to the component cooling water in the shell. Further pressure reduction takes place in a

low pressure letdown valve before passing through one of the mixed-bed demineralizers, where

ionic impurities are removed. The water then flows either through the thermal regeneration

resins, or directly through the reactor coolant filter, and into the volume control tank through a spray nozzle.

Normal charging flow to the reactor coolant system is handled by one or more of the three

charging pumps. The charging pumps take suction from the volume control tank and pump the

makeup water through the tubes of the regenerative heat exchanger, where its temperature is

increased by the hot letdown fluid in the shell. The flow is then injected into the reactor coolant

system via the cold leg of reactor coolant loop No. 2.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-20 REV 23 5/11

3K.4.1.6.2 CVCS Letdown Piping The 3-in. CVCS piping was analyzed for the effects of a full area circumferential break at the

postulated break locations and for critical cracks anywhere along the line. The entire letdown

line system piping is B31.7 class 2, ASME III Seismic Category I. The letdown line has been

equipped with two fail-closed air-operated valves in series (QV565A and B) as shown in

drawings D-175039 and D-205039. These valves limit the adverse environmental effects due to a rupture in the letdown line.

These isolation valves are actuated by pressure sensors which monitor all areas affected by a

rupture in the CVCS letdown piping. The sensors detect pressure buildups caused by a line

break, and initiate signals to close the air-operated valves provided. A more detailed

description of their function is given in paragraph 3K.4.1.6.6.

3K.4.1.6.3 Areas Affected by a CVCS Letdown Line Rupture The CVCS piping penetrates the containment at el 108 ft 6 in. into the airtight penetration room

at el 100. From the penetration room the letdown line goes through a wall seal into a sealed

piping tunnel, then to the seal water heat exchanger room and the letdown heat exchanger

room at el 100.

In addition to the rooms that contain the CVCS letdown line piping, the el 100-ft corridor is also

affected by a letdown line rupture in the piping tunnel or the heat exchanger rooms. The door

between the letdown heat exchanger room and this corridor will open due to elevated pressure

in the letdown heat exchanger room following a letdown line rupture. The open doorway

provides a flow path for steam to enter the corridor. In Unit 1 the equipment hatch acts as an

open flow path and connects this corridor to other elevations (el 121, 139, and 155 ft). In

Unit 2 there is no equipment hatch, however, a 6-ft 2 open flow path (a pipe chase) exists between the el 100-ft and 121-ft corridors. Therefore, the el 100-ft and 121-ft corridors are

affected by the line rupture.

3K.4.1.6.4 Pipe Whip The analysis criteria and methods used for consideration of full area pipe breaks for pipe whip

are in accordance with the descriptions outlined in attachments A and F, respectively.

Pipe whip restraints have been so located at the postulated break locations as to prevent

whipping of the pipe due to a full area break at those locations.

The forces that the pipe would experience in the event of a full area rupture are given in

attachment F.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-21 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.1.6.5 Jet Impingement No safety-related equipment, cables, or equipment necessary to bring the plant to a hot standby

and eventual cold shutdown are located in letdown line areas that would be affected by jet

impingement forces.

3K.4.1.6.6 Compartment Pressurization As described in paragraph 3K.4.1.6.2, the CVCS letdown line has been equipped with two

air-operated valves which are actuated to the closed position by pressure sensors located in the

areas affected by a CVCS letdown line rupture. The sensors are calibrated to actuate the

air-operated valves at a pressure of 0.28 psig within the compartments affected. The operating

time of the air-operated valves is 5 s to the closed position. However, to account for

instrument response time, the valve is assumed to remain fully open for 2 s after the room

pressure reaches the high-pressure setpoint. Therefore, the total response time of the valve is assumed to be 7 s.

The pressure sensors and associated circuitry that actuate isolation valves in the CVCS letdown

line are seismically qualified. The pressure sensors are not mounted in the rooms whose

pressure they are to sense. They are connec ted to these rooms by stainless steel tubing through wall penetrations.

The blowdown rates for double-ended full-area circumferential breaks in the penetration room (el 100 ft), the letdown heat exchanger room, and the seal water heat exchanger room and for a

critical crack in the piping tunnel are given in tables E-2 through E-6. Critical cracks were not

postulated in the other rooms because the blowdown from a circumferential break is more

severe. The blowdown decreases linearly when the air-operated valves start to close and stops

when the valves are fully closed. The blowdown is based on the letdown reheat heat

exchanger outlet valve (TCV-381A) being open; this valve is open when the boron thermal

regeneration system is in the boron-release mode of operation. Therefore, since the valve is

open, the branch piping for the alternate letdown path contains high-temperature water and, thus, it contributes to the compartment pressurization.

The analytical methods used for the pressure response analyses are in accordance with

reference 2 of attachment E.

As discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.6.3, the el 100-ft corridor outside of the letdown heat

exchanger room for both Units 1 and 2 is affected by a letdown line rupture. Additionally, the Unit 1 corridors on el 121, 139, and 155 ft are also affected. Due to the increased volume from

the upper elevations in Unit 1, the pressure increase of the piping tunnel, the seal water heat

exchanger room, and the letdown heat exchanger room is lower for Unit 1 than for Unit 2. The

Unit 2 pressures provide an upper bound for Unit 1. The temperatures for both units are about

the same.

The pressure and temperature histories for CVCS letdown line breaks in the penetration room, the CVCS letdown heat exchanger room, and the seal water heat exchanger room and the

piping tunnel are given in figures E-9 through E-18. As shown in these figures and in table E-7, the letdown line is isolated before the pressure reaches 3 psig (the design peak differential for FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-22 REV 23 5/11 Seismic Category I structures) in any of these rooms. In table E-7, the reported peak

temperatures and pressures apply to both units since these temperatures and pressures

provide an upper bound for both units. In addition, only the peak pressure of a break or crack

area is reported; for the affected areas other than the break or crack areas, only peak

temperatures are reported.

The flow diagrams used in this analysis are given in figures E-19 and E-20.

3K.4.1.6.7 Flooding Due to the small mass of blowdown (equal to about 45 ft 3 of water) from a CVCS letdown line rupture, no flooding damage to safety-related equipment or equipment necessary for a cold

shutdown will occur.

3K.4.1.6.8 Environmental Effects Due to the short duration of blowdown from the CVCS letdown, as described in

paragraph 3K.4.1.6.6, environmental effects will be minimal. The peak temperatures and

pressures shown in table E-7 will not adversely affect equipment required for shutdown.

3K.4.1.6.9 Emergency Shutdown with a CVCS Letdown Line Rupture For a break in the letdown line between the containment and the letdown heat exchanger, the

following must be available:

A. Boration capability via the safety injection system.

B. Letdown line containment isolation valves.

C. Auxiliary feedwater.

D. Steam generator power-operated relief valves (local manual operation).

E. RHRS, to bring the plant to cold-shutdown conditions.

3K.4.1.7 Boron Thermal Regenerative System (BTRS) Line Rupture The 3-in. boron thermal regenerative system (BTRS) lines considered in this report carry water at 380°F and 510 psig from the CVCS letdown line described in paragraph 3K.4.1.6 to the

BTRS letdown reheat heat exchanger, and from the BTRS letdown reheat heat exchanger back

to the CVCS letdown line at 247°F and 500 psig. The alternate letdown line and its return line

connect with the main letdown line upstream of the letdown heat exchanger. A double-ended, full-area circumferential break is considered a ssuming the boron thermal regenerative system is in operation at the time of the break. The pipe break criteria described in paragraph 3K.2.1.1

were used for the analysis.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-23 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.1.7.1 BTRS System Design The BTRS contains high-energy lines only when boron concentration in the reactor coolant is

being increased (the boron-release mode--see paragraph 9.3.4.2.2.). In this mode, high

temperature letdown fluid is extracted from the letdown line between the letdown orifices and the letdown heat exchanger. The fluid flows through the tubes of the letdown reheat heat

exchanger, where it gives up its heat, to the low temperature letdown fluid in the shell that has

had the ionic impurities removed in the mixed-bed demineralizers.

The high-temperature letdown fluid in the tubes is then returned to the letdown line upstream

from the letdown heat exchanger.

During all other modes of normal plant operation, the letdown reheat heat exchanger is valved

off and the lines leading to and from the letdown heat exchanger cease to be high-energy lines.

Since the worst postulated line break occurs when the BTRS is in the boron-release mode, the

BTRS line is assumed to contain high-energy water.

3K.4.1.7.2 BTRS Piping The 3-in. BTRS piping considered in this appendix was analyzed for the effects of a full area

circumferential break at the postulated break locations and for critical cracks anywhere along

the line. The BTRS piping considered in this appendix is Seismic Category I.

3K.4.1.7.3 Areas Affected by a BTRS Line Rupture The 3-in. BTRS lines join with the CVCS letdown line in the CVCS letdown heat exchanger

room. Lines going in and returning from the BTRS letdown reheat heat exchanger exit the

CVCS letdown heat exchanger room, enter the piping tunnel, and go on to the recycle holdup

tank compartment immediately adjacent to the tunnel. From the recycle holdup tank

compartment, both lines traverse two other recycle holdup tank compartments and into the compartment containing the BTRS letdown reheat heat exchanger. Since the CVCS line break

analysis was performed for a postulated break in the CVCS heat exchanger rooms and a crack

in the piping tunnel (paragraph 3K.4.1.6), it is not necessary to postulate a break in those

locations.

In addition to the rooms that contain the BTRS alternate letdown line piping, the el 121-ft

corridor is also affected by an alternate letdown line rupture in the three recycle holdup tank

compartments and the heat exchanger/valve room. There is an open doorway between the

heat exchanger/valve room and this corridor that provides a flow path for steam to enter the

corridor. In Unit 1, the equipment hatch acts as an open flow path and connects this corridor to

other elevations (el 100, 139, and 155 ft). For Unit 2, the same description as in 3K.4.1.6.3

applies.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-24 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.1.7.4 Pipe Whip The analysis criteria and methods used for consideration of full area pipe breaks for pipe whip

are in accordance with the description outlined in attachments A and F, respectively.

Pipe whip restraints have been located at the postulated break location so as to prevent

whipping of the pipe due to a full area break at those locations.

The forces that the pipe would experience in the event of a full area rupture are given in

attachment F.

3K.4.1.7.5 Jet Impingement No safety-related equipment or equipment necessary to bring the plant to a hot standby and

eventual cold shutdown that would be damaged by jet impingement forces are located in BTRS line areas.

3K.4.1.7.6 Compartment Pressurization All the compartments affected by a rupture in the BTRS line have been equipped with pressure

sensors that will isolate the CVCS letdown line in the event of a rupture in the compartment

affected. The sensors are calibrated to actuate at a compartment pressure of 0.28 psig. (See

paragraph 3K.4.1.6.6.) As the BTRS is an integral part of the CVCS letdown line during

operation, the isolation of the air-operated valves in the CVCS letdown line will also isolate the

BTRS alternate letdown line.

As discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.7.3, the el 121-ft corridor outside of the heat exchanger/valve

room for both Units 1 and 2 is affected by an alternate letdown line rupture. Additionally, the

Unit 1 corridors on el 100, 139, and 155 ft are also affected. Due to the increased volume from

the upper elevations in Unit 1, the pressure increase of the recycle holdup tank rooms and the

heat exchanger/valve room is lower for Unit 1 than for Unit 2.

The blowdown rates for double-ended full-area circumferential breaks in two of the recycle

holdup tank rooms (numbers 156 and 157) are given in tables E-8 and E-9. Although these

tables are based on Unit 2, the compartment pressurization results are valid for both units. The

blowdown rates for the break in the heat exchanger room/valve room are given in table E-10 for Unit 1 and in table E-11 for Unit 2. Since the pressure of the Unit 1 compartments increases

slower than the Unit 2 compartments, both the detection of the piping rupture and the closure of

the air-operated valve occur later. Therefore, the blowdown for Unit 1 terminates later than that

of Unit 2. A critical crack in the heat exchanger/valve room in Unit 1 is postulated to see a

long-term temperature response in all the elevations. Its corresponding blowdown rates are

given in table E-12. A critical crack in the heat exchanger/valve room in Unit 2 was not

postulated since the blowdown from a circumferential break is more severe.

The analytical methods used for the pressure response analyses are in accordance with

reference 2 of Appendix E.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-25 REV 23 5/11 The pressure and temperature histories of BTRS alternate letdown line breaks in recycle holdup

tank rooms 156 and 157 are given in figures E-21 through E-24. Only the Unit 2 results are

presented here because they provide an upper bound for Unit 1 pressures. The temperatures

for both units are approximately the same. The pressure and temperature histories for the

break in the heat exchanger/valve room for Units 1 and 2 are given in figures E-25 through

E-28. For the critical crack case, the resulting temperature and pressure histories are shown in

figures E-29 and E-30. As shown in these figures and in table E-13, the alternate letdown line

is isolated before the pressure reaches 3 psig in any of these rooms. The peak temperatures

and pressures in table E-13 apply to both units since these temperatures and pressures

provide an upper bound for both units. In addition, only the peak pressure of a break or crack

area is reported; for the affected areas other than the break or crack areas, only peak

temperatures are reported.

The flow diagrams used in this analysis are given in figures E-31 through E-33.

3K.4.1.7.7 Flooding Due to the small mass of blowdown (equal to about 61 ft 3 of water) from a BTRS alternate letdown line rupture, no flooding damage to safe ty-related equipment or equipment necessary for a cold shutdown will occur.

3K.4.1.7.8 Environmental Effects Because of the short duration of the blowdown, as described in paragraph 3K.4.1.6.7, environmental effects will be minimal. The peak temperatures and pressure shown in the

curves in attachment E will not adversely affect equipment required for shutdown.

3K.4.1.7.9 Emergency Shutdown Procedure with a BTRS Line Rupture Shutdown following a rupture in that portion of BTRS piping considered in this appendix would

be the same as that following a rupture in the CVCS letdown line. The emergency shutdown

procedure following a CVCS letdown line rupture is discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.6.9.

3K.4.1.8 Steam Generator Blowdown Processing System (SGBD) Line Rupture Three 2-in. steam generator blowdown processing system (SGBD) lines carry steam generator effluent to the steam generator blowdown processing system, which maintains the plant effluent

from the steam generators at a chemical and r adiological specification which meets plant discharge regulations. Treated blowdown is suitable for recycle into the main condenser. A

complete system description is contained in subsection 10.4.8.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-26 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.1.8.1 SGBD Piping The 2-in. SGBD lines considered were analyzed for the effects of a full area circumferential

break at the postulated break locations and for critical cracks anywhere along the line.

3K.4.1.8.2 Deleted 3K.4.1.8.3 Jet Impingement The steam generator blowdown lines were analyzed for jet impingement effects, using the

methods outlined in attachment F. No safety-related equipment or equipment necessary to

bring the plant to a hot standby and eventual cold shutdown that would be damaged by jet

impingement forces is affected by the postulated breaks in the SGBD line break.

3K.4.1.8.4 Pipe Whip The analysis criteria and methods of full area pipe breaks are in accordance with the description

outlined in attachments A and F.

Pipe whip restraints have been so located at the postulated break locations as to prevent

whipping of the pipe because of a full area break at those locations. Thrust loads for the line

are shown in table F.1.

3K.4.1.8.5 Compartment Pressurization Not all compartments affected by a rupture in the SGBD line have been equipped with pressure sensors that will isolate the SGBD line in the ev ent of a rupture in the compartment affected.

However, due to the location and separation of pressure sensors in adjacent compartments, a rupture in any affected compartment will be sensed and the SGBD line will be isolated. The sensors are calibrated to actuate at a compartment pressure of 7.76-in. WG.

3K.4.2 PIPING SYSTEMS WITH POWER OPERATION TEMPERATURES HIGHER THAN 200°F OR PRESSURES HIGHER THAN 275 psig 3K.4.2.1 CVCS Charging Line Rupture The 3-in. CVCS charging line carries water at a temperature of 120°F and a pressure of

2485 psig from the charging pumps to the containment penetration. The CVCS charging line

was analyzed in accordance with the criteria in subsection 3K.2.0 and specifically as per

paragraph 3K.2.1.2. The CVCS charging system is described in paragraph 3K.4.1.6.1.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-27 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.2.1.1 CVCS System Makeup Piping The 3-in. discharge lines from the three respective pumps run to a 4-in. header. From a 4 x 3

reducer the 3-in. charging line proceeds to the containment penetration. The entire CVCS

charging line is Seismic Category I.

3K.4.2.1.2 Areas Affected by a CVCS Charging Line Rupture Each charging pump is located in its individual watertight compartment. The common 3-in.

header from the boron injection tank area passes through the containment storage area to the

penetration room at el 100 ft and into the containment.

