Information Notice 2010-27, Ventilation System Preventive Maintenance and Design Issues: Difference between revisions
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| issue date = 12/16/2010 | | issue date = 12/16/2010 | ||
| title = Ventilation System Preventive Maintenance and Design Issues | | title = Ventilation System Preventive Maintenance and Design Issues | ||
| author name = Blount T | | author name = Blount T, Tracy G | ||
| author affiliation = NRC/NRO/DCIP, NRC/NRR/DPR | | author affiliation = NRC/NRO/DCIP, NRC/NRR/DPR | ||
| addressee name = | | addressee name = | ||
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| document type = NRC Information Notice | | document type = NRC Information Notice | ||
| page count = 5 | | page count = 5 | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{#Wiki_filter: | {{#Wiki_filter:UNITED STATES | ||
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION | |||
OFFICE OF NUCLEAR REACTOR REGULATION | |||
OFFICE OF NEW REACTORS | |||
WASHINGTON, DC 20555-0001 December 16, 2010 | |||
NRC INFORMATION NOTICE 2010-27: VENTILATION SYSTEM PREVENTIVE | |||
MAINTENANCE AND DESIGN ISSUES | |||
==ADDRESSEES== | ==ADDRESSEES== | ||
All holders of an operating license or construction permit for a nuclear power reactor issued under Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) Part 50, | All holders of an operating license or construction permit for a nuclear power reactor issued | ||
under Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) Part 50, Domestic Licensing of | |||
Production and Utilization Facilities, except those who have permanently ceased operations | |||
and have certified that fuel has been permanently removed from the reactor vessel. | |||
All holders of, or applicants for, an early site permit, standard design certification, standard | |||
design approval, manufacturing license, or combined license issued under 10 CFR Part 52, Licenses, Certifications, and Approvals for Nuclear Power Plants. | |||
==PURPOSE== | ==PURPOSE== | ||
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issuing this information notice (IN) to inform addressees of recent operating experience concerning ventilation system preventive maintenance and design issues, including instances involving the control room habitability | The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issuing this information notice (IN) to inform | ||
On December 26, 2006, two Magnitude 7 earthquakes occurred near Maanshan Nuclear Power Station in | |||
addressees of recent operating experience concerning ventilation system preventive | |||
maintenance and design issues, including instances involving the control room habitability | |||
system. The NRC expects recipients to review the information for applicability to their facilities | |||
and consider actions, as appropriate, to avoid similar problems. The suggestions that appear in | |||
this IN are not NRC requirements; therefore, no specific action or written response is required. | |||
==DESCRIPTION OF CIRCUMSTANCES== | |||
Krümmel Nuclear Power Plant (Germany) | |||
On June 28, 2007, a short circuit in one of two main generator transformers at Krümmel Nuclear | |||
Power Plant in northern Germany caused a reactor trip and transformer fire. Winds blew the | |||
heavy smoke from the fire towards the switchgear building, which shares its ventilation system | |||
with the conjoined main control room. Smoke detectors in the ventilation supply line sensed the | |||
smoke and automatically shifted the ventilation lineup to the smoke removal mode, closing the | |||
recirculation line and drawing all ventilation air in from the outside, which is typically expected to | |||
be free of smoke. The control logic of the ventilation system recognized the smoke removal | |||
mode as the highest priority, and operators discovered that they were unable to shift the | |||
ventilation system back to recirculation mode from the control room. Although filters in the | |||
ventilation system retained the smoke particles, fire gases passed through the filters and | |||
entered the control room. Approximately 15 minutes elapsed before the operators manually | |||
realigned the ventilation system to recirculation mode from the local ventilation control panel. | |||
The utility identified two major issues that led to the presence of excessive smoke in the control | |||
room during the transformer fire. It was determined that the effects of a fire outside of the | |||
building (as opposed to outside the control room but inside the building) were not considered | |||
during the design phase. The detection of smoke in the ventilation system led to the automatic | |||
shift of the system to smoke removal mode with no consideration for where the smoke | |||
originated. The control logic that sets the priority for the ventilation system prevented operators | |||
in the control room from overriding the automatic signal and placing the ventilation into | |||
recirculation mode. | |||
In response to the event, the licensee disabled the automatic ventilation shift feature of the | |||
control room ventilation system for smoke detection and replaced it with a control room alarm. | |||
In addition, the licensee installed pushbuttons, both in the control room and at the remote | |||
shutdown panel, to allow operators to either isolate the ventilation system or place it in smoke | |||
removal mode, as the situation required. | |||
Maanshan Nuclear Power Station (Taiwan) | |||
On December 26, 2006, two Magnitude 7 earthquakes occurred near Maanshan Nuclear Power | |||
Station in Taiwan. In addition to causing a small amount of spillage from the spent fuel pool and | |||
minor damage to the cable duct connections of the reactor coolant pump, the earthquake | |||
caused a release of dust into the control room; the dust had accumulated in the outlet ducts of | |||
the control room ventilation system. The operators in the control room experienced a large | |||
shaking movement of the ground such that they could not stand firmly on the floor. Following | |||
the actuation of the reactor coolant pump and main turbine high-vibration alarms and numerous | |||
tank water level alarms, operators for Unit 2 made a conservative decision to initiate a manual | |||
scram of the reactor. This decision may also have been influenced by the large amount of | |||
falling dust from above the ceiling. In response, the licensee has incorporated ventilation ducts | |||
into the maintenance program to ensure a regular cleaning schedule. | |||
===Grand Gulf Nuclear Station=== | |||
While measuring the airflow through the standby service water pump house with the ventilation | |||
fans running on January 14, 2009, the licensee at the Grand Gulf Nuclear Station noted that the | |||
airflow was significantly lower than expected in normal mode and higher than expected in cold | |||
weather recirculation mode. The results of an inspection that the licensee performed on the air | |||
intake showed that the station had not inspected or performed maintenance on the intake | |||
screens and damper assemblies for both divisional ventilation trains in approximately 20 years. | |||
The inspection showed that debris had accumulated and resulted in large differential pressures | |||
and low flow across the intake screens. Inadequate lubrication of the damper blade bearings | |||
resulted in damage to the intake dampers and operating mechanisms that resulted in | |||
significantly reduced flow control. | |||
The reason no maintenance had been performed on this ventilation system was that during its | |||
preventive maintenance (PM) optimization initiative, the licensee decided that functional checks | |||
and inspections would be performed as required using observations from operator rounds and engineering walkdowns instead of performing them at the periodic interval the licensee had | |||
established for dampers and ducting. This decision was based on an incorrect assumption the | |||
intake screens and dampers are visible during routine, non-invasive rounds and walkdowns. | |||
After the licensee cleaned the screens and reworked the damaged dampers in August 2009, normal airflow through the ventilation system improved from 30,000 to 48,000 standard cubic | |||
feet per minute, and flow control was established to maintain the design flow in both normal and | |||
recirculation modes of operation. The licensee created preventive maintenance tasks to | |||
perform nonintrusive airflow testing on a 2-year frequency. The licensee also added | |||
maintenance procedures to lubricate the damper blade bearings and to inspect the intake | |||
dampers, operating mechanisms, and intake screens on a 2-year frequency. Additional | |||
information appears in Grand Gulf Nuclear StationNRC Integrated Inspection Report | |||
05000416/2009004, dated October 29, 2009, on the NRCs public website in the Agencywide | |||
Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) under Accession No. ML093050016. | |||
==DISCUSSION== | |||
Criterion 19, Control Room, of Appendix A, General Design Criteria for Nuclear Power | |||