3K.4.2.1.3 Jet Impingement The CVCS makeup line and the areas affected were analyzed for critical cracks using the

methods outlined in attachment F.

Due to the short effectual distance of the jet spray from the pipe, no adverse effects will occur.

3K.4.2.1.4 Flooding Due to a CVCS Charging Line Break Flooding because of a CVCS charging line rupture is limited to the charging/high-head safety

injection watertight pump rooms, interconnecting corridors, and piping penetration room at el

100 ft.

A line rupture in watertight pump room lA was analyzed for flooding by assuming flow out of a

critical crack for 10 min without operator action. The 1100 ft 3 of water exiting through the crack is estimated to cover the 220 ft 2 of floor area, submerge the pump, and attain a level of 4 ft 6 in.

above the floor elevation of 100 ft. Valving necessa ry to isolate the affected pump from the rest of the system is located above the calculated flood level. Thus, safe shutdown capability can be

maintained by the two remaining unaffected pumps.

Indication of flooding in pump room lA is a sump high level alarm in the control room.

Flooding due to a CVCS charging line rupture in charging/high-head safety injection watertight

pump room lB is estimated to reach a level of 5 ft 9 in. This is based on the previous

assumptions (1100 ft 3 of water in 10 min exiting the crack without operator action) and a net floor area of 178 ft

2. All valves necessary to isolate the affected pump are located above the calculated flood level. The floor drain in this space is piped to an otherwise sealed sump in the

corridor. This floor drain is the only source of water to the sump. Activation of a sump high

level alarm in the control room will provi de indication of flooding in pump room lB.

Flooding analysis of charging/high-head safety injection pump room lC was identical to those of

the other two pump rooms, with an estimated flooding level of 5 ft 6 in. Safe shutdown

capability is maintained, as flooding is localized to pump room lC by the watertight door.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-28 REV 23 5/11 Valving necessary to isolate the affected pump is located well above the flood level. Indication

of flooding is activation of a high sump level alarm in the control room.

Since the pump rooms are each equipped with watertight doors, flooding of any one will not

impair the operability of either of the other two. Therefore, safe shutdown capability is not

impaired.

Flooding in the corridors in the area of the charging/high-head safety injection pump rooms is

estimated to reach a level of 1 ft 6 in. above el 100 ft, assuming no drainage.

No safety-related equipment is located at or below el 101 ft 9 in.

Indication of flooding in the corridor adjacent to the charging/high-head safety injection pump

rooms (where no sump is available) is a floor drain tank high level alarm accompanied by a charging line low flow alarm.

The effects of water backup from a full floor drain tank were analyzed by allowing 10 min of flow

(1100 ft 3) from a critical crack to back up through the floor drain system into each affected space connected to the floor drain tank. In all spaces considered, no equipment required for safe

shutdown is adversely affected.

Flooding in the piping penetration room at el 100 would result in an estimated flooding depth of

8 in. No safety-related equipment is adversely affected, and safe shutdown capability is intact.

3K.4.2.1.5 Emergency Procedure with a CVCS Charging Line Critical Crack For a critical crack in the charging line between the containment and the charging pumps, the

following must be available:

A. Boration capability via the safety injection system.

B. Auxiliary feedwater.

C. Steam generator power-operated relief valves (local manual operation).

D. RHRS, to bring the plant to cold shutdown conditions.

3K.4.2.2 Auxiliary Feedwater System Rupture The auxiliary feedwater system carries water from three auxiliary feedwater pumps to the three

main feedwater lines. The temperature and pressu re from the motor driven auxiliary feedwater pumps are 110

°F and 1231 psig, respectively. The temperature and pressure from the turbine driven auxiliary feedwater pump is 110

°F and 1227 psig, respectively.

A design description of the auxiliary feedwater system is given in paragraph 3K.4.1.2.1. The

system was analyzed in accordance with the criteria in subsection 3K.2.0 and specifically as per

paragraph 3K.2.1.2.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K-29 REV 23 5/11 3K.4.2.2.1 Auxiliary Feedwater System Piping The 6-in. discharge from the steam-driven auxiliary feedwater pump runs to a 4-in. discharge line from the two motor-driven auxiliary pumps. The 4-in. motor-driven pump discharge lines then run to a common 4-in. header where they join the three main feedwater lines on the steam

generator side of the first isolation valve on each main feedwater line.

3K.4.2.2.2 Areas Affected by an Auxiliary Feedwater Line Rupture Each MDAFWP is contained in its individual watertight room at el 100. The areas that would be affected by a rupture in any one of the discharge lines from all three pumps would be:

A. The areas for a rupture in the auxiliary steam supply to the steam-driven auxiliary feedwater pump discussed in paragraphs 3K.4.1.4.3 and 3K.4.1.4.7.

B. Each watertight MDAFWP pump room.

C. The chemical storage room adjacent to the MDAFWP room 1.

D. The main steam room.

3K.4.2.2.3 Jet Impingement The auxiliary feedwater lines and the areas affe cted were analyzed for jet impingement from critical cracks using the methods outlined in attachment F.

The results of that analysis are as follows:

A. Due to the short effective distance of the jet spray from the pipe, structural integrity of the separation walls and floors at el 100 and el 127 will not be

affected.

B. Any adverse spray effects in clos e proximity to one auxiliary feedwater pump will not damage either of the other two.

Jet impingement effects at el 127 is the same as those discussed in paragraph 3K.4.1.1.5.

3K.4.2.2.4 Flooding Flooding because of an auxiliary feedwater line rupture at el 100 will affect the individual

auxiliary feedwater pump rooms, corridors, the adjacent equipment room, and the chemical tank and pump area.

In the case of MDAFWP room No. 1, the flooding level is calculated assuming 10 min of flow at

125 percent of rated turbine-driven pump capacity (1170 ft

3) through a critical crack without operator action. The level attained over the estimated 240 ft 2 of floor area above el 100 is FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.2-1 CRITERIA FOR INDENTIFICATION OF HIGH-ENERGY LINES AND EFFECTS CONSIDERED

Criteria Break Types and Effects Considered A Critical crack, jet impingement, flooding B Circumferential or longitudinal breaks, critical cracks, pipe whip, jet impingement, flooding, pressure and temperature effects on structural integrity of compartments, environmental effects

C Same as A D Piping systems with temperatures and pressures less than 200

° F and 275 psig not considered in this appendix.

Note: 1. Also includes temperature and steam/moisture effects. See section 3K.2.1.2.

Service 275 A B Pressure (psig) 0 D C 0 200 Service Temperature (F)

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.3-1 (SHEET 1 OF 2)

EQUIPMENT REQUIRED FOLLOWING A HIGH-ENERGY LINE BREAK - UNIT 1 (a)(b) (OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT)

Short-Term Long-Term Required for (<10 Min) (Hot Standby) Cooldown Reactor trip and safeguards act uation channels including sensors, Auxiliary feedwater system including pumps, water supply, Steam generator power operated relief valves (can be circuitry, and processing equipment (the prot ection circuits and system valves and piping (this system must be placed manually operated locally) used to trip the reactor on undervoltage, underfrequency, and in service to supply water to operable steam generators turbine trip may be excluded) within one minute after initiating signal)

Controls for defeating automatic safety injection actuation during Safety injection system, includi ng Reactor containment ventilation a cooldown and depressurization. pumps, the refueling wate r storage cooling units tank, and system valves and Residual heat removal system piping including pumps, heat exchanger and system valves and piping Diesel generators and emergency necessary to cool and maintain power distribution equipment the reactor coolant system in a cold shutdown condition Essential service water system including pumps and system valves and piping Capability for obtaining a reactor coolant system sample Essential component cooling water system including pumps, heat exchanger, and component cooling water surge tank

Main feedwater control valves(trip closed feature)(c)

Circuits and/or equipment required to trip the

) main feedwater pumps (c Main feedwater isolation valves (trip closed feature)(c)

Main steam line stop valv es (trip closed feature)(d)

Main steam line stop valve bypass valves (trip closed feature)(d)

Steam generator blowdown isolation valves (automatic closure feature)

Batteries

Control room ventilation

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.3-1 (SHEET 2 OF 2)

Short-Term Long-Term Required for (<10 Min) (Hot Standby) Cooldown Control room equipment must not be damaged to the extent that any equipment will be spuriously actuated or any of the equipment contained elsewhere in this list cannot be operated Emergency lighting In addition to the instrumentation required to operate the equipment on this list, indication of the following plant parameters should be available to the operator:

Wide range T hot or T cold (preferably T hot) for each reactor coolant loop Pressurizer water level Wide range reactor coolant system pressure Steam line pressure for each steam generator Wide range and narrow range steam generator level for each steam generator Containment pressure

a. Instrumentation, interlocks, and power supplies required to operate the above equipment must be available.
b. Support systems for the above equipment su ch as long-term diesel fuel storage, battery chargers, and a long-term water supply for the auxiliary feedwater system must be available.
c. Required for steam line and steam generator blowdown line break only.
d. Required for steam line, feed line, and steam generator blowdown line break only.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-i REV 21 5/08

ATTACHMENT A GENERAL INFORMATION REQUIRED FOR CONSIDERATION OF EFFECTS OF A PIPING SYSTEM BREAK OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-1 REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT A PART I GENERAL INFORMATION REQUIRED FOR CONSIDERATION OF THE EFFECTS OF A PIPING SYSTEM BREAK OUTSIDE CONTAINMENT

The following is a general list of information required for NRC review of the effects of a piping

system break outside containment, including the double-ended rupture of the largest pipe in the

main steam and feedwater systems, and for NRC review of any proposed design changes that

may be found necessary. Since piping layouts are substantially different from plant to plant, applicants and licensees should determine on an individual plant basis the applicability of each

of the following items for inclusion in their submittals.

A. The systems (or portions of systems) for which protection against pipe whip is required should be identified. Protection from pipe whip need not be provided if

any of the following conditions exist:

1. Both of the following piping system conditions are met:
a. The service temperature is less than 200°F.
b. The design pressure is 275 psig or less.
2. The piping is physically separated (o r isolated) from structures, systems, or components important to safety by protective barriers, or restrained

from whipping by plant design features, such as concrete encasement.

3. Following a single break, the unrestrained pipe movement of either end of the ruptured pipe in any possible direction about a plastic hinge formed at

the nearest pipe-whip restraint cannot impact any structure, system, or

component important to safety.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-2 REV 21 5/08 4. The internal energy level (a) associated with the whipping pipe can be demonstrated to be insufficient to impair the safety function of any

structure, system, or component to an unacceptable level.

B. Design basis break locations should be selected in accordance with the following pipe whip protection criteria; however, where pipes carrying high-energy fluid are routed in the vicinity of structures and systems necessary for safe shutdown of

the nuclear plant, supplemental protection of those structures and systems shall

be provided to cope with the environmental effects (including the effects of jet

impingement) of a single postulated open crack at the most adverse location(s)

with regard to those essential structures and systems; the length of the crack

size is taken to be one-half the pipe diameter in length and one-half the wall

thickness in width.

The criteria used to determine the design basis piping break locations in the piping systems should be equivalent to the following:

1. ASME Section III Code Class I piping (b) breaks should be postulated to occur at the following locations in each piping run (c) or branch run:
a. The terminal ends.
a. The internal fluid energy level associated with the pipe- break reaction may take into account

any line restrictions (e.g., flow limiter) between the pressure source and break location, and the

effects of either single-ended or double- ended flow conditions, as applicable. The energy level

in a whipping pipe may be considered as insufficient to rupture an impacted pipe of equal or

greater nominal pipe size and equal or heavier wall thickness.

b. Piping is a pressure-retaining component consisting of straight or curved pipe and pipe

fittings (e.g., elbows, tees, and reducers).

c. A piping run interconnects components, such as pressure vessels, pumps, and rigidly fixed

valves, that may act to restrain pipe movement beyond that required for design thermal

displacement. A branch run differs from a piping run only in that it originates at a piping

intersection as a branch of the main pipe run.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-3 REV 21 5/08 b. Any intermediate locations between terminal ends where the primary plus secondary stress intensities S n (circumferential or longitudinal) derived on an elastically calculated basis under the

loadings associated with 1/2 safe shutdown earthquake and

operational plant conditions (a) exceed 2.0 S m (b) for ferritic steel and 2.4 S m for austenitic steel.

c. Any intermediate locations between terminal ends where the cumulative usage factor (U)(c) derived from the piping fatigue analysis and based on all normal, upset, and testing plant

conditions exceeds 0.1.

2. ASME Section III Code Class 2 and 3 piping breaks should be postulated to occur at the following locations in each piping run or branch run:
a. The terminal ends.
b. Any intermediate locations between terminal ends where either the circumferential or longitudinal stresses derived on an

elastically calculated basis under the loadings associated with

seismic events and operational plant conditions exceed 0.8.

a. Operational plant conditions include normal reactor operation, upset conditions (e.g.,

anticipated operational occurrences) and testing conditions.

b. S m is the design stress intensity as specified in Section III of the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code, "Nuclear Plant Components."
c. U is the cumulative usage factor as specified in Section III of the ASME Boiler and Pressure

Vessel Code, "Nuclear Power Plant Components."

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-4 REV 21 5/08 (S h + S A)(a) or the expansion stresses exceed 0.8 S A.

The requirement to postulate arbitrary intermediate breaks has been eliminated from the structural design basis (including resultant dynamic

and environmental effects) as allowed by NRC Generic Letter 87-11, "Relaxation in Arbitrary Intermediate Pipe Rupture Requirement".

C. The criteria used to determine the pipe break orientation at the break locations as specified under (b) above should be equivalent to the following:

1. Longitudinal (b) breaks in piping runs and branch runs, 4-inches nominal pipe size and larger.
2. Circumferential (c) breaks in piping runs and branch runs exceeding 1-inch nominal pipe size.

D. A summary should be provided of the dynamic analyses applicable to the design of Category I piping and associated supports which determine the resulting

loadings as a result of a postulated pipe break including:

a. S h is the stress calculated by the rules of NC-3600 and ND-3600 for Class 2 and 3 components, respectively, of the ASME Code Section III Winter 1972 Addenda.

S A is the allowable stress range for expansion stress calculated by the rules of NC-3600 of the ASME Code,Section III, or the USA Standard Code for Pressure Piping, ANSI B31.1.0-1967.

b. Longitudinal breaks are parallel to the pipe axis and oriented at any point around the pipe

circumference. The break area is equal to the e ffective cross-sectional flow area upstream of the break location. Dynamic forces resulting from such breaks are assumed to cause lateral

pipe movements in the direction normal to the pipe axis.

c. Circumferential breaks are perpendicular to the pipe axis, and the break area is equivalent to

the internal cross-sectional area of the ruptured pipe. Dynamic forces resulting from such

breaks are assumed to separate the piping axially and cause whipping in any direction normal

to the pipe axis.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-5 REV 21 5/08 1. The locations and number of design basis breaks on which the dynamic analyses are based.

2. The postulated rupture orientation, such as a circumferential and/or longitudinal break(s), for each postulated design basis break location.
3. A description of the forcing functions used for the pipe-whip dynamic analyses, including the direction, rise time, magnitude, duration, and initial

conditions that adequately represent the jet-stream dynamics and the

system-pressure difference.

4. Diagrams of mathematical models used for the dynamic analysis.
5. A summary of the analyses which demonstrates that unrestrained motion of ruptured lines will not damage, to an unacceptable degree, structures, systems, or components important to safety, such as the control room.

E. A description should be provided of the measures, as applicable, to protect against pipe whip, blowdown jet, and reactive forces, including:

1. Pipe restraint design to prevent pipe whip impact.
2. Protective provisions for structures, systems, and components required for safety against pipe whip, blowdown jet, and reactive forces.
3. Separation of redundant features.
4. Provisions to separate physically piping and other components of redundant features.
5. A description of the typical pipe-whip restraints and a summary of number and location of all restraints in each system.

F. The procedures that will be used to evaluate the structural adequacy of Category I structures and to design new seismic Category I structures should be

provided, including:

1. The method of evaluating stresses, e.g., the working stress method and/or the ultimate strength method that will be used.
2. The allowable design stresses and/or strains.
3. The load factors and the load combinations.

G. The structural design loads should be provided. They include the pressure and temperature transients; the dead, live, and equipment loads; and the pipe and

equipment static, thermal, and dynamic reactions.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-6 REV 21 5/08 H. Seismic Category I structural elements, such as floors, interior and exterior walls, building penetrations, and the buildings as a whole, should be analyzed for

eventual reversal of loads due to the postulated accident.

I. If new openings are to be provided in existing structures, the capabilities of the modified structures to carry the design loads should be demonstrated.

J. Verification that failure of any structure, including nonseismic Category I structures, caused by the accident, will not cause failure of any other structure in

a manner to adversely affect:

1. Mitigation of the consequences of the accidents.
2. Capability to bring the unit(s) to a cold shutdown condition.

K. Verification that rupture of a pipe carrying high-energy fluid will not directly or indirectly result in:

1. Loss of required redundancy in any portion of the protection system (as defined in IEEE-279), Class IE electric system (as defined in IEEE-308),

engineered safety feature equipment, cable penetrations, or their

interconnecting cables required to mitigate the consequences of that

accident and place the reactor(s) in a cold-shutdown condition.

2. Environmentally induced failures caused by a leak or rupture of the pipe, which would not of itself result in protective action but does disable

protection functions. In this regard, a loss of redundancy is permitted but a

loss of function is not permitted. For such situations plant shutdown is

required.

L. Assurance should be provided that the control room will be habitable and its equipment functional after a steam-line or feedwater-line break or that the

capability for shutdown and cooldown of the unit(s) will be available in another

habitable area.

M. Environmental qualification should be demonstrated by test for that electrical equipment required to function in the st eam-air environment resulting from a

high-energy-fluid-line break. The information required for our review should

include the following:

1. Identification of all electrical equipment necessary to meet requirements of K above. The time after the accident in which they are required to operate

should be given.

2. The test conditions and the results of test data showing that the systems will perform their intended function in the environment resulting from the

postulated accident and time interval of the accident. Environmental

conditions used for the tests should be selected from a conservative

evaluation of accident conditions.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-7 REV 21 5/08 3. The results of a study of steam systems identifying locations at which barriers will be required to prevent st eam jet impingement from disabling a protection system. The design criteria for the barriers should be stated and

the capability of the equipment to survive within the protected environment

should be described.

4. An evaluation of the capability for safety-related electrical equipment in the control room to function in the environment that may exist following a

pipe-break accident. Environmental conditions used for the evaluation

should be selected from conservative calculations of accident conditions.

5. An evaluation to ensure that the onsite power distribution system and onsite sources (diesels and batteries) will remain operable throughout the event.

N. Design diagrams and drawings of the steam and feedwater lines, including branch lines, showing the routing from containment to the turbine building should

be provided. The drawings should show elevations and include the location

relative to the piping runs of safety-related equipment, including ventilation

equipment, intakes, and ducts.

O. A discussion should be provided of the potential for flooding of safety-related equipment in the event of failure of a feedwater line or any other line carrying

high-energy fluid.

P. A description should be provided of the quality control and inspection programs that will be required or have been utilized for piping systems outside

containment.

Q. If leak-detection equipment is to be used in the proposed modifications, a discussion of its capabilities should be provided.

R. A summary should be provided of the emergency procedures that would be followed after a pipe-break accident, including the automatic and manual

operations required to place the reactor unit(s) in a cold-shutdown condition. The

estimated times following the accident for all equipment and personnel

operational actions should be included in the procedure summary.

S. A description should be provided of the seismic and quality classification of the high-energy-fluid piping systems, includi ng the steam and feedwater piping that runs near structures, systems, or components important to safety.

T. A description should be provided of the assumptions, methods, and results of analyses, including steam- generator blowdown, used to calculate the pressure

and temperature transients in compartments, pipe tunnels, intermediate

buildings, and the turbine building following a pipe rupture in these areas. The

equipment assumed to function in the analyses should be identified, and the

capability of systems required to function to meet a single active component

failure should be described.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-8 REV 21 5/08 U. A description should be provided of the methods or analyses performed to demonstrate that there will be no adverse effects on the primary and/or

secondary containment structures due to a pipe rupture outside these structures.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-9 REV 21 5/08 PART II POSTULATED BREAK AND LEAKAGE LOCATIONS IN THE MAIN STEAM LINE High-Energy Fluid System Piping A. Fluid Systems Separated from Essential Systems and Components

For the purpose of satisfying the separation provisions of plant arrangement as specified in B.1.a of the Branch Technical Position APCSB 3-1, a review of the

piping layout and plant arrangement drawings should clearly show that the

effects of postulated piping breaks at any location are isolated or physically

remote from essential systems and components. At the designer's option, break

locations as determined from B.1.c and B.1.d of Branch Technical Position MEB

3-1 may be assumed for this purpose.

B. Fluid System Piping in Containment Penetration Area

Breaks need not be postulated in those portions of piping identified in B.2.c of the Regulatory Position APCSB 3-1, provided they meet the requirements of the

ASME Code,Section III, Subarticle NE-1120, and the following additional design

requirements:

1. The following design stress and fatigue limits should not be exceeded:

For ASME Code,Section III, Class 2 Piping

a. The maximum stress ranges as calculated by equation 9 and 10 in Paragraph NC-3652, ASME Code Section III, considering upset

plant conditions (i.e., sustained loads, occasional loads, and thermal

expansion) and an OBE event should not exceed 0.8 (S h + S A).

b. The maximum stress as calculated by equation 9 in Paragraph NC-3652, under the loadings resulting from a postulated piping

failure of fluid system piping beyond these portions of piping, should

not exceed 1.8 S

h. The deflection-limited stresses are included in equation 9.
2. Welded attachments, for pipe supports or other purposes, to these portions of piping should be avoided except where detailed stress

analyses, or tests, are performed to demonstrate compliance with the

limits of B.1.b(1) of MEB 3-1.

3. The number of circumferential and longitudinal piping welds and branch connections should be minimized.
4. The length of these portions of piping should be reduced to the minimum length practical.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-10 REV 21 5/08 5. The design of pipe anchors or restraints (e.g., connections to containment penetrations and pipe whip restraints) should not require welding directly

to the outer surface of the piping (e.g., flued, integrally forged pipe fittings

may be used) except where such welds are 100-percent volumetrically

examinable in service and a detailed stress analysis is performed to

demonstrate compliance with the limits of B.1.b(1) of MEB 3-1.1.

C. Fluid Systems Enclosed Within Protective Structures

1. With the exception of those portions of piping identified Part B above, breaks in Class 2 and 3 piping (ASME Code,Section III) should be

postulated at the following locations in those portions of each piping and

branch run within a protective structure or compartment designed to

satisfy the plant arrangement provision of B.1.b or B.1.c of Branch

Technical Position APCSB 3-1:

a. At terminal ends of the run if located within the protective structure.

Terminal ends include those locations identified in APCSB 3-1, paragraph B.2.c(3).

b. At intermediate locations selected by one of the following criteria:
i. At each pipe fitting (e.g., elbow, tee, cross, flange, and nonstandard fitting), welded attachment, and valve.

Where piping contains no fittings, welded attachments, or valves, at one location at each extreme of the piping within

the protective structure. (A terminal end, as determined by

B.1.c(1)(a) of MEB 3-1, may be considered as one of these

extremes.)

ii. At each location where the stresses exceed 0.8 (S h + S A).

NOTES:

1. Tees and junctions having comparable sizes and fixtures need not be considered as terminal

ends for purposes of break locations when so justified in the stress analysis.

2. Stresses under normal and upset plant conditions, and an OBE event as calculated by

equations 9 and 10, Paragraph NC-3652 of the ASME Code,Section III.

3. Select two locations with at least 10-percent difference in stress or, if stresses differ by less

than 10 percent, two locations separated by a change of direction of the pipe run.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-11 REV 21 5/08 The requirement to postulate arbitrary intermediate breaks at locations where the stresses do not exceed 0.8 (S h + S A) has been eliminated from the structural design basis (including resultant dynamic and environmental effects) as

allowed by NRC Generic Letter 87-11, "Relaxation in

Arbitrary Intermediate Pipe Rupture Requirements".

2. The main steam piping downstream of the MSIVs was designed, fabricated, and constructed to the requirements of ANSI B31.1.0-1967

through 1971 addenda, including Code Cases 74 and 95. The main

steam piping upstream of the MSIVs was designed, fabricated, and

constructed to the requirements of ASME Section III, Class 2, through

Summer 1971 addenda. The stress analyses performed on both portions

of piping were carried out using identical methods of analysis. Breaks, and the use of no break criteria, in the ANSI B31.1 portions of this piping

were postulated using the same criteria that were applied to the ASME

Section III portions. The following discussion provides justification for

using this approach.

c. A comparison of materials, quality assurance, welding heat treatment, and nondestructive examination for piping and fittings for

the main steam system was made between the ASME Section III, Class 2, portion of the system as installed and the ANSI B31.1.0

portion of the system as installed. The results are as summarized

below.

The materials including weld filler metal for both portions have the same physical and chemical properties. The same quality

assurance provisions for welding apply throughout both portions.

The design material specifications require 100-percent radiography

of all longitudinal and circumferential butt welds in both portions of

the system. All welding is post-weld heat treated in both portions;

i.e., stress relief at 1100-1200°F.

d. The only differences between the as-fabricated piping systems are as follows:
i. ASME Section III portion requires Code Data Forms; ANSI portion does not. ii. ASME Section III portion requires third party inspection; ANSI portion does not. iii. All piping and associated welding filler metal that is part of the containment penetration is Charpy impact tested.

Impact testing is required by ASME Section III and may be

advisable for cold hydrostatic testing, but is not needed for

system operation as brittle fracture would not occur at

main steam operating temperature.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.A-12 REV 21 5/08 In summary the ANSI portion of the main steam piping is equivalent to the ASME Section III portion. However, the "N" stamp cannot be applied to

ANSI piping because of items i and ii above. This difference does not

affect the quality of material or workmanship.

D. Augmented Inservice Inspection

Inservice examination and related des ign provisions in the containment penetration area and throughout the no break region should be in accordance

with the following:

1. The protective measures, structures, and guard pipes should not prevent the access required to conduct the inservice examinations specified in the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code,Section XI, Division 1, "Rules

for Inspection and Testing of Components in Light-Water Cooled Plants."

2. For those portions of fluid system piping identified in B.2.c of APCSB 3-1, the extent of inservice examinations completed during each inspection

interval (IWA-2400, ASME Code, 1974 Edition with Addenda through Summer 1975,Section XI) should provide 100-percent volumetric

examination of circumferential and longitudinal pipe welds within the

boundary of these portions of piping to the extent practical.

3. The areas subject to examination should be defined in accordance with Examination Categories C-F and C-G for Class 2 piping welds in Table

IWC-2520.

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.B-i REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT B PIPE WHIP RESTRAINT DESIGN

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.C-i REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT C METHODS USED TO CALCULATE BLOWDOWN RATES FOR HIGH ENERGY FLUID LINE RUPTURES

REV 21 5/08 CRITICAL MASS VELOCITY vs RESERVOIR PRESSURE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-1

REV 21 5/08 CRITICAL MASS VELOCITY vs RESERVOIR QUALITY AND RESERVOIR PRESSURE (VIA MOODY CORRELATION)*

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-2

REV 21 5/08 REDUCTION IN MASS FLOWRATE DUE TO PIPING FRACTION LOSSES JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-3

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 SIMPLIFIED SCHEMATIC OF STEAM LINE HEADER AND BREAK LOCATION THREE LOOP PLANTS JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-4

REV 21 5/08 MASS RELEASE RATE vs TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-5

REV 21 5/08 ENERGY RELEASE RATE vs TIME JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-6

REV 21 5/08 CRITICAL MASS VELOCITY AS A FUNCTION AT PRESSURE AND QUALITY JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-7

REV 21 5/08 ENTHALPY OR FLUID AS A FUNCTION AT PRESSURE AND QUALITY JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-8

REV 21 5/08 STEAM GENERATOR STEAM MASS AS A FUNCTION AT INITIAL PRESSURE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.C-9

FNP-FSAR-3K 3K.D-i REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT D COMPARTMENT PRESSURE TEMPERATURE ANALYSIS COMPUTER PROGRAM DESCRIPTION FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-1 REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT D COMPARTMENT PRESSURE TEMPERATURE ANALYSIS COMPUTER PROGRAM DESCRIPTION (COPDA)

3K.D.1 INTRODUCTION This appendix describes the analytical techniques used to evaluate high-energy pipe rupture.

3K.D.2 INITIAL COMPARTMENT CONDITIONS The masses of air and water as steam in the compartments are determined using the initial

input conditions of temperature, pressure, relative humidity, and compartment volumes. The

specific humidity of saturated air at the compartment temperature is read from a correlation

table of temperature and water vapor in saturated air. The compartment specific humidity is

obtained by:

SH = (RH) x (SSH)

where:

SH = specific humidity of compartment air, lb steam/lb air

RH = relative humidity of compartment air

SSH = specific humidity of saturated air at compartment temperature, lb steam/lb air.

The vapor pressure of the water is determined by:

PW = SH 0.623 (SH)(PT)+ where:

PW = vapor pressure of water at compartment temperature, psia

PT = total compartment pressure, psia.

The air pressure in the compartment is determined by:

PA = PT - PW

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-2 REV 21 5/08 The mass of air in the compartment is evaluated using the perfect gas law equation:

MA = (T)n R(V)(PA)(144) where:

V = volume of compartment, ft 3

R = gas constant, 1545.3

T = compartment temperature, °R

n = molecular weight of air, 28.97 lb/lb mole

PA = partial pressure of the air lb/in 2

The mass of water in the compartment, MS, is:

MS = (MA)(SH)

The masses of air and water in the remaining compartments are determined in the same

manner.

The internal energy of the air, UA(I), in each compartment is calculated using 0°F as a base:

UA(I) = [CV][MA(I)][TP]

where:

CV = specific heat of air at constant volume, 0.171 Btu/lb-°F

TP = compartment temperature, °F

The internal energy of the water vapor in each compartment is calculated by the equation:

US(I) = [MS(I)][UG]

where:

UG = internal energy of the steam evaluated from the saturated steam tables at the compartment temperature.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-3 REV 21 5/08 3K.D.3 CONSERVATION OF MASS AND ENERGY IN COMPARTMENTS

The inventory of the total mass and energy in the compartments is maintained from the inlet and

exit flows during the time increment:

()()()()UA(I)UV(I)UV(I)US(I)UW(I)UV(I)MSO HGOMSIHGI(I)SUUS(I)MWOHOMWIHI(I)WUUW(I)

UAO UAI(I)AUUA(I)

MA(I)MV(I)MT(I)MS(I)MW(I)MV(I)MSO MSI(I)SMMS(I)

MWO MWI MW(I)MW(I)MAO MAI(I)AMMA(I)

N N N N N N N N N N N N+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+= where: Primed () values refer to end of previous time step; all other values refer to current time step.

MA(I) = mass of air in compartment (I), lb

MW(I) = mass of water in compartment (I), lb

MS(I) = mass of steam in compartment (I), lb

MV(I) = mass of water and steam in compartment (I), lb

MT(I) = total mass in compartment (I), lb

MAI = mass of air entering compartment, lb

MAO = mass of air leaving compartment, lb

MWI = mass of water entering compartment, lb

MWO = mass of water leaving compartment, lb

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-4 REV 21 5/08 MSI = mass of steam entering compartment, lb

MSO = mass of steam leaving compartment, lb

UAI = total energy of air entering compartment, Btu

UAO = total energy of air leaving compartment, Btu

HI = enthalpy of water entering compartment (I), Btu/lb

HO = enthalpy of water leaving compartment (I), Btu/lb

HGI = enthalpy of steam entering compartment (I), Btu/lb

HGO = enthalpy of steam leaving compartment (I), Btu/lb

UA(I) = energy in air in compartment (I), Btu

UW(I) = energy in water in compartment (I), Btu

US(I) = energy in steam in compartment (I), Btu

UV(I) = energy in two-phase mixture in compartment (I), Btu

UT(I) = total energy in compartment (I), Btu.