Plants, to 10 CFR Part 50 requires that a control room shall be provided from which actions | |||
can be taken to operate the nuclear power unit safely under normal conditions and to maintain it | |||
in a safe condition. Some plants are designed with control room smoke control systems that | |||
automatically align to a smoke purge mode that, as at Krümmel Nuclear Power Plant, will isolate | |||
the control room from the adjacent areas and purge it with a large quantity of outdoor air upon | |||
actuation of a smoke detection signal. Licensees are responsible for meeting fire protection and | |||
license condition commitments made during the establishment of their fire protection program. | |||
The NRC has evaluated plants licensed to operate after January 1, 1979, against Section 9.5.1, Fire Protection Program, of NUREG-0800, Standard Review Plan for the Review of Safety | |||
Analysis Reports for Nuclear Power Plants, which has always specified that, The outside air | |||
intake(s) for the control room ventilation system should be provided with smoke detection | |||
capability to alarm in the control room to enable manual isolation of the control room ventilation | |||
system and thus prevent smoke from entering the control room. | |||
No specific requirement to periodically clean the inside of the control room ventilation ducts | |||
exists. However, such cleaning can prevent the introduction of dust into the control room | |||
following a seismic event; operators at the Maanshan Nuclear Power Station were distracted by | |||
dust in addition to being challenged in their response to a seismic event. | |||
Criterion V, Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings, of Appendix B, Quality Assurance | |||
Criteria for Nuclear Power Plants and Fuel Reprocessing Plants, to 10 CFR Part 50 requires | |||
licensees to prescribe and accomplish procedures for activities affecting quality, including | |||
procedures to ensure the operability of safety-related ventilation systems. In the example | |||
above, the licensee at Grand Gulf Nuclear Station had no procedures or PM schedules for the | |||
ventilation system of the standby service water pump house, which left the ventilation system in | |||
a degraded condition that caused significantly reduced ventilation flow. | |||
==CONTACT== | ==CONTACT== | ||
This IN requires no specific action or written | This IN requires no specific action or written response. Please direct any questions about this | ||
Tom Blount, Acting Director Glenn Tracy, Director Division of Policy and Rulemaking Division of Construction Inspection Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation and Operational Programs Office of New Reactors Technical Contacts: Kevin Mattern, NRO Rebecca Sigmon, NRR 301-415-6622 301-415-4018 E-mail: Kevin.Mattern@nrc.gov E-mail: Rebecca.Sigmon@nrc.gov Omid Tabatabai, NRO 301-415-6616 E-mail: Omid.Tabatabai@nrc.gov Note: NRC generic communications may be found on the NRC public website, http://www.nrc.gov, under Electronic Reading Room/Document | |||
matter to the technical contacts listed below or to the appropriate Office of Nuclear Reactor | |||
Regulation (NRR) project manager. | |||
/RA/ /RA by JTappert for/ | |||
Tom Blount, Acting Director Glenn Tracy, Director | |||
Division of Policy and Rulemaking Division of Construction Inspection | |||
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation and Operational Programs | |||
Office of New Reactors | |||
Technical Contacts: Kevin Mattern, NRO Rebecca Sigmon, NRR | |||
301-415-6622 301-415-4018 E-mail: Kevin.Mattern@nrc.gov E-mail: Rebecca.Sigmon@nrc.gov | |||
Omid Tabatabai, NRO | |||
301-415-6616 E-mail: Omid.Tabatabai@nrc.gov | |||
Note: NRC generic communications may be found on the NRC public website, http://www.nrc.gov, under Electronic Reading Room/Document Collections. | |||
==CONTACT== | ==CONTACT== | ||
This information notice requires no specific action or written | This information notice requires no specific action or written response. Please direct any | ||
Tom Blount, Acting Director Glenn Tracy, Director Division of Policy and Rulemaking Division of Construction Inspection Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation and Operational Programs Office of New Reactors Technical Contacts: Kevin Mattern, NRO Rebecca Sigmon 301-415-6622 301-415-4018 Kevin.Mattern@nrc.gov Rebecca.Sigmon@nrc.gov Omid Tabatabai, NRO 301-415-6616 Omid.Tabatabai@nrc.gov Note: NRC generic communications may be found on the NRC public website, http://www.nrc.gov, under Electronic Reading Room/Document | |||