3K.D.4 COMPARTMENT PRESSURE CALCULATIONS

The compartment pressure is calculated using the total mass and energy in the compartment after the flow from the upstream compartments and/or the blowdown has been

added to the compartment inventory of mass and energy. A convergence procedure is used to arrive at the equilibrium thermodynamics conditions in the compartment using temperature as

the trial argument. The equilibrium thermody namic state is considered determined when the trial temperature provides properties such that the ratio of the difference between the trial

energy balance and the energy inventory is less than 0.001. The state properties of the steam

and water mixture at the trial temperature are obtained from the saturation tables. The mass of

steam is then determined by:

MS = VG(VL) (MW) - (V) 1 where:

V = volume of compartment, ft 3

VL = specific volume of water, ft 3/lb FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-5 REV 21 5/08 VG = specific volume of steam, ft 3/lb MW 1 = mass of water from previous iteration, lb

The mass of water (MW) is determined by:

MW = MV - MS

A trial energy balance is calculated:

ETRIAL = (MS)(UG) + (MW)(UL) + 0.171(MA)(TP)

The procedure is repeated varying the value of TP until the relation:

001.0 UTETRIAL -UT is satisfied.

If, after establishing the thermodynamic equilibrium conditions, MW 0, the compartment is considered to be superheated. The equilibrium conditions are recalculated by setting the steam mass equal to the vapor mass and calculating the steam pressure at the search temperature by:

PS = 0.5961(MS)

V T PS = pressure of steam, psia

T = compartment search temperature, °R

V = compartment volume, ft 3 0.5961 = )144(183.1545)144( Weight Mole R= The internal energy of the steam at the pressure and temperature is obtained from the

superheat tables and a trial energy balance calculated by:

ETRIAL = (MS)(UG) + 0.171(MA)(TP)

The procedure is repeated varying the value of TP until the relation:

001.0 UTETRIAL -UT is satisfied.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-6 REV 21 5/08 where:

UL = internal energy of water at the compartment temperature, Btu/lbm

UG = internal energy of steam, Btu/lbm

The total pressure in the compartment is the sum of the steam pressure and the air pressure

with the latter being calculated by:

PA = V688.459TPMA37.0+ where:

0.37 = ()()14497.283.1545 144 Weight Mole R= 3K.D.5 FLOW CALCULATION

Two-flow equations are provided for calculati ng the flow between compartments. The Moody Equation is used for the analysis of reactor cavity pressures resulting from the decompression

of the primary coolant system and for other co mpartments where the blowdown results in single

component two-phase flow fairly early in the tr ansient. A compressible fluid flow equation is used for the analysis of steam generator compartment pressures for the main steam line breaks

and for other compartments where the blowdown re sults in two component two-phase flow for all of the transient or that portion of the transient through the maximum peak pressure.

In the application of the Moody Equation for ca lculating the flow from compartment 1 to

component 2, the flow is assumed to be critical if the pressure in compartment 2 is less than 0.55 times the pressure in compartment 1. If the flow is critical, the throat pressure is set equal

to 0.55 times compartment 1 pressure.

For subcritical flow the form of the Moody equation is:

()()()2 1 2 22X1K2X2VF2X1 K2VG2X2H1HOJGc2 G+xx+xxx= 1 - Corresponds to upstream compartment 2 - Corresponds to downstream compartment

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-7 REV 21 5/08 All the terms of the formula are evaluated using the following equations:

HO1 = MV1 HV1 H2 = HF2 + X2 x HFG2 X2 = SF2- SG2SF2 - SO2 SO2 = SO1 (Since Moody's Model assumes isentropic flow)

SO1 = SF1 + X1 x SFG1 X1 = HF1 - HG1HF1 - H01 K = 2P2P1P224.12VL2VG 3 1x where:

HO1 = stagnation enthalpy of the fluid in compartment 1, Btu/lb

HV1 = internal energy of the vapor in compartment 1, Btu

MV1 = mass of vapor in compartment 1, lb

SO1 = specific stagnation entropy of fluid in compartment 1, Btu/lb - °R

SF1 = specific entropy of water in compartment 1, Btu/lb - °R

SG1 = specific entropy of steam in compartment 1, Btu/lb - °R

HF1 = specific enthalpy of water in compartment 1, Btu/lb

HG1 = specific enthalpy of steam in compartment 1, Btu/lb

SFG1 = specific entropy of vaporization in compartment 1, Btu/lb - °R

P1 = total pressure in compartment 1, psia

X1 = quality (vapor mass flow fraction) in compartment 1

H2 = specific enthalpy of fluid in compartment 2, Btu/lb

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-8 REV 21 5/08 HF2 = specific enthalpy of water in compartment 2, Btu/lb

HFG2 = specific enthalpy of vaporization in compartment 2, Btu/lb

SO2 = specific stagnation entropy of compartment 2, Btu/lb - °R

SF2 = specific entropy of water in compartment 2, Btu/lb - °R

SG2 = specific entropy of steam in compartment 2, Btu/lb - °R

VG2 = specific volume of steam in compartment 2, ft 3/lb VL2 = specific volume of water in compartment 2, ft 3/lb P2 = total pressure in compartment 2, psia

K = slip ratio dimensionless

The state properties for compartments 1 and 2 are obtained from the saturation tables at the

pressures in the compartment.

For critical flow the form of the Moody Equation is:

[]2 3 3 2 3 2 2 1VGTXTVFTXT(1 HT)J(H01Gc2 Gx+xxx= All the terms of the formula are evaluated using the following equations:

HO1 = UV1/MV1

HT = HFT + XT x HFGT XT = SFT SGT SFT SOT SOT = SO1 since isentropic

SO1 = SF1 + X1 x SFG1 X1 = HF1 - HG1HF1 - HO1 FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-9 REV 21 5/08 where:

XT = quality at the throat

HT = specific enthalpy of the fluid at the throat

HFT = specific enthalpy of the water at the throat

HFGT = specific enthalpy of the vaporization at the throat

SOT = specific stagnation entropy of the fluid at the throat

SGT = specific entropy of the steam at the throat

SFT = specific entropy of the water at the throat

The other variables were defined previously. The state properties for compartment 1 and the

throat are obtained from the saturation tables at the respective pressures in the

compartment and throat.

The throat pressure is calculated as follows:

PT = P1 x 0.55 With Moody flow for both the subcritical and critic al flow conditions, the calculated value of the flow is decreased to sixty percent of the flow (Moody Multiplier = 0.6).

In the application of the compressible fluid equation, if the ratio of the pressure in

compartment 2 to the pressure in com partment 1 is less than RC as obtained by:

RC = 1K KK1 2+ the flow is considered to be critical.

The form of the flow equation is:

G = 2 11K1K1K 2RH01P1KGc+xxxx+ The isentropic exponent K for the air, steam, and water mixture is calculated by:

K = P1 PA1KA + P1 PS1KGF xx FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-10 REV 21 5/08 where:

KA = isentropic value of K for air (= 1.4)

KGF = isentropic value of K for steam-water mixture RHO1 = specific density of the mixture in compartment 1, lb/ft 3

P1 = total pressure of compartment 1, psia

PS1 = pressure of steam in compartment 1

PA1 = pressure of air in compartment 1

RH01 is calculated using the equation:

RH01 = MT1/VOL1

where:

MT1 = total mass of fluid in compartment 1, lb

VOL1 = volume of compartment 1

If the flow is subcritical, the form of the flow equation is:

G = 2 1 K1K K 2)R(R1K KRH01P1Gc2xxxx+ where the terms are as previously defined and R =

1 2 P P The mass flow for both the compressible fluid flow equation and the Moody equation is

calculated by:

total MF = CAGxx air MAF = 1MT1MA MF water MWF = 1MT1MWMF steam MSF = 1MT1MS MF FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.D-11 REV 21 5/08 The energy transferred by the flow is:

air UAF = T1CPMAFxx water UWF = HL MWFx steam USF = HG MSFx where:

A = area of flow path, ft 2

G = mass flow, lb/ft 2-s C = flow coefficient calculated external to code

CP = specific heat of air at constant pressure

HL = enthalpy of water at compartment temperature

HG = enthalpy of steam at compartment temperature

MA1, MW1, MS1, and MT1 are the same as the one previously defined.

The flow coefficient "C" was calculated using the same method as outlined in the COPRA

computer program which has been previously submitted for NRC review in NS-731-TN, "Containment Pressure Analysis," Power and Industrial Division, Bechtel Corporation, San Francisco, California, December 1968.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.E-i REV 21 5/08

ATTACHMENT E CALCULATION METHODS FOR COMPARTMENT PRESSURIZATION

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.E-1 REV 21 5/08 3K.E.1 PRESSURE AND TEMPERATURE ANALYSIS The results presented below have been superseded with regard to the pressure and

temperature transient for the main steam line break in the main steam valve room. The details

and results of the new analysis are presented in appendix 3J. The discussion below is retained for completeness.

3K.E.1.1 Compartment Model The worst break within the main steam room was determined by analysis. The main steam

room is modeled as one large room. Venting to the atmosphere from the main steam room is possible through either the pipe chase or the penthouse.

The worst break within the pipe chase was determined by analysis. Venting to the atmosphere

is either directly from this chase or through the main steam room.

3K.E.1.2 Flow Model Flow coefficients for expansions and contractions were calculated by the methods outlined in

reference 1. When flow was through highly restricted vents, such as through grating, a

conservative flow coefficient was applied. A flow model for the main steam room is given in

figure 3K.E-3. A flow model for the pipe chase is given in figures 3K.E-6 and 3K.E-6A.

3K.E.1.3 Results A double-ended guillotine break in the 36-in. O.D. line in the main steam room results in the

most severe localized pressure response. The pressure reaches a peak of 20.5 psig at 0.123 s.

As the transient continues, heat absorption by t he walls, which is conservatively neglected, in addition to the decrease of the blowdown, will cause the pressure and temperature to decrease.

The temperature and pressure responses for a break in the main steam room are plotted in

figures 3K.E-1, 3K.E-1A, 3K.E-2, and 3K.E-2A. The maximum pressure in the pipe chase is

28.8 psig. The pressure and temperature are plotted in figures 3K.E-4 and 3K.E-5.

The penthouse, which was added to provide both additional volume and venting to the

atmosphere, was optimized by varying both its volume and vent area until construction and

pressurization limitations were satisfied. The final design provides adequate venting so that

overpressurization does not occur for any break in the main steam room.

A pressure-temperature response in the turbine-driven auxiliary feedwater pump room, resulting

from the severance of a 4-in. auxiliary turbine pump steam line, is also analyzed. At the low

flowrate through the 4-in. O.D. line, the valve closure time, approximately 10 seconds, is short

compared to the time to reach 4-percent quality flow -- approximately 60 seconds. The

pressure response curve for this room is shown in figure 3K.E-8.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.E-2 REV 21 5/08 In addition to pressure and temperature response curves for the main steam system, additional curves and flow models for the following com partments containing high energy lines have been

calculated using the computer model described in attachment D:

A. Turbine-driven auxiliary feedwater pump room.

B. CVCS letdown heat exchanger room (upper and lower levels).

C. Piping tunnel from the letdown line penetration room, elevation 100 to the CVCS heat exchanger room.

D. Letdown line penetration room elevation 100.

E. Recycle holdup tank compartments (3).

F. BTRS alternate letdown line valve compartment elevation 121.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.E-3 REV 21 5/08 REFERENCES

1. "Containment Pressure Analysis," NS-731-TN , Bechtel Corporation, Power and Industrial Division, San Francisco, California, December 1968.
2. "Subcompartment Pressure and Temperature Transient Analysis," BN-TOP-4, Rev. 1 , Bechtel Power Corporation, October 1977.

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-1 BLOWDOWN-AUXILIARY STEAM LINE

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0 274.9 1191.4 0.156 274.9 1191.4 0.156 91.56 1191.4 10.0 91.56 1191.4

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-2 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

BLOWDOWN-PENETRATION ROOM (el 100 ft)

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0000 876.00 353.74 0.0201 520.89 353.69 0.0436 389.88 353.60 1.0670 389.88 353.60 1.0670 272.04 353.60 3.2581 272.04 353.60 8.2581 194.94 353.60 8.7609 194.94 353.60 8.7609 0.00 353.60 1.0E+6 0.00 353.60

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-3 UNIT 1: CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

BLOWDOWN-LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.00000 632.94 353.7 0.09006 389.88 353.6 2.01000 389.88 353.6 2.01000 194.94 353.6 4.46420 194.94 353.6 9.32370 194.94 353.6 9.32370 45.93 353.6 12.3026 0.00 353.6 1.0E+06 0.00 353.6

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-4 UNIT 2: CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

BLOWDOWN-LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.00000 632.94 353.7 0.09006 389.88 353.6 2.01000 389.88 353.6 2.01000 194.94 353.6 8.33410 194.94 353.6 8.33410 0.00 353.6 1.0E+06 0.00 353.6

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-5 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

BLOWDOWN-SEAL WATER HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0000 876.00 353.74 0.0263 654.10 353.72 0.0637 419.60 353.64 0.0758 389.90 353.60 1.5593 389.90 353.60 1.5593 272.00 353.60 8.2279 272.00 353.60 8.2279 0.00 353.60 1.0E6 0.00 353.60

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-6 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

BLOWDOWN-PIPE TUNNEL

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0000 9.82 353.74 3.9 9.82 353.74 5.5171 4.37 353.60 445.5171 4.37 353.60 445.5171 0.00 353.60 1.00E+06 0.00 353.60

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-7 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

PEAK TEMPERATURES AND PRESSURES

Temperature Pressure Room (°F) (psig) el 100-ft penetration room 171 2.7 Letdown heat exchanger room 216 2.5 Seal water heat exchanger room 219 2.6 Piping tunnel 216 2.5 el 100-ft rooms 162, 155 175 el 100-ft rooms 160, 161, 163 142 el 121-ft hallway areas Bound by the BTRS line break

el 139-ft hallway areas Bound by the BTRS line break

el 155-ft hallway areas Bound by the BTRS line break

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-8 BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

BLOWDOWN-HOLDUP TANK ROOM (NO. 156)

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0000 820.8 357.7 0.0843 472.1 357.7 0.1654 358.8 357.7 0.1654 358.8 353.6 1.5704 358.8 353.6 1.5704 265.5 353.6 6.6102 265.5 353.6 6.6102 71.0 353.6 7.30 0.0 353.6 1.0E+06 0.0 353.6

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-9 BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE:

BLOWDOWN-HOLDUP TANK ROOM (NO. 157)

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0000 820.8 357.7 0.0952 453.6 357.7 0.1614 358.8 357.7 0.1614 358.8 353.6 1.3773 358.8 353.6 1.3773 265.5 353.6 6.6529 265.5 353.6 6.6529 71.0 353.6 7.45 0.0 353.6 1.0E+06 0.0 353.6

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-10 BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE: BLOWDOWN UNIT 1 HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM/VALVE COMPARTMENT

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0000 820.8 357.7 0.1079 412.6 357.7 0.1407 358.8 357.7 0.1407 358.8 353.6 0.7108 358.8 353.6 0.7108 265.5 353.6 6.8906 265.5 353.6 6.8906 71.0 353.6 17.75 71.0 353.6 22.75 71.0 353.6 1.0E+06 0.0 353.6

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-11 BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE: BLOWDOWN UNIT 2 HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM/VALVE COMPARTMENT

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.0000 820.8 357.7 0.1079 412.6 357.7 0.1407 358.8 357.7 0.1407 358.8 353.6 0.7108 358.8 353.6 0.7108 265.5 353.6 6.8906 265.5 353.6 6.8906 71.0 353.6 8.4 0.0 353.6 1.0E+06 0.0 353.6

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-12 BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE CRITICAL CRACK: BLOWDOWN UNIT 1 HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM/VALVE COMPARTMENT

time m h (s) (lb/s) (Btu/lb) 0.00000 9.20 357.7 200.00 9.20 357.7 208.64 4.02 357.7 208.64 4.02 353.6 673.16 4.02 353.6 673.16 0.00 353.6 1.0E+06 0.00 353.6

FNP-FSAR-3K

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3K.E-13 BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE PEAK TEMPERATURES AND PRESSURES

Temperature Pressure Room (°F) (psig) Recycle holdup tank room (No. 156) 208 2.3 Recycle holdup tank room (No. 157) 207 2.3 Reheat heat exchanger/valve room 211 2.0 el 121-ft room 207 (hatch area) 170 el 121-ft other hallway areas 139 (rooms 205, 208, 209, 218, 222, and 237) el 100-ft hallway area Bound by the CVCS line break el 139-ft hallway areas 123 el 155-ft hallway areas 107

REV 21 5/08 DIFFERENTIAL PRESSURE ACROSS STEAM ROOM AND PIPE CHASE WALL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-1

REV 21 5/08 TEMPERATURE IN MAIN STEAM ROOM RESULTING FROM A DOUBLE-ENDED MAIN STEAM BREAK IN MAIN STEAM ROOM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-1A

REV 21 5/08 PRESSURE IN MAIN STEAM ROOM RESULTING FROM A DOUBLE-ENDED BREAK IN MAIN STEAM ROOM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-2

REV 21 5/08 TEMPERATURE DISTRIBUTION IN PIPE CHASE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-2A

REV 21 5/08 MAIN STEAM ROOM FLOW MODEL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-3

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 PIPE CHASE PRESSURE (COMPARTMENTS 1, 4)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-4

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 PIPE CHASE TEMPERATURES (COMPARTMENT 1)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-5

REV 21 5/08 PIPE CHASE, MAIN STEAM ROOM FLOW MODEL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-6

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 PIPE CHASE, MAIN STEAM ROOM FLOW MODEL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-6A (SHEET 1 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 PIPE CHASE, MAIN STEAM ROOM FLOW MODEL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-6A (SHEET 2 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 TURBINE-DRIVEN AUXILIARY FEEDWATER PUMP ROOM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-7

REV 21 5/08 TURBINE-DRIVEN AUXILIARY FEEDWATER PUMP ROOM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-7A

REV 21 5/08 AUXILIARY TURBINE ROOM FLOW MODEL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-8

REV 21 5/08 el 100-ft PENETRATION ROOM PRESSURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN el 100-ft PENETRATION ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-9

REV 21 5/08 el 100-ft PENETRATION ROOM TEMPERATURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN el 100-ft PENETRATION ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-10

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM PRESSURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-11

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM TEMPERATURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-12

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 2 LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM PRESSURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-13

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 2 LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM TEMPERATURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-14

REV 21 5/08 SEAL WATER HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM PRESSURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN SEAL WATER HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-15

REV 21 5/08 SEAL WATER HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM TEMPERATURES (LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN SEAL WATER HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-16

REV 21 5/08 PIPING TUNNEL PRESSURES (LETDOWN LINE CRITICAL CRACK IN PIPING TUNNEL)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-17

REV 21 5/08 PIPING TUNNEL TEMPERATURES (LETDOWN LINE CRITICAL CRACK IN PIPING TUNNEL)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-18

REV 21 5/08 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE FLOW MODEL: A CRITICAL CRACK IN THE PIPING TUNNEL IN UNIT 2 JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-19 (SHEET 1 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE FLOW MODEL:

LINE BREAK IN el 100-ft PENETRATION ROOM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-19 (SHEET 2 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE FLOW MODEL: UNIT 1 - LINE BREAK IN LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-20 (SHEET 1 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 CVCS LETDOWN LINE RUPTURE FLOW MODEL: UNIT 2 - LINE BREAK IN LETDOWN HEAT EXCHANGER ROOM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-20 (SHEET 2 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 RECYCLE HOLDUP TANK ROOM (NO. 156) PRESSURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE TANK ROOM - NO. 156)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-21

REV 21 5/08 RECYCLE HOLDUP TANK ROOM (NO. 156) TEMPERATURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE TANK ROOM - NO. 156)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-22

REV 21 5/08 RECYCLE HOLDUP TANK ROOM (NO. 157) PRESSURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE TANK ROOM - NO. 157)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-23

REV 21 5/08 RECYCLE HOLDUP TANK ROOM (NO. 157) TEMPERATURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE TANK ROOM - NO. 157)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-24

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 REHEAT HEAT EXCHANGER/VALVE ROOM PRESSURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE HX/VALVE ROOM IN UNIT 1)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-25

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 REHEAT HEAT EXCHANGER/VALVE ROOM TEMPERATURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE HX/VALVE ROOM IN UNIT 1)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-26

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 2 REHEAT HEAT EXCHANGER/VALVE ROOM PRESSURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE HX/VALVE ROOM IN UNIT 2)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-27

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 2 REHEAT HEAT EXCHANGER/VALVE ROOM TEMPERATURESS (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE BREAK IN THE HX/VALVE ROOM IN UNIT 2)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGIURE 3K.E-28

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 REHEAT HEAT EXCHANGER/VALVE ROOM PRESSURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE CRITICAL CRACK IN THE HX/VALVE ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-29

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 1 REHEAT HEAT EXCHANGER/VALVE ROOM TEMPERATURES (BTRS ALTERNATE LETDOWN LINE CRITICAL CRACK IN THE HX/VALVE ROOM)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-30

REV 21 5/08 UNIT 2 FLOW MODEL OF el-121 HALLWAY AREA JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-31

REV 21 5/08 LINE BREAK: FLOW MODEL OF UNIT 1 HALLWAYS IN el 100, 121, 139, AND 155 JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-32 (SHEET 1 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 LINE BREAK: FLOW MODEL OF UNIT 1 HALLWAYS IN el 100, 121, 139, AND 155 JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-32 (SHEET 2 OF 2)

REV 21 5/08 CRITICAL CRACK: FLOW MODEL OF UNIT 1 HALLWAYS IN el 100, 121, 139, AND 155 JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.E-33

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-i REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT F METHODS USED TO CALCULATE PIPE WHIP THRUST LOADS AND JET IMPINGEMENT FORCES FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-1 REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT F ANALYSIS OF PIPE RUPTURE THRUST AND JET FORCES 3K.F.1 GENERAL

Methods for calculating pipe rupture thrust and jet impingement forces are given in this attachment. Single- and two-phase blowdowns are analyzed to evaluate the nature and

magnitude of these forces which result in pipe whip and impingement loads on structures and

preventive barriers.

3K.F.2 JET THRUST FORCES In the event of a high energy pipe break, the fluid blowdown and the propagation of pressure disturbance produce jet loads that may result in pipe whip and jet impingement forces.

Immediately after the break, while the pressure disturbance propagation is settling down and

the blowdown rate is building up, the resulting jet forces are a function of time, asymptotically

acquiring steady-state value provided the system stagnation pressure P o remains constant.

Methods of calculating the steady-state values of these forces are given in the following:

3K.F.2.1 Steady-State Thrust Calculation The generalized steady-state thrust equation as developed by Shapiro (1) is ()eae c eAPP gVm F+= (1) where:

m = fluid mass flowrate (lb m/s) V e = fluid exit velocity (ft/s)

g c = gravitational constant (32.2 lb m ft/lb f s 2)

P e = fluid exit pressure (psf)

P a = ambient pressure (psf)

A e = exit area (ft

2)

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-2 REV 21 5/08 A convenient nondimensional thrust can be defined by dividing through by P o and A e obtaining P P - P + P g GV = AP F oae o c eeo (2) One-dimensional continuity, m = VA and the definition G = m/A can be used with equation (2) to obtain the alternate expressions P P-P +P g GV = AP F oae o c eeo (3) and P P-P+p gG= AP F oae o c e 2eo (4) where e is exit mass density (lb m/ft 3). Two blowdown situations are considered for rupture of steam and water lines. They are as

follows:

1. Blowdown of steam from superheated or saturated conditions.
2. Blowdown of a steam-water mixture or subcooled water.

3K.F.2.2 Saturated Steam

Thrust forces associated with the blowdown of saturated steam are obtained from figure 3K.F-1 (when fL/D effects are considered) or from figure 3K.F-2 (when effects of a flow restrictor only

are considered).

As can be seen from figure 3K.F-2, thrust forces associated with the critical flow of two-phase

mixtures through upstream restrictions are lower than those associated with the blowdown of

saturated steam through the same restriction. Therefore, the thrust forces associated with the

blowdown of saturated steam were used to evaluate the effects of a main steam line rupture.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-3 REV 21 5/08 3K.F.2.3 Saturated Steam-Water Mixture or Subcooled Water

Although fluid escaping from a rupture in a subcooled system involves a two-phase mixture, the

subcooled forces only were conservatively us ed for the analysis applying the following Moody equation from reference 2.

()c m 2 m m B t gV)(GPP A F+= (5) where

P m = Maximum pressure at the break

G m = Maximum flowrate at the break

V m = Specific volume (V f) at P m P = Atmospheric pressure A B = Break Area

G m and P m were obtained from figures 3K.F-3 and 3K.F-4, respectively, using a stagnation enthalpy (h f) for the system temperatures and the system source pressure P o given in table 3K.F-1. When the corresponding data points did not fall within the envelopes in figures 3K.F-3

and 3K.F-4, a point on the saturated liquid boundary at the system pressure was used to obtain

P m and G m. For conservatism, no D Lf effects were considered for subcooled forces.

3K.F.3 FLUID JET IMPINGEMENT FORCES

In the event of a pipe break, the fluid flowing through the pipe emerges out as a jet impinging at

nearby structures or equipment. Various blowdown situations considered here are described in

subsection 3K.F.2. On emerging from the breakpoint, the jet undergoes free rapid expansion to

the ambient pressure at relatively short distance -- a few diameters of break area. For this asymptotic distance, momentum and shear interactions with jet environment can reasonably be

neglected. As such, applying forward momentum conservation, the total jet force, F j , is constant throughout its travel, and theref ore, as assumed by Moody; (2)

F j = F (6) where F is the total thrust force defined in subsection 3K.F.2. Methods of calculating F are also

given there.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-4 REV 21 5/08 For the purpose of this attachment, it is further assumed that F j remains constant for all distances beyond the asymptotic area. This assumption is conservative. Therefore, the jet

pressure at any location along the axis of the jet is given by:

(x) A F (x)P j j j= (7) where

A j (x) is the expanded jet area at location x along the jet axis. See figure 3K.F-5 for system geometry.

Moody (2) has developed a simple analytical model for estimating the asymptotic jet area for steam, saturated water, and steam/water bl owdown situations. Evaluations of LOFT (5) experimental results tend to indicate that, for s ubcooled water and steam blowdown situations, the jet area expands uniformly at half angle of about 15 degrees, whereas steam/water

blowdown expands much more rapidly because of large-scale water flashing. Results of

Moody's analytical analysis agree, at least qualitati vely, with LOFT results. In addition, Moody's analytical analysis predicts results of other experiments, as discussed in reference 2.

In this attachment, an empirical approach has been adopted combining Moody's analytical

model with the uniform half angle approach, as shown in figure 3K.F-5. The half angle is conservatively assumed to be = 10 degrees.

According to this empirical model, the distance of jet travel is divided into three regions.

Region 1 extends to the asymptotic area, at which point the jet expansion area is calculated

according to Moody's method; in Region 2, jet area remains constant; then in Region 3, the jet expands at half angle = 10 degrees.

For subcooled water blowdown, this model assumes half angle approach, = 10 degrees, uniformly in all the three regions, since Moody's model is not truly applicable for this case.

To follow Moody, the extent of Region 1 is taken as

x 1 = 5D e (8) and the jet area at location x 1 is given by the equation:

A j (x 1) = R 2 j 1 (9) = jc 1 2 eFg V G)(A where:

D e = Equivalent diameter of pipe break area FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-5 REV 21 5/08

A e = Pipe break area

R j1 = Radius of the expanded jet at location x

1. R j1 is constant in region 2.

F j = F, thrust force (equation 6)

v 1 = Specific volume. v 1 is calculated as described in reference 2

For two-phase blowdown, mass flowrate G is taken from reference 3. Region 2 extends to the

location x 2 given by:

A j (x 1) = A j (x), x = x 2

where

A j (x) is the jet area in Region 3 and is calculated by any one of the following equations. (See figure 3K.F-6 for jet geometrical configurations):

1. Guillotine break:

A j (x) = 2 e) tan D2x (1 Ae+ where = 10 degrees is the half angle of jet expansion

2. Longitudinal (slot) break:

A j (x) = ) tan w 2x )(1 tan 2x (1 Ae++ where = 2D e and w =

e D 8 and and w are slot length and width, respectively

3. Circumferential crack:

A j (x) = )) tan2(1 x )(1 tan w2x (1 Ae+++

where = 2 1 D e and w =

2 1 wall thickness and and w are slot length and width, respectively

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-6 REV 21 5/08 In Region 1, the additional conservative assumption is made that the jet area increases uniformly from A j at x = 0, to A j (x 1) at x = x 1 , or A j (x) = 1 2 e j 1 exxofor,1 R R x x1A 1+ where j1 e e eRand, A 2 D R== is given by equation 9.

3K.F.3.1 Impingement Loads on Targets

Once the jet area A j is calculated by the method described above, the jet pressure is readily calculated according to equation 7, i.e.,

P j = j j A F and the jet impingement load on the target is given by

F T = P j A te where A te is the effective target area. Calculation of A te for various geometries is outlined below:

1. Flat Surface

If the target with physical area A t cancels all the fluid momentum in the jet, then:

A te = A t For the case where target is oriented at angle with respect to the jet axis and there is no flow reversal:

A te = A t sin 2. Pipe Surface

Let

D p = Diameter of pipe, and

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-7 REV 21 5/08 D j = Diameter of jet impinging on pipe

= A 4 j then, for D p > D j A te = CA j where C is pipe curvature factor and =2 C For D p < D j A te = tAC where jptDDA=(conservative approximation)

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.F-8 REV 21 5/08 REFERENCES

1. Shapiro, A. H., The Dynamics and Thermodynamics of Compressible Fluid Flow , Ronald Press Co., New York, 1953.
2. Moody, F. J., "Prediction of Blowdown and Jet Thrust Forces," ASME Paper 69 HT-31 , August 6, 1969.
3. Moody, F. J., "Max imum Two-Phase Vessel Blowdown from Pipes," APED-4827 (65APE4), General Electric Co., April 20, 1965.
4. Moody, F. J. "M aximum Flow Rate of a Singl e Component, Two-Phase Mixture," APED-4378 , General Electric Co., October 25, 1963.
5. Dietz, K. A., Editor, Quarterly Technical Report , Engineering and Test Branch, October 1 through December 31, 1967, Phillips Petroleum Company, IDO-17242, May 1968.
6. Moody, F. J. "Fluid Reaction and Impi ngement Loads," presented at the Specialty Conference, Structural Design of Nuclear Plant Facilities at Chicago, Illinois, December 17-18, 1973. (Published in Volume 1 of the conference notes.)

FNP-FSAR-3K TABLE 3K.F-1 THRUST LOADS DUE TO A FULL AREA PIPE RUPTURE

REV 21 5/08 System Line Size Temperature

(°F) Pressure (P o) (psig) Thrust Force (lb f) Main steam 32 in. 547 1005 285,000 36 in. 547 1005 278,100 Main feedwater 14 in. 442 1055 122,700 Auxiliary steam 3 in. 547 1005 7,300 4 in. 547 1005 5,400 Auxiliary feedwater 4 in. 442 1055 10,500 8 in. 442 1055 39,400 10 in. 442 1055 62,000 CVCS and BTRS 3 in. 380 550 6,900 Steam generator blowdown 2 in.

547 1055 4,730

REV 21 5/08 FRICTION EFFECT ON STEADY BLOWDOWN FORCE (REF. 6)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.F-1

REV 21 5/08 STEADY BLOWDOWN FORCE WITH RESTRICTION (REF. 6)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.F-2

REV 21 5/08 MAXIMUM STEAM WATER FLOWRATE AND LOCAL STAGNATION PROPERTIES (REF. 4)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.F-3

REV 21 5/08 LOCAL STATIC PRESSURE AND STAGNATION PROPERTIES AT MAXIMUM STEAM/WATER FLOWRATE (REF. 4)

JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.F-4

REV 21 5/08 JET GEOMETRY JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.F-5

REV 21 5/08 FLUID JET GEOMETRY JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.F-6

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.G-i REV 21 5/08 ATTACHMENT G MAIN STEAM ROOM AND PIPE CHASE STRUCTURAL STRESS ANALYSIS FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.G-1 REV 21 5/08 3K.G.1 INTRODUCTION The purpose of this attachment is to describe the analysis performed on the main steam room of

the Farley Nuclear Plant, Unit 1. Since the Unit 2 main steam room is a mirror image of the

Unit 1 main steam room, the results and conclusions of these analyses are applicable to both

units. A computer finite element analysis was undertaken for the walls and slab of the main

steam room because of the relatively complex geometry of the room, the number of possible loading cases involved, and the numerous points of application of loads. A conventional

analysis was performed on the portion of the containment wall adjacent to the main steam room.

These analyses are described in more detail in subsection 3K.G.2 of this attachment.

Subsection 3K.G.3 contains the summary of results and conclusions.

3K.G.2 DESCRIPTION OF ANALYSIS 3K.G.2.1 Finite Element Model The structure under investigation was modeled using a finite element method. The finite

element mesh is shown in figures 3K.G.2-3 and 3K.G.2-4. The model includes the north and

west wall of the main steam room, the slab at elevation 127 ft 0 in., including beams and the

cable chase, and two partition walls in the main steam room between the three main steam

lines. A total of 758 nodal points and 693 quadrilateral and triangular elements were utilized in

this model. Forty-seven beam elements were also used to represent the two beams and the cable chase. The boundary conditions which were input to the program are shown on figures

3K.G.2-3 and 3K.G.2-4. These boundary conditions include partial or complete fixity against

rotation, combined with partial or complete fixity against displacement.

3K.G.2.2 Containment Wall Analysis The method of analysis of the portion of the containment wall adjacent to the main steam room

is a method described by P. P. Bijlaard in a paper titled "Stresses from Radial Loads in

Cylindrical Pressure Vessels." (1) The three worst combinations of pressure loads from a postulated pipe rupture in the main steam room were applied to the containment wall. The

method described in the aforementioned paper was then used to determine the maximum

forces and moments. A conventional working stress design method was then used to evaluate

the stresses in the containment wall and, finally, the margin of safety percentage.