questions about this matter to the technical contacts listed below or the appropriate Office of | |||
Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR) project manager. | |||
/RA/ /RA by JTappert for/ | |||
Tom Blount, Acting Director Glenn Tracy, Director | |||
Division of Policy and Rulemaking Division of Construction Inspection | |||
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation and Operational Programs | |||
Office of New Reactors | |||
Technical Contacts: Kevin Mattern, NRO Rebecca Sigmon | |||
301-415-6622 301-415-4018 Kevin.Mattern@nrc.gov Rebecca.Sigmon@nrc.gov | |||
Omid Tabatabai, NRO | |||
301-415-6616 Omid.Tabatabai@nrc.gov | |||
Note: NRC generic communications may be found on the NRC public website, http://www.nrc.gov, under Electronic Reading Room/Document Collections. | |||
ADAMS Accession Number: ML102450114 OFFICE NRR:DIRS:IOEB NRO:CAEB NRO:CTSB Tech Editor BC:NRR:DIRS:IOEB | |||
NAME RSigmon KMattern OTabatabai KAzariah-Kribbs JThorp | |||
DATE 11/3/10 10/13/10 (e-mail) 11/19/10 10/27/10 (e-mail) 11/8/10 | |||
OFFICE BC:NRR:SCVB BC:OIP BC:NRO:CAEB D:NRR:DSS BC:NRO:SBCV | |||
NAME RDennig CAbrams TFrye WRuland JMcKirgan | |||
DATE 11/8/10 11/17/10 11/19/10 11/15/10 12/2/10 | |||
OFFICE NRR:DPR:PGCB NRR:DPR:PGCB BC:DPR:PGCB D: NRO:DCIP D:NRR:DPR | |||
NAME DBeaulieu CHawes SRosenberg GTracy JTappert for TBlount | |||
OFFICE 12/3/10 12/8/10 12/8/10 12/15/10 12/16/10 | |||
OFFICIAL RECORD COPY}} | |||
{{Information notice-Nav}} | {{Information notice-Nav}} |
Latest revision as of 14:50, 13 November 2019
ML102450114 | |
Person / Time | |
---|---|
Issue date: | 12/16/2010 |
From: | Blount T, Tracy G Division of Construction Inspection and Operational Programs, Division of Policy and Rulemaking |
To: | |
Beaulieu, D P, NRR/DPR, 415-3243 | |
References | |
IN-10-027 | |
Download: ML102450114 (5) | |
UNITED STATES
NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION
OFFICE OF NUCLEAR REACTOR REGULATION
OFFICE OF NEW REACTORS
WASHINGTON, DC 20555-0001 December 16, 2010
NRC INFORMATION NOTICE 2010-27: VENTILATION SYSTEM PREVENTIVE
MAINTENANCE AND DESIGN ISSUES
ADDRESSEES
All holders of an operating license or construction permit for a nuclear power reactor issued
under Title 10 of the Code of Federal Regulations (10 CFR) Part 50, Domestic Licensing of
Production and Utilization Facilities, except those who have permanently ceased operations
and have certified that fuel has been permanently removed from the reactor vessel.
All holders of, or applicants for, an early site permit, standard design certification, standard
design approval, manufacturing license, or combined license issued under 10 CFR Part 52, Licenses, Certifications, and Approvals for Nuclear Power Plants.
PURPOSE
The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issuing this information notice (IN) to inform
addressees of recent operating experience concerning ventilation system preventive
maintenance and design issues, including instances involving the control room habitability
system. The NRC expects recipients to review the information for applicability to their facilities
and consider actions, as appropriate, to avoid similar problems. The suggestions that appear in
this IN are not NRC requirements; therefore, no specific action or written response is required.
DESCRIPTION OF CIRCUMSTANCES
Krümmel Nuclear Power Plant (Germany)
On June 28, 2007, a short circuit in one of two main generator transformers at Krümmel Nuclear
Power Plant in northern Germany caused a reactor trip and transformer fire. Winds blew the
heavy smoke from the fire towards the switchgear building, which shares its ventilation system
with the conjoined main control room. Smoke detectors in the ventilation supply line sensed the
smoke and automatically shifted the ventilation lineup to the smoke removal mode, closing the
recirculation line and drawing all ventilation air in from the outside, which is typically expected to
be free of smoke. The control logic of the ventilation system recognized the smoke removal
mode as the highest priority, and operators discovered that they were unable to shift the
ventilation system back to recirculation mode from the control room. Although filters in the
ventilation system retained the smoke particles, fire gases passed through the filters and
entered the control room. Approximately 15 minutes elapsed before the operators manually
realigned the ventilation system to recirculation mode from the local ventilation control panel.