3K.G.2.3 Input Loads

A. Dead Load (D) -

The concrete deadweight of 150 lb/ft 3 was used for the walls and slab.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.G-2 REV 21 5/08 B. Live Load (L) -

A uniformly distributed live load of 300 lb/ft 2 was applied to the entire floor slab at elevation 127 ft 0 in. Of this

300 lb/ft 2 , 200 lb/ft 2 was for miscellaneous live loads and 100 lb/ft 2 was for piping and conduit live loads.

C. Thermal Load -

(T a) Operating thermal effect was incorporated according to

the following data and table.

Initial concrete temperature = 70°F

Main steam room operating temperature = 120°F

Operating temperature in other auxiliary

building area = 80°F

Inside (°F) Outside(°F)

Wall A 120 120 Wall B 120 80 Wall C 120 120 Wall D 120 120 Slab 120 80 The resulting thermal stresses from the subsequent higher

temperature in the main steam room following a pipe break

were not incorporated. This is because these stresses

would not occur simultaneously with those from pressure

and jet-impingement forces.

D. Thermal Pipe -

Reaction (R a) Forces to the structures from pipe reactions under thermal

conditions generated by a postulated break were not

included for the same reason as item C above. At the

normal operating condition the effect was examined and

found to be negligible. Hence, the load (R a) was not incorporated in the load combinations of the finite element

analysis.

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3K.G-3 REV 21 5/08 E. Pressure (P a) - The calculated pressure values in each main steam room compartment following a pipe break were all multiplied by

a factor, 1.4 x 1.2 = 1.68, to obtain the equivalent static

pressure. The value of 1.4 is a safety factor for the

pressurization calculation, and the value of 1.2 accounts

for the dynamic load factor. In the actual load input, these

equivalent static pressures were further multiplied by 1.25

or 1.50 to comply with the load combinations.

F. Pipe -

Restraint Force (Yr)

The structural steel pipe restraints in the main steam room

are framed together so that the load taken is shared by

each of the concrete separating walls. Any load which is

taken by one restraint is transferred to each of the walls. It

was found that because of the interaction between

restraints and the stiffness of the walls, the displacement

and thus the stresses in each wall are negligible.

Therefore, the finite element model which analyzes the

walls and slab considers the restraint point as a point of

support.

G. Jet Force (Yj) - The jet forces were calculated in accordance with attachment F. These forces, as in the pressure case, were

multiplied by a factor, 1.2 x 1.2 = 1.44, to account for the

safety and dynamic load factors, prior to being applied to

the finite element analysis.

H. Missile Impact -

Load (y m) Pipe restraints are spaced such that no pipe missile will be

generated by, or during, a postulated break.

Consequently, this load was not included in the load

combinations.

I. Seismic Force -

(Feqo, Feqs) 1. Vertical components of the seismic force were superimposed on the dead load as follows:

7 percent g for OBE (1/2 SSE) 1.25 x 7 percent =

8.75 percent g for 1.25 OBE, and 9 percent g for

SSE.

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3K.G-4 REV 21 5/08

2. Lateral components of the seismic force were applied to the walls as uniformly distributed lateral

pressures. For walls A and B (figure 3K.G.2-4)

which have supports on four sides and, thus, relatively high natural frequencies, the maximum

wall accelerations were taken to be the same as

the maximum floor accelerations as indicated

below. 1.25 (OBE) E-W 0.131 g x 1.25 = 0.164 g N-S 0.122 g x 1.25 = 0.153 g (SSE) E-W 0.157 g N-S 0.157 g

For cantilever walls C and D (figure 3K.G.2-4)

which have relatively low natural frequencies, maximum spectral accelerations were used as

indicated below.

1.25 (OBE) N-S 1.25 x 1.80 g = 2.25 g (SSE) N-S 1.10 g

3K.G.2.4 Load Combinations As required by "Structural Design Criteria for Evaluating the Effects of High-Energy Pipe Breaks on Category I Structures Outside the Containment"-Document (B) of the NRC, the following load

combinations were examined for each postulated break:

1) U = D + L + T a + R a + 1.5 P a
2) U = D + L + T a + R a + 1.25 P a + 1.0(Y r + Y j + Y m) + 1.25 Feqo
3) U = D + L + T a + R a + 1.0 P a + 1.0(Y r + Y j + Y m) + 1.0 Feqs

The values of the input loads D, L, T a , R a , P a , Y r , Y j , Y m , Feqo, and Feqs are described in paragraph 3K.G.2.3.

3K.G.2.5 Description Of Program The program used to analyze the main steam room is a general structural analysis program

originally developed by Edward L. Wilson of the University of California and subsequently improved by Bechtel. This program is called SAP (1.8).

(2)

The purpose of the computer program is to perform linear, elastic analyses of three-dimensional structural systems. The structural systems to be analyzed may be composed of combinations FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.G-5 REV 21 5/08 of a number of structural element types. The present version contains the following element

types:

A. Boundary.

B. Truss.

C. Beam.

D. Curved beam.

E. Plane strain.

F. Membrane (plane stress).

G. Simple plate.

H. Shell.

I. Thick shell.

J. Brick.

K. Axisymmetric ring.

Two elements were utilized in the analysis of the main steam room. These were the shell and

beam elements.

Systems composed of large numbers of joints and elements may be analyzed. There is no limitation in the program on the number of joints, number of elements, number of load cases, or

equation bandwidth. In addition to being able to solve very large structural systems, the

program can also analyze smaller problems with an efficiency comparable to smaller special-purpose programs. The reason for this is the fact that storage requirements of the program are

adjusted dynamically during execution to conform to the actual requirements of the particular problem being considered.

The thin shell element used in this analysis is either a triangular or quadrilateral element of

arbitrary geometry formed from four compatib le triangles. The bending properties of this quadrilateral element are completely described in a paper titled, "A Refined Quadrilateral

Element For Analysis of Plate Bending." (3)

The element employs a partially restrained linear strain triangle to represent the membrane

behavior. As shown in figure 3K.G.2-1, the central node is located at the average of the

coordinates of the four corner nodes. The element has 17 interior degrees of freedom which

are eliminated at the element level prior to assembling; therefore, the resulting quadrilateral

element has 20 degrees of freedom, 5 per node, in the local element coordinate system.

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3K.G-6 REV 21 5/08 For flat plates, the stiffness associated with the rotation normal to the shell surface is not

defined; therefore, the appropriate boundary condition must be enforced.

The beam element is a straight, prismatic beam member. Any force and/or moment at either or

both ends of the beam may be released if necessary. The following loads can be directly

applied to the element:

A. Inertia loads.

B. Thermal loads due to uniform temperature difference and temperature gradient.

C. Fixed end forces and moments.

D. Uniformly and linearly distributed loads along the span.

E. Concentrated forces and moments on the span.

Displacements of each node, axial forces, shear forces, and torsional and bending moments at

both ends of the beam are computed.

Each joint in the system may have from 0 to 6 degrees of freedom as required. The user must

ensure that the degrees of freedom specified for a given joint are compatible with the element

types which are adjacent to it. Optimum so lution efficiency is obtained by minimizing the

number of degrees of freedom of the system.

A right-handed orthogonal coordinate system, shown in figure 3K.G.2-2, is used to describe the

geometry of the structure. All joint loads and displacements are defined with reference to this

system. A local coordinate system is used for each element type.

Loads may be applied by means of both point loads acting at the joints and by element loading (e.g. gravity, temperature). Each element may have an unlimited number of loads. Any number of load cases may be analyzed with each load case consisting of an unlimited combination of

element loads and nodal point loads.

There is no size limitation built into the program, so the size of the problem that can be solved

depends only on the machine core capacity. All storage is allocated at the time of execution

and may be adjusted either upward or downward during execution. Therefore, the actual

storage used will conform not only to the size of the structure, but will also conform to the

specific requirements of each phase of the analysis process.

For static analysis, the program is divided into five phases. A machine-dependent overlay

system is used for each phase. These five are executed in the following sequences:

A. Data Input - Joint coordinates and loads are read or generated. As element properties are read or generated, the element stiffness matrices are formed and

placed on tape.

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3K.G-7 REV 21 5/08 B. Formation of the global stiffness matrix is accomplished by reading the element stiffness tape and forming the joint equilibrium equations in blocks.

C. Formation of load vectors is accomplished by processing the element loads and nodal loads for each loading case.

D. Equilibrium equations are solved for joint displacements; all load conditions are treated at the same time.

E. From the joint displacements, element stresses are calculated for all load conditions.

The capacity of the program is controlled by the number of joints (nodal points) of the structural

system. All joint data are retained in high-s peed storage during the formation of the element stiffness matrices. For each joint, three coordinates and six boundary condition codes are

required; therefore, the minimum required storage for a given problem is nine times the number

of joints in the system.

Immediately after the joint data are supplied to the program, a relationship between each joint

degree of freedom and the corresponding equation number is established. Each of the six

boundary condition codes for a given joint is replaced by the equation number for that degree of

freedom. Restrained boundary conditions are identified by a zero equation number. Slave degrees of freedom (for beam elements) are identified by a negative joint number of the master

node.

After the coordinates of the joints are supplied and the equation numbers of the degrees of

freedom established, the stiffness and stress-displacement transformation matrices are

calculated for each structural element in the system. Very little additional high-speed storage is

required for this phase since these matrices can be formed and placed on tape storage as the

element properties are read. In addition to the element matrices, the corresponding equation

numbers are written on tape.

The total stiffness matrix is formed by making a pass through the element stiffness matrices and

adding in the appropriate element stiffness coefficients. To minimize the effort in searching

through all the element stiffnesses, the element stiffness matrices for several blocks are

transferred to another storage unit; therefore, in the formation of the next several blocks, the

time required to search for the contributions to these blocks is reduced significantly.

The equilibrium equations (the global stiffness matrix and load vectors) are stored and

transferred in and out of storage in large blocks. The block size is determined automatically at

the time of solution, thus utilizing storage in the most efficient manner for each particular

problem.

The computer program is built around two optional large-capacity linear equation solvers, USOL and SESOL. The procedure used to solve the equations is not significantly different from the method developed by Gauss in 1827. The banded characteristics of the equations are

recognized.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.G-8 REV 21 5/08 Operations with zero coefficients are skipped. Data are transferred in and out of high-speed

storage in large blocks; therefore, a small amount of time is lost in the transfer of data. In the

SESOL routine, random access files are used to reduce further the equation solution data

transfer time.

After the joint displacements are calculated, a pass is made through the element

stress-displacement matrix tape, and the element forces and movements are calculated and

printed.

The output for the main steam room analysis includes nodal point displacements and rotations, element membrane force components, and element bending moment components.

3K.G.3

SUMMARY

OF RESULTS AND CONCLUSIONS Sample deflection curves, moment diagrams, and tables of results are shown in figures

3K.G.3-1 through 3K.G.3-5 and tables 3K.G.3-1 through 3K.G.3-7.

The results of this linear, elastic finite element analysis have shown that the walls and slab in

the main steam room are sufficiently strong to resist various combination loads following a

postulated pipe break in the main steam room, with at least an 18-percent margin of safety over

and above the margin provided by the load increases and load factors used in the analysis.

This conclusion is based on an examination of the most critical section of the walls and slab

governing the entire structural strength. Structural capacity is established when this section first

reaches its elastic limit. Due to the great uncertainty involved in a pipe break incident, the

additional strength gained from the structure which, after reaching this elastic limit, would then

undergo a nonlinear process prior to its final collapse, is not taken into consideration in this

evaluation of the structural capability.

A conventional linear elastic analysis of the portion of the containment wall adjacent to the main

steam room indicated that this wall is strong enough to resist the most severe combination of

pressure loads resulting from a postulated pipe break in the main steam room with a 64-percent

margin of safety.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.G-9 REV 21 5/08 REFERENCES

1. Bijlaard, P. P., "Stresses From Radial Loads in Cylindrical Pressure Vessels," Welding Journal Research Supplement , 1954.
2. Structural Analysis Program, Pacific International Computing Corporation.
3. "A Refined Quadrilateral Element for Analysis of Plate Bending," Proceedings, (Second) Conference on Matrix Methods in Structural Mechanics , Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio, 1968.

FNP-FSAR-3K

3K.G-10 REV 21 5/08 NOTES ON VALUES IN TABLES

1. The selected points for tabulation are indicated in figures 3K.G.3-1 through 3K.G.3-5.

These locations are considered the possible critical areas when subjected to various

combined loads during a pipe break incident, as described previously.

2. For concrete, tensile stress was not considered.
3. Except from the operating thermal condition, the membrane stresses were found negligible. Axial compressive forces (Px & Py) indicated in the tables result from pipe

restraint forces in some local areas and were combined with bending moments in stress

calculation.

4. The resulting operating thermal stress was found to be compressive across the entire thickness of the walls and slab. To account for the uncertainty involved in the actual

temperature distribution, only maximum thermal compressive stress was added to

concrete, and no reduction was made for tensile reinforcing stress.

5. The allowable stress was taken as 85 percent of the specified compressive strength for concrete and 90 percent of the yield strength for reinforcing bars.

REV 21 5/08 THIN SHELL ELEMENT JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.2-1

REV 21 5/08 GLOBAL COORDINATE SYSTEM JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.2-2

REV 21 5/08 MAIN STEAM ROOM SLAB FINITE ELEMENT MODEL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.2-3

REV 21 5/08 MAIN STEAM ROOM WALLS FINITE ELEMENT MODEL JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.2-4

REV 21 5/08 SAMPLE DEFLECTION AND MOMENT DIAGRAMS WALL A JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.3-1

REV 21 5/08 SAMPLE DEFLECTION AND MOMENT DIAGRAMS WALL B JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.3-2

REV 21 5/08 SAMPLE DEFLECTION AND MOMENT DIAGRAMS WALL C JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.3-3

REV 21 5/08 SAMPLE DEFLECTION AND MOMENT DIAGRAMS WALL D JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.3-4

REV 21 5/08 SAMPLE DEFLECTION AND MOMENT DIAGRAMS SLAB JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3K.G.3-5

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-i REV 21 5/08 3L ASME SECTION III NUCLEAR CLASS AUXILIARY PIPING STRUCTURE ANALYSIS TABLE OF CONTENTS

Page 3L.

1.0 INTRODUCTION

....................................................................................................3L-1

3L.2.0 NUCLEAR CLASS 1..............................................................................................3L-1

3L.2.1 PIPING CONSIDERED..........................................................................................3L-1

3L.2.2 METHODS OF ANALYSIS.....................................................................................3L-2

3L.2.2.1 Class 1 Lines (Including Accumulator Lines).....................................3L-2 3L.2.2.2 Safety Injection Lines (Except Accumulator Lines)............................3L-2

3L.2.3 BREAK POINTS AND WHIP RESTRAINT LOCATIONS.......................................3L-6

3L.2.3.1 Class 1 Lines (Including Accumulator Lines).....................................3L-6 3L.2.3.2 Safety Injection Lines (Except Accumulator Lines)............................3L-6

3L.3.0 NUCLEAR CLASS 2..............................................................................................3L-6

3L.3.1 PIPING CONSIDERED..........................................................................................3L-6

3L.3.2 METHODS OF ANALYSIS.....................................................................................3L-7

3L.3.2.1 Piping System Analysis (ME 632)......................................................3L-7 3L.3.2.2 Linear Elastic Analysis of Piping Systems (ME 101).......................3L-11 3L.3.2.3 Local Stresses in Cylindrical Shells due to External Loadings (ME 210)..........................................................................3L-12

3L.3.3 BREAK POINTS AND WHIP RESTRAINT LOCATIONS.....................................3L-12

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-1 REV 21 5/08 APPENDIX 3L ASME SECTION III NUCLEAR CLASS AUXILIARY PIPING STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS

3L.

1.0 INTRODUCTION

This appendix was prepared in response to question MEB-2.3A, transmitted by a letter from K.

Kniel (NRC) to A. Barton (APC) on June 14, 1974. The appendix presents a summary of the

analysis for branch lines in the containment which are ASME Section III, Nuclear Class 1 and 2.

The Design Specification for ASME Nuclear Class 1 auxiliary piping requires that a stress

analysis be performed according to the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code,Section III, Nuclear Power Plant Components, 1971 Edition (including applicable addenda).

3L.2.0 NUCLEAR CLASS 1 This section contains the structural evaluation of ASME III Nuclear Class 1 piping connected to

the reactor coolant piping and inside the containment building and all fittings connecting the

above piping under postulated loading conditions. These loads result from thermal expansion, pressure, weight, earthquake, design basis accident, and plant operational thermal and

pressure transients. Criteria for postulated break locations are specified in subsection 3.6.2.3.

3L.2.1 PIPING CONSIDERED The Class 1 piping considered in this appendix consists of the following lines:

Size (in.) Line 14 Pressurizer surge line 12 Residual heat removal line, loop 1 12 Residual heat removal line, loop 3 12 SIS accumulator line, loop 1 12 SIS accumulator line, loop 2 12 SIS accumulator line, loop 3 3 CVCS normal charging line 3 CVCS alternate charging line 3 CVCS normal letdown line FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-2 REV 21 5/08 In addition to the lines listed above, the safety injection lines (except accumulator lines) were

also considered. The stress analysis results for these lines are given in the applicable Class 1

stress reports.

3L.2.2 METHODS OF ANALYSIS 3L.2.2.1 Class 1 Lines (Including Accumulator Lines)

The analytical methods used in this analysis are described in subsection 5.2.1.10. They consist

of the transfer matrix method and stiffness matrix formation for the static structural analysis, the

response spectrum method for seismic dynamic analysis, and a structural analysis for the effect

of a reactor coolant loop pipe break. The complexity of the piping systems requires the use of a

computer to obtain the displacements, forces, and stresses in the piping and support members.

The computer codes used for the Class 1 piping systems are capable of performing an elastic

analysis of redundant piping systems subjected to thermal, static, and dynamic loads. A

detailed description, the extent of application, and the verification and qualification of the

WESTDYN 7 computer code can be found in topical report WCAP-8252 , Documentation of Selected Westinghouse Structural Analysis Computer Codes (April 1974).

Emergency core cooling system (ECCS) branch lines are analyzed for the effects of postulated

reactor coolant pipe breaks as a faulted condition. Emergency core cooling system lines

attached to both the unbroken loops and to the unbroken legs of the broken loop were

considered. By comparison of the magnitude of the reactor coolant loop (RCL) and reactor

pressure vessel (RPV) LOCA displacements, it was determined that the effects of a crossover

leg break would be the most severe condition for the safety injection system (SIS) accumulator

lines. (The RPV inlet and outlet nozzle breaks impose less severe loading conditions on the

accumulator lines; therefore, the crossover leg break is presented as the limiting case.) A

dynamic analysis was performed on a linear, elastic basis by applying the time-history displacement output of the RCL analysis to the ECCS lines using program FIXFM. The

resultant stresses were combined with other faulted condition stresses to satisfy the ASME

code equation 9 faulted stress intensity limit of 3.0 S

m.

3L.2.2.2 Safety Injection Lines (Except Accumulator Lines)

The following are descriptions of the computer programs used in stress analysis of the safety injection lines (except accumulator lines). In addition to the following, ME632, described in

subsection 3L.3.2.1, was also used.

3L.2.2.2.1 Thermal Stress Program (ME 662)

Purpose To determine the temperature and stress distributions within a body as a function of time when subjected to thermal and/or mechanical loads. The program is valid for axisymmetric or plane

structures.

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-3 REV 21 5/08 Method of Analysis The program consists of two parts, each of which can be used separately. The first part calculates steady-state or transient temperature distributions due to temperature or heat

flux inputs. The method used is the finite element technique coupled with a step-by-step time

integration procedure. The program adopts a stepwise description of environmental

temperatures and heat transfer coefficients if they are time dependent. Transient temperature

distributions are calculated from the specified initial temperatures and the step function heat

inputs.

The second part of the program is built on the displacement method of the matrix theory of

structures, which calculates the displacements and stresses within the solids with orthotropic, temperature-dependent nonlinear material properties.

The user has the option of saving the results from part 1 on an external tape. After reviewing

the printout, he can specify the transient states for the stress evaluations. Part 2 then picks up

the necessary information from the tape and performs the calculations.

References

1. Wilson, E. and Nickell, S. R. "Application of the Finite Element Method to Heat Conduction Analysis," Nuclear Engineering and Design , Vol. 4, 1966.
2. Wilson, E., "Structural Analysis of Axisymmetric Solids," AIAA Journal , Vol. 3, No. 12, December 1965.

Program Verification The program has been verified by comparing its output with the "ASME Program Verification

and Qualification Problem Library," standard thermal problem. The results were acceptable.

3L.2.2.2.2 LOTEMP Program (ME-913)

Purpose This program is used to calculate piping stresses in accordance with the simplified method of

NB-3650 of the ASME Section III Code.

Method of Analysis In order to calculate the stresses and usage factors according to the rules of NB-3650, the

program requires the following input data:

A. Moments due to thermal expansion, deadweight seismic, and seismic movement.

B. Thermal gradient data t 1 , T 2 , T a and T b.

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-4 REV 21 5/08 C. Material properties, cross-section, pressures, weld information, and component type at each data point of the pipe.

D. Allowable stresses and number of cycles.

The stresses are calculated in accordance with equations 9 through 14 defined in

Section NB-3650 of the ASME Code. The stresses and the usage factor are printed out for

each data point in the analysis.

References

1. ASME Sec. III Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code, 1971 Edition.
2. ASME Sample Program for Analysis of Class 1 Piping.

Program Verification LOTEMP has been verified by comparing its output with the "ASME Sample Problem," using the identical input information. The LOTEMP results were identical to the results derived in the

sample program.

3L.2.2.2.3 Pipe Thermal Transient Program "DELTA T" (ME 912)

Purpose To calculate temperature gradient across the pipe wall and along the axis of the pipe, per ASME

Section III code.

Method of Analysis ME 912 is developed to calculate the reduced thermal transients along the axial direction of

piping. It also calculates the thermal transient radially across the pipe wall at various locations.

It allows nonuniform initial temperature distribution and time-dependent temperature inputs.

ME 912 prepares all the thermal input, T 1 , T 2 , (T a-T b), etc. for program ME 913, Nuclear Class 1 piping stress analysis, per ASME Section III code.

Program Verification The temperature gradient for various pipe sizes and for various temperatures has been

calculated manually and verified with the results from ME 912. Also, the results from ME 912

have been compared with many commerc ially available programs. The results were very close.

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-5 REV 21 5/08 3L.2.2.2.4 Local Stress Analysis at Lug Supports on Piping Systems (ME 916)

Purpose To calculate stress intensities and fatigue analysis at the junction of the integral attachment of

lugs and stanchions to the pipe, per ASME Section III, NB-3600 criteria.

Method of Analysis In ME 916 input data needed are lug and pipe size, stress indices, material properties, loading conditions, and input loadings for pipe and lugs. For fatigue analysis, properties of cyclic loads

or load pair set also are defined. The output from this program provides allowable stress

equations, per MB-3600 and a cumulative usage factor.

Verification ME 916 has been verified by a set of hand calculations of stresses as shown in NB-3600, Class I analyses. All stress and usage factors agree with hand calculations and with the results

from many standard commercial programs.

3L.2.2.2.5 ANSYS Program (Rev. 2)

Purpose This program is used to calculate stress displacement and load history as a function of time, caused by transient displacement in the reactor coolant loops during a loss-of-coolant accident

and during major breaks in the loops.

Method of Analysis A time-history displacement profile at the various nozzle connections for each of the postulated

reactor coolant loop break cases was obtained from Westinghouse on computer tapes. Pipings

were modeled as finite element elastic stick and elastic plates. Transient displacements were

applied at the nozzle connections, and reduced linear transient dynamic analysis was

performed.

The results were extracted in three different steps, as follows:

A. Displacement Pass: Displacement time-history at each node of the geometry was obtained.

B. Stress Pass: Stresses, forces, and moments were obtained at each nodal point.

C. Max Pass: Maximum and minimum val ues of displacement, stress, forces, and moments, independent of time, were obtained in this pass.

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-6 REV 21 5/08 Verification

The ANSYS program has been developed and verified by Swanson Analysis Systems, Inc.

References

1. ANSYS Theoretical Manual
2. ANSYS User's Information Manual
3. ANSYS Verification Manual

3L.2.3 BREAK POINTS AND WHIP RESTRAINT LOCATIONS Stress analysis results utilized in the criteria for determining pipe break locations are

documented in the applicable piping stress calculation for each piping system. Whip restraint

locations based on postulated pipe break locations are shown on applicable civil design

drawings.

3L.2.3.1 Class 1 Lines (Including Accumulator Lines)

The criteria for postulated break locations are specified in subsection 3.6.2.3. It has been

determined that in all cases for these lines, the governing criterion for postulated break locations

is primary and secondary stress intensity range.

3L.2.3.2 Safety Injection Lines (Except Accumulator Lines)

The criteria for postulated break locations are specified in subsection 3.6.2.3.

3L.3.0 NUCLEAR CLASS 2 This section provides the information related to Class 2 piping.

3L.3.1 PIPING CONSIDERED The Class 2 piping considered in this appendix consists of the main steam and main feedwater

piping in the containment.

The stress analysis results utilized in the criteria for determining pipe break locations are

documented in the applicable piping stress calculation for each piping system.

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3L-7 REV 21 5/08 3L.3.2 METHODS OF ANALYSIS The following is a description of the computer program used in stress analysis of the systems

listed in 3L.2.2.2 and 3L.3.1, and also a brief description of the programs' assumptions and

theory. All programs conform to the design and control measures required by Appendix B of 10

CFR Part 50.

3L.3.2.1 Piping System Analysis (ME 632)

Purpose The stresses and loads in piping systems due to restrained expansion, deadweight, seismic

movement, and earthquake are calculated using the static analysis computer program.

Method of Analysis The stiffness method of finite element analysis has been used in this program. In this method, the displacements of the joints of a given structure are considered to be the basic unknowns.

The dynamic analysis of the program utilizes the general theory of response analysis by the

modal synthesis methods. The modal synthesis , in principle, exploits known maximum accelerations produced in a single degree of freedom model of certain frequency. The method

is described in detail in the references. The program's principal assumptions are:

A. Linearly elastic structure.

B. Simultaneous displacement of all supports described by a single time dependent function.

C. Lumped mass model satisfactorily replaces the structure.

D. Modal synthesis is applicable.

E. Rotational inertias of the masses have negligible effect.

Static Analysis For gravity, thermal, and seismic movement analyses, the static load and displacement matrices

were formed in addition to the stiffness matrix of the mathematical model. These matrices

included the applied joint forces and displacements, the distributed loading on the mathematical

model, and the thermal forces developed in the me mbers of the model, whichever is applicable.

Once these matrices were formed, the joint displacements of the mathematical model were

found by solving the following equation:

R - Kr = 0 Eq. (1) in which:

R = Joint load matrix FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-8 REV 21 5/08 K = Stiffness matrix of pipe loop

r = Joint displacement matrix

After the joint displacements were determined, the individual member forces were obtained by

using the member stiffness properties, and, finally, the support reactions were calculated.

Dynamic Analysis The dynamic analysis of flexible piping system s is performed using the response spectrum method. A flexible piping system is idealized as a mathematical model consisting of lumped masses connected by massless elastic members. The lumped masses are carefully located so

as to adequately represent the dynamic and elastic properties of the piping system. The three

dimensional stiffness matrix of the mathematic al model is determined by the direct stiffness method. Axial, shear, flexural and torsional deformations of each member are included. For

curved members, a decreased stiffness is used in accordance with ASME Section III. The mass

matrix is also calculated.

After the stiffness and the mass matrix of the mathematical model are calculated, the natural

frequencies of piping system and corresponding mode shapes are determined using the

following equation:

0)MWK(2 n= Eq. (2) where:

K = stiffness matrix W n = natural circular frequency for the nth mode M = mass matrix

N = mode shape matrix for the nth mode 0 = zero matrix

The Givens or the Jacobi method is used in the solution of the above equation. The mode

shapes are normalized as follows:

1M n t n= Eq. (3) A generalized mass matrix is calculated, and should correspond to:

IM t= Eq. (4) where FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-9 REV 21 5/08

= matrix of mode shapes t = transposition of I = identifies matrix

If any one of the off-diagonal terms in the generation of the left-hand side of Equation (4) is

greater than 1 x 10

-4 , the problem is aborted. This occurs when poor or improper modeling of the piping system exists.

The response spectrum method is them used to find the maximum response of each mode:

n 2 n n max (t)nMWSaDM Y n= Eq. (5) where

Sa n = spectral acceleration value for the nth mode

D = earthquake vector matrix, used to introduce earthquake direction to the response analysis

O = transposition of the nth mode shape

M = generalized mass of the nth mode; equals one by Equation (2-2)

Y n = generalized coordinate for the nth mode

Using the maximum generalized coordinate for each mode, the maximum displacements

associated with each mode are calculated:

max n n(t)YV= Eq. (6) Once the appropriate maximum modal displacements have been determined for each mass

point, the effective inertia forces for each mode are computed:

n nVKQ= Eq. (7) where:

Q n = effective inertia force matrix due to nth mode

V = displacement matrix due to nth mode

The effective acceleration for each mode is calculated:

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-10 REV 21 5/08 n 1 nQMa= Eq. (8) where:

a = effective acceleration matrix due to nth mode

M-1 = the inverse of mass matrix

After the effective inertia forces have been determined, the internal forces and moments for

each mode are also calculated:

nQb n S= Eq. (9) where:

S = internal force and moment matrix due to the nth mode

b = force transformation matrix

The modal stresses are then calculated from the modal internal forces and moments in

accordance with ASME Section III. The analysis is made three times: once for the vertical

direction and once for each of the two principal horizontal directions of the building. The

method of combining the modal responses (i.e., displacements, effective inertia forces, effective

accelerations, internal forces and moments, support reactions, and stresses) is the square root

of the sum of the squares.

References

1. Gere, J. M. and Weaver, W. Jr., Analysis of Framed Structures , D. Van Nostrand Co., Inc., 1965.
2. Weaver, W. Jr., Computer Program for Structural Analysis, D. Van Nostrand Co., Inc., 1967.
3. Roark, R. J. Formulas for Stress and Strain , McGraw-Hill, 1965.
4. Morris, D. L. "Curved Beam Stiffness Coefficients," Struct. Div. Journal, ASCE , May 1968. Verification

The program has been verified by comparing its output with the "ASME Program Verification and Qualifications Program Library," standard problems. The results were acceptable.

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-11 REV 21 5/08 3L.3.2.2 Linear Elastic Analysis of Piping Systems (ME 101)

Purpose This program serves the same purpose as ME 632. In addition it forms the stress equations, as

defined in ANSI B31.1 and ASME Section III, from individual loading conditions and satisfies

them.

Method of Analysis

This program replaces the program ME 632 and has almost the same features. The basic

method of analysis is the same as ME 632 discussed in subsection 3L.2.2.2.3.

The development of ME 101 is intended to produce a more efficient and systematic piping

program. ME 101 is structured so as to allow easy incorporation of changes and any further

enhancements.

ME 101 has the capability of performing stress combinations, per ASME Section III and

ANSI B31.1 codes and of satisfying appropriate equations. In analysis it incorporates NRC

Regulatory Guide 1.92. It prepares load summary sheets and stress summary sheets for stress

reports.

Verification

The program has been verified by a series of hand calculations and by comparing the results of the program with the results from commercially available standard computer programs.

3L.3.2.3 Local Stresses in Cylindrical Shells due to External Loadings (ME 210)

Purpose To calculate local stresses caused in pipe walls due to external loading on lugs or stanchions

attached integrally to the pipe.

Method of Analysis

ME 210 is based on WRC Bulletin 107 for local stresses in cylindrical shells due to external

loading. In this program induced stresses in the pipe walls, due to loads applied on lugs and

stanchions, are calculated and combined with stresses obtained in ME 101 analysis, to satisfy

stress equations, per ASME Section III, NC and MD-3600, and ANSI B31.1.

Program Verification

The program has been verified through a set of hand calculations using procedures outlined in

WRC Bulletin No. 107.

FNP-FSAR-3L

3L-12 REV 21 5/08 References

1. Forsythe, G. E. and Wasow, W. R., Finite-Difference Methods for Partial Differential Equations , John Wiley, 1960, pp 101-107, 119-125.
2. Holman, J. P., Heat Transfer , Third Edition, McGraw-Hill, 1972, Eqs. (6.1) and (6.29).
3. McNeill, D. R. and Brock, J. B., "Charts for Transient Temperatures in Pipes," in Heating/Piping/Air Conditioning, November 1971, pp 107-119.
4. Tung, T. K., "Thermal Gradients in Pipe Walls Due to Ramps in Fluid Temperature," Report BR-5853-T-012 , Bechtel Power Corporation, San Francisco, 1975.
5. Tung, T. K., "Analysis on Axial Discontinuity Temperature Difference in Pipe Walls," to be reported.

3L.3.3 BREAK POINTS AND WHIP RESTRAINT LOCATIONS

Break points are postulated in accordance with the requirements set forth in attachment A of

appendix 3K. Whip restraint locations based on postulated pipe break locations are shown on

applicable civil design drawings.