The utility identified two major issues that led to the presence of excessive smoke in the control
room during the transformer fire. It was determined that the effects of a fire outside of the
building (as opposed to outside the control room but inside the building) were not considered
during the design phase. The detection of smoke in the ventilation system led to the automatic
shift of the system to smoke removal mode with no consideration for where the smoke
originated. The control logic that sets the priority for the ventilation system prevented operators
in the control room from overriding the automatic signal and placing the ventilation into
recirculation mode.
In response to the event, the licensee disabled the automatic ventilation shift feature of the
control room ventilation system for smoke detection and replaced it with a control room alarm.
In addition, the licensee installed pushbuttons, both in the control room and at the remote
shutdown panel, to allow operators to either isolate the ventilation system or place it in smoke
removal mode, as the situation required.
Maanshan Nuclear Power Station (Taiwan)
On December 26, 2006, two Magnitude 7 earthquakes occurred near Maanshan Nuclear Power
Station in Taiwan. In addition to causing a small amount of spillage from the spent fuel pool and
minor damage to the cable duct connections of the reactor coolant pump, the earthquake
caused a release of dust into the control room; the dust had accumulated in the outlet ducts of
the control room ventilation system. The operators in the control room experienced a large
shaking movement of the ground such that they could not stand firmly on the floor. Following
the actuation of the reactor coolant pump and main turbine high-vibration alarms and numerous
tank water level alarms, operators for Unit 2 made a conservative decision to initiate a manual scram of the reactor. This decision may also have been influenced by the large amount of
falling dust from above the ceiling. In response, the licensee has incorporated ventilation ducts
into the maintenance program to ensure a regular cleaning schedule.
Grand Gulf Nuclear Station
While measuring the airflow through the standby service water pump house with the ventilation
fans running on January 14, 2009, the licensee at the Grand Gulf Nuclear Station noted that the
airflow was significantly lower than expected in normal mode and higher than expected in cold
weather recirculation mode. The results of an inspection that the licensee performed on the air
intake showed that the station had not inspected or performed maintenance on the intake
screens and damper assemblies for both divisional ventilation trains in approximately 20 years.
The inspection showed that debris had accumulated and resulted in large differential pressures
and low flow across the intake screens. Inadequate lubrication of the damper blade bearings
resulted in damage to the intake dampers and operating mechanisms that resulted in
significantly reduced flow control.
The reason no maintenance had been performed on this ventilation system was that during its
preventive maintenance (PM) optimization initiative, the licensee decided that functional checks
and inspections would be performed as required using observations from operator rounds and engineering walkdowns instead of performing them at the periodic interval the licensee had
established for dampers and ducting. This decision was based on an incorrect assumption the
intake screens and dampers are visible during routine, non-invasive rounds and walkdowns.
After the licensee cleaned the screens and reworked the damaged dampers in August 2009, normal airflow through the ventilation system improved from 30,000 to 48,000 standard cubic
feet per minute, and flow control was established to maintain the design flow in both normal and
recirculation modes of operation. The licensee created preventive maintenance tasks to
perform nonintrusive airflow testing on a 2-year frequency. The licensee also added
maintenance procedures to lubricate the damper blade bearings and to inspect the intake
dampers, operating mechanisms, and intake screens on a 2-year frequency. Additional
information appears in Grand Gulf Nuclear StationNRC Integrated Inspection Report 05000416/2009004, dated October 29, 2009, on the NRCs public website in the Agencywide
Documents Access and Management System (ADAMS) under Accession No. ML093050016.
DISCUSSION
Criterion 19, Control Room, of Appendix A, General Design Criteria for Nuclear Power
Plants, to 10 CFR Part 50 requires that a control room shall be provided from which actions
can be taken to operate the nuclear power unit safely under normal conditions and to maintain it
in a safe condition. Some plants are designed with control room smoke control systems that
automatically align to a smoke purge mode that, as at Krümmel Nuclear Power Plant, will isolate
the control room from the adjacent areas and purge it with a large quantity of outdoor air upon
actuation of a smoke detection signal. Licensees are responsible for meeting fire protection and
license condition commitments made during the establishment of their fire protection program.
The NRC has evaluated plants licensed to operate after January 1, 1979, against Section 9.5.1, Fire Protection Program, of NUREG-0800, Standard Review Plan for the Review of Safety
Analysis Reports for Nuclear Power Plants, which has always specified that, The outside air
intake(s) for the control room ventilation system should be provided with smoke detection
capability to alarm in the control room to enable manual isolation of the control room ventilation
system and thus prevent smoke from entering the control room.
No specific requirement to periodically clean the inside of the control room ventilation ducts
exists. However, such cleaning can prevent the introduction of dust into the control room
following a seismic event; operators at the Maanshan Nuclear Power Station were distracted by
dust in addition to being challenged in their response to a seismic event.
Criterion V, Instructions, Procedures, and Drawings, of Appendix B, Quality Assurance
Criteria for Nuclear Power Plants and Fuel Reprocessing Plants, to 10 CFR Part 50 requires
licensees to prescribe and accomplish procedures for activities affecting quality, including
procedures to ensure the operability of safety-related ventilation systems. In the example
above, the licensee at Grand Gulf Nuclear Station had no procedures or PM schedules for the
ventilation system of the standby service water pump house, which left the ventilation system in
a degraded condition that caused significantly reduced ventilation flow.
CONTACT
This IN requires no specific action or written response. Please direct any questions about this
matter to the technical contacts listed below or to the appropriate Office of Nuclear Reactor
Regulation (NRR) project manager.
/RA/ /RA by JTappert for/
Tom Blount, Acting Director Glenn Tracy, Director
Division of Policy and Rulemaking Division of Construction Inspection
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation and Operational Programs
Office of New Reactors
Technical Contacts: Kevin Mattern, NRO Rebecca Sigmon, NRR
301-415-6622 301-415-4018 E-mail: Kevin.Mattern@nrc.gov E-mail: Rebecca.Sigmon@nrc.gov
301-415-6616 E-mail: Omid.Tabatabai@nrc.gov
Note: NRC generic communications may be found on the NRC public website, http://www.nrc.gov, under Electronic Reading Room/Document Collections.
CONTACT
This information notice requires no specific action or written response. Please direct any
questions about this matter to the technical contacts listed below or the appropriate Office of
Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR) project manager.
/RA/ /RA by JTappert for/
Tom Blount, Acting Director Glenn Tracy, Director
Division of Policy and Rulemaking Division of Construction Inspection
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation and Operational Programs
Office of New Reactors
Technical Contacts: Kevin Mattern, NRO Rebecca Sigmon
301-415-6622 301-415-4018 Kevin.Mattern@nrc.gov Rebecca.Sigmon@nrc.gov
301-415-6616 Omid.Tabatabai@nrc.gov
Note: NRC generic communications may be found on the NRC public website, http://www.nrc.gov, under Electronic Reading Room/Document Collections.
ADAMS Accession Number: ML102450114 OFFICE NRR:DIRS:IOEB NRO:CAEB NRO:CTSB Tech Editor BC:NRR:DIRS:IOEB
NAME RSigmon KMattern OTabatabai KAzariah-Kribbs JThorp
DATE 11/3/10 10/13/10 (e-mail) 11/19/10 10/27/10 (e-mail) 11/8/10
OFFICE BC:NRR:SCVB BC:OIP BC:NRO:CAEB D:NRR:DSS BC:NRO:SBCV
NAME RDennig CAbrams TFrye WRuland JMcKirgan
DATE 11/8/10 11/17/10 11/19/10 11/15/10 12/2/10
OFFICE NRR:DPR:PGCB NRR:DPR:PGCB BC:DPR:PGCB D: NRO:DCIP D:NRR:DPR
NAME DBeaulieu CHawes SRosenberg GTracy JTappert for TBlount
OFFICE 12/3/10 12/8/10 12/8/10 12/15/10 12/16/10
OFFICIAL RECORD COPY