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3M-i REV 21 5/08 3M REACTOR PRESSURE VESSEL SUPPORT LOADS TABLE OF CONTENTS

3M.1 INTRODUCTION.........................................................................................................3M-1

3M.2 INTERFACE INFORMATION......................................................................................3M-1

3M.3 LOADING CONDITIONS.............................................................................................3M-2

3M.4 REACTOR VESSEL AND INTERNALS MODELING..................................................3M-2

3M.5 ANALYTICAL METHODS...........................................................................................3M-3

3M.6 RESULTS OF THE ANALYSIS...................................................................................3M-4

FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-ii REV 21 5/08 LIST OF TABLES 3M-1 Maximum Reactor Vessel Displacements at Reactor Vessel Centerline

3M-2 Maximum Reactor Vessel Support Loads for Postulated Pipe Rupture Conditions

3M-3 Maximum Reactor Vessel Support Loads for Combined Pipe Rupture Condition, Safe Shutdown Earthquake, and Deadweight

FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-iii REV 21 5/08 LIST OF FIGURES

3M-1 Reactor Vessel Support Shoe

3M-2 Reactor Vessel Support Box

3M-3 Mathematical Model for Horizontal Response

3M-4 Mathematical Model for Vertical Response

FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-1 REV 21 5/08 APPENDIX 3M REACTOR PRESSURE VESSEL SUPPORT LOADS

3M.1 INTRODUCTION This appendix presents the method of computing the reactor pressure vessel loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA) support loads and displacements. The structural analysis considers

simultaneous application of the time history loads on the reactor vessel resulting from the

reactor coolant loop vessel nozzle mechanical loads, internal hydraulic pressure transients, and

reactor cavity pressurization (for postulated breaks in the reactor coolant pipe at the vessel

nozzles). The vessel is restrained by reactor vessel support pads and shoes beneath each

nozzle, and the reactor coolant loops with the primary supports of the steam generators and the

reactor coolant pumps. The objective of this analysis is to obtain reactor vessel displacements

and reactor vessel support loads.

Pipe displacement restraints installed in the primary shield wall limit the break opening area of

the vessel nozzle pipe breaks to less than 100 in.

2 for the inlet nozzle and 30 in.

2 for the outlet nozzle. These areas were determined to be an upper bound by using worst case vessel and

pipe relative motions based on similar plant analyses. Detailed studies have shown that pipe

breaks at the hot or cold leg reactor vessel nozzles, even with a limited break area, would give

the highest reactor vessel support loads and the highest vessel displacements, primarily due to

the influence of reactor cavity pressurization. By considering these breaks, the most severe

reactor vessel support loads are determined. For completeness, a break outside the shield

wall, for which there is no cavity pressurization, is also analyzed; specifically, the pump outlet

nozzle pipe break is considered. In summary, three loss of coolant accident conditions are

analyzed:

A. Reactor vessel inlet nozzle pipe break.

B. Reactor vessel outlet nozzle pipe break.

C. Reactor coolant pump outlet nozzle pipe break.

3M.2 INTERFACE INFORMATION Bechtel Power Corporation performed the reactor containment design and analysis. Stiffness of

the primary shield wall beneath the reactor vessel supports and asymmetric cavity

pressurization loading was provided by Bechtel to Westinghouse. Cavity pressure loads were

provided as force time histories acting on the reactor vessel.

All other input information was developed within Westinghouse. These items are reactor

internals properties, loop mechanical loads and loop stiffness, internal hydraulic pressure

transients, and reactor support stiffnesses. These inputs allowed formulation of the

mathematical models and performance of the analyses, as will be described.

FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-2 REV 21 5/08 3M.3 LOADING CONDITIONS

Following a postulated pipe rupture at the reactor vessel nozzle, the reactor vessel is excited by

time history forces. As described, these forces are the combined effect of three phenomena:

reactor coolant loop mechanical loads, reactor cavity pressurization forces, and reactor internal

hydraulic forces.

The reactor coolant loop mechanical forces are derived from the elastic dynamic analyses of the

loop piping for the postulated break. This analysis is described in subsection 5.2.1.10.1.1. The

dynamic reactions on the nozzles of all the unbroken piping legs are applied to the vessel in the

RPV blowdown analysis.

Reactor cavity pressurization forces arise for the pipe breaks at the vessel nozzles from the

steam and water which is released into the reactor cavity through the annulus around the

broken pipe. The reactor cavity is pressurized asymmetrically with higher pressure on the side

adjacent to the break. These differences in pressure horizontally across the reactor cavity

result in horizontal forces applied to the reactor vessel. Smaller vertical forces arising from

pressure on the bottom of the vessel and the vessel flanges are also applied to the reactor

vessel. The cavity pressure analysis is described in section 6.2.

The internals reaction forces develop from asymmetric pressure distributions inside the reactor

vessel. For a vessel inlet nozzle break and pump outlet nozzle break, the depressurization

wave path is through the broken loop inlet nozzle and into the region between the core barrel

and reactor vessel. (See figure 3.9-1.) This region is called the downcomer annulus. The initial

waves propagate up, down and around the downcomer annulus and up through the fuel. In the

case of an RPV outlet nozzle break, the wave passes through the outlet nozzle and directly into

the upper internals region, depressurizes the core, and enters the downcomer annulus from the

bottom of the vessel. Thus, for an outlet nozzle break, the downcomer annulus is

depressurized with much smaller differences in pressure horizontally across the core barrel than

for the inlet break. For both the inlet and outlet nozzle breaks, the depressurization waves

continue their propagation by reflection and transmission through the reactor vessel fluid but the

initial depressurization wave has the greatest effect on the loads.

The reactor internals hydraulic pressure transients were calculated including the assumption

that the structural motion is coupled with the pressure transients. This phenomena has been

referred to as hydroelastic coupling or fluid-structure interaction. The hydraulic analysis

considers the fluid structure interaction of the core barrel by accounting for the deflections of

constraining boundaries which are represented by masses and springs. The dynamic response

of the core barrel in its beam bending mode responding to blowdown forces compensates for

internal pressure variation by increasing the volume of the more highly pressurized regions.

The analytical methods used to develop the reactor internals hydraulics are described in

WCAP-8708.(1) 3M.4 REACTOR VESSEL AND INTERNALS MODELING The reactor vessel and internals general assembly is shown in figure 3.9-1. The reactor vessel

is restrained by two mechanisms: the three attached reactor coolant loops with the steam

generator and reactor coolant pump primary supports, and six reactor vessel supports, one FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-3 REV 21 5/08 beneath each reactor vessel nozzle. The reactor vessel supports are described in

subsection 5.5.14 and are shown in figures 5.5-7, 3M-1, and 3M-2. The support shoe provides

restraint in the horizontal directions and for downward reactor vessel motion.

The reactor vessel model consists of two separate nonlinear elastic models connected at a

common node. One model represents the dynamic ve rtical characteristics of the vessel and its internals, and the other model represents the translational and rotational characteristics of the

structure. These two models are combined in the DARI-WOSTAS code (2) to represent motion of the reactor vessel and its internals in the plane of the vessel centerline and the broken pipe

centerline.

The model for horizontal motion is shown in figure 3M-3. Each node has one translational and

one rotational degree of freedom in the vertical plane containing the centerline of the nozzle

attached to the broken pipe and the centerline of the vessel. A combination of beam elements

and concentrated masses are used to represent the components including the vessel, core

barrel, neutron panels, fuel assemblies, and upper support columns. Connections between the

various components are either pin-pin rigid links, translational impact springs with damping, or

rotational springs.

The model for vertical motion is shown in figure 3M-4. Each mass node has one translational

degree of freedom. The structure is represented by concentrated masses, springs, dampers, gaps, and frictional elements. The model includes the core barrel, lower support columns, bottom nozzles, fuel rods, top nozzles, upper support columns, upper support structure, and

reactor vessel.

The horizontal and vertical models are coupled at the elevation of the primary nozzle

centerlines. Node 1 of the horizontal model is coupled with node 2 of the vertical model at the

reactor vessel nozzle elevation. This coupled node has external restraints characterized by a

3 x 3 matrix which represents the reactor coolant loop stiffness characteristics, by linear

horizontal springs which describe the tangential resistance of the supports, and by individual

nonlinear vertical vessel support dynamic elem ents (spring dashpot system) which provide restraint only in the vertically downward direction. The supports as represented in the horizontal

and vertical models (figures 3M-3 and 3M-4) are not indicative of the complexity of the support

system used in the analysis. The individual supports are located at the actual support pad

locations and accurately represent the independent nonlinear behavior of each support.

3M.5 ANALYTICAL METHODS The time-history effects of the cavity pressurization loads, internals loads and loop mechanical

loads are combined and applied simultaneously to the applicable nodes of the mathematical

model of the reactor vessel and internals. The anal ysis is performed by numerically integrating the differential equations of motion to obtain the transient response. The output of the analysis

includes, among other things, the displacements of the reactor vessel and the loads in the

reactor vessel supports. The loads from the postulated pipe break on the vessel supports are

combined with other applicable faulted condition loads and subsequently used to calculate the

stresses in the supports. Also, the reactor coolant loop is analyzed by applying the reactor

vessel displacements to the reactor coolant loop model. The resulting loads and stresses in

the piping, components, and supports are then combined with those from the loop dynamic FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-4 REV 21 5/08 blowdown analysis, and the adequacy of the system is verified. Thus, the effect of vessel

displacements upon loop response and the effect of loop blowdown upon vessel displacements

are both evaluated.

3M.6 RESULTS OF THE ANALYSIS As described, the reactor vessel and internals were analyzed for three postulated break

locations. Table 3M-1 summarizes the displacements and rotations of and about a point

representing the intersection of the nozzle centerline of the nozzle attached to the leg in which

the break was postulated to occur and the vertical centerline of the reactor vessel. Positive

vertical displacement is up, and positive horiz ontal displacement is away from and along the centerline of the vessel nozzle in the loop in which the break was postulated to occur. These

displacements were calculated using an assumed break opening area for the postulated pipe

ruptures at the vessel nozzles of 144 in.

2(a) and a double-ended rupture at the pump outlet nozzle. These areas are estimated prior to performing the analysis. Following the reactor

coolant system structural analysis, the relative motions of the broken pipe ends are obtained

from the reactor vessel and reactor coolant loop blowdown analyses. These motions resulted in

an average break opening area of less than 85 in.

2 (100 in.2 , peak) for the vessel inlet nozzle break and 15 in.

2 (23 in.2 , peak) for the vessel outlet nozzle break. Since these areas are less than the areas used to generate the applied loads, the system structural analysis is

conservative.

The maximum loads induced in the vessel supports due to the postulated pipe break are given

in table 3M-2. These loads are per vessel support and are applied at the vessel nozzle pad. It

is conservatively assumed that the maximum horizontal and vertical loads occur simultaneously and on the same support, even though the time-history results show that these loads do not

occur simultaneously on the same support. The peak vertical load occurs for a vessel inlet

nozzle break; the peak horizontal load occurs for the vessel outlet nozzle break. Note that the

peak horizontal load is an extremely conservative value since the break opening area for the

vessel outlet nozzle break is only 15 in.

2 instead of 144 in.

2(a) area used to generate the applied loads. If additional analysis were performed using the lower break opening area, the load would

be considerably reduced. Furthermore, the peak vertical load and peak horizontal load do not

occur on the same vessel support. The largest vertical loads are produced on the supports

beneath and opposite the broken nozzle. The largest horizontal loads are produced on the

supports which are the most perpendicular to the broken nozzle horizontal centerline.

The LOCA loads are combined with other applicable faulted condition loads, and the total

applied loads are obtained. These total loads on a per support basis are summarized in table

3M-3. This total combined load is applied to the reactor vessel supporting structure, which is

analyzed into two independent components: the U-shaped vessel shoe (figure 3M-1), and the

cooling box, which is the structure between the shoe and the concrete (figure 3M-2). Final

analyses have been performed on the support shoe and the cooling box structure, and the

results are presented in subsection 5.2.1.10.1.1(M).

a. The maximum break opening area of the inlet nozzle was redetermined to be 100 in.

2 and the maximum break area of the outlet nozzle was redetermined to be 30 in.

2 Only the inlet nozzle break was reanalyzed since it bounds the smaller break in the outlet nozzle.

FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-5 REV 21 5/08 The reactor coolant loop piping was evaluated for the primary membrane plus bending stress

intensity against the faulted- condition stress limit, equation 9 of subarticle 3650 of the ASME

Section III, Nuclear Power Piping Code. The loads included in the evaluation result from the

SSE inertia loading, deadweight, pressure, LOCA loop hydraulic forces, and reactor vessel

motion. Individual loadings at critical stress locations were combined, and primary stress

intensities were calculated for the combined load sets. The primary stress intensities at all

locations were under the faulted condition stress limit. It is therefore concluded that the reactor

coolant loop piping of the unbroken loop or the unbroken legs of the broken loop meets the

faulted condition requirements of ASME Section III and is capable of withstanding the

consequences resulting from a break at the reactor vessel inlet or outlet nozzle.

For the evaluation of the design adequacy of equipment, the maximum loads at the primary

equipment nozzles resulting from the analysis of each loading condition were determined. The

external loads imposed upon primary equipment by the reactor coolant loop produce stress intensities which are below the faulted condition allowable values.

The effects of the postulated breaks at the reactor vessel inlet and outlet nozzle locations on the

CRDM's, reactor vessel internals, ECCS branch lines, RCS component supports, and the

reactor core are presented in subsection 5.2.1.10.1.1 (N), subsection 3.9.3.8, appendix 3L, subsection 5.2.1.10.1.1(M), and subsection 4.2.1.3.2, respectively.

The results of these analyses verify that the integrity of the safeguards systems is assured

during a loss of coolant accident and that the reactor can be safely shut down and maintained in

a safe condition.

FNP-FSAR-3M

3M-6 REV 21 5/08 REFERENCES

1. Takeuchi, K., et al, "MULTIFLEX - A Fortran-IV Computer Program for Analyzing Thermal - Hydraulic-Structure System Dynamics," WCAP-8708 , February 1976.
2. WCAP-8252, "Documentation of Selected Westinghouse Structural Analysis Computer Codes," April 1976.

FNP-FSAR-3M

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3M-1 MAXIMUM REACTOR VESSEL DISPLACEMENTS AT REACTOR VESSEL CENTERLINE Maximum Horizontal Maximum Vertical Maximum Displacement Displacement Rotation (in.) (in.) (radians) 144 in.2(a) 0.078 0.030 0.00025 RPV inlet 0.0 -0.038 -0.0004 144 in.2(a) 0.086 0.016 0.00007 RPV outlet 0.0 -0.020 -0.00026 Double-ended 0.049 0.004 0.00031

pump outlet

-0.028 -0.036 -0.00029

a. Physical restraints limit the maximum circumferential break in the inlet nozzle to 100 in.

2 and to 30 in.2 in the outlet nozzle. The maximum displacements and rotations for these breaks were verified to be less than those listed here for a 144 in.

2 break.

FNP-FSAR-3M

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3M-2 MAXIMUM REACTOR VESSEL SUPPORT LOADS FOR POSTULATED PIPE RUPTURE CONDITIONS (a) LOCA Maximum Vertical Load LOCA Maximum Horizontal Load Per Support Including Per Support Deadweight 2150 Kips 1050 Kips

a. Physical restraints limit the maximum circumferential break in the inlet nozzle to 100 in.

2 and to 30 in.2 in the outlet nozzle. The maximum loads for these breaks were verified to be less than those listed here for a 144 in.

2 break.

FNP-FSAR-3M

REV 21 5/08 TABLE 3M-3 MAXIMUM REACTOR VESSEL SUPPORT LOADS FOR COMBINED PIPE RUPTURE CONDITION, SAFE SHUTDOWN EARTHQUAKE, AND DEADWEIGHT (a) Maximum Combined Vertical Ma ximum Combined Horizontal Load Per Support Load Per Support 2392 Kips 1326 Kips

a. Physical restraints limit the maximum circumferential break in the inlet nozzle to 100 in.

2 and to 30 in.2 in the outlet nozzle. The maximum loads for these breaks were verified to be less than those listed here for a 144 in.

2 break.

REV 21 5/08 REACTOR VESSEL SUPPORT SHOE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3M-1

REV 21 5/08 REACTOR VESSEL SUPPORT BOX JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3M-2

REV 21 5/08 MATHEMATICAL MODEL FOR HORIZONTAL RESPONSE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3M-3

REV 21 5/08 MATHEMATICAL MODEL FOR VERTICAL RESPONSE JOSEPH M. FARLEY NUCLEAR PLANT UNIT 1 AND UNIT 2 FIGURE 3M-4