Information Notice 2004-01, Auxiliary Feedwater Pump Recirculation Line Orifice Fouling - Potential Common Cause Failure

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Auxiliary Feedwater Pump Recirculation Line Orifice Fouling - Potential Common Cause Failure
ML040140460
Person / Time
Site: Point Beach  NextEra Energy icon.png
Issue date: 01/21/2004
From: Beckner W D
NRC/NRR/DIPM
To:
Dozier J I, NRR/IROB 415-1014
References
IN-04-001
Download: ML040140460 (9)


UNITED STATESNUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSIONOFFICE OF NUCLEAR REACTOR REGULATIONWASHINGTON, D.C. 20555January 21, 2004NRC INFORMATION NOTICE 2004-01:AUXILIARY FEEDWATER PUMPRECIRCULATION LINE ORIFICE FOULING -

POTENTIAL COMMON CAUSE FAILURE

Addressees

All holders of operating licenses or construction permits for nuclear power reactors, exceptthose that have permanently ceased operations and have certified that fuel has been

permanently removed from the reactor.

Purpose

The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) is issuing this information notice to informaddressees of the potential common cause failure of auxiliary feedwater pumps because of

fouling of pump recirculation line flow orifices. It is expected that recipients will review the

information for applicability to their facilities and consider actions, as appropriate, to avoid

similar problems. However, suggestions in this information notice are not NRC requirements;

therefore no specific action or written response is required.Background:Point Beach Nuclear Plant (PBNP) is a two unit site. Each unit has a turbine-driven AFW pump(pumps 1P29 and 2P29) which can supply water to both steam generators. Additionally, the

plant has two motor-driven AFW pumps (pumps P38A and P38B) each of which can be aligned

to a steam generator in each unit. Each pump has a recirculation line back to the condensate

storage tanks (CSTs) to ensure minimum flow to prevent hydraulic instabilities and dissipate

pump heat. The recirculation line contained a pressure reducing, flow restricting orifice. An

arrow is pointing to the recirculation flow restricting orifice (RO) in the major flow path AFW

diagram provided in Figure 1 and a picture of the RO is provided in Figure 2. The RO used a multi-stage, anti-cavitation trim package installed in the body of a globe valve tolimit flow. This style of orifice or flow restrictor was installed in the AFW recirculation lines at

PBNP in the past few years to eliminate cavitation caused by the old orifices. This type of flow

restrictor used very small channels and holes in each stage combined with a tortuous path to

limit flow and prevent cavitation. Figure 1. AFW System - Major Flow PathsFigure 2. Recirculation Flow Restricting Orifice

Description of Circumstances

On October 24, 2002, during post-maintenance surveillance testing of the P38A motor-drivenAFW pump at PBNP, the licensee observed AFW recirculation line flow to be 64.5 gpm, which

was less than the 70 gpm acceptance criterion. Normal flow through the recirculation line was

75 gpm. Suspecting instrument error, plant personnel vented and recalibrated the flow

instrument. The P38A AFW pump was then started and tested again; however, the observed

recirculation flow was essentially unchanged. Following that test run, the recirculation flow

orifice was removed and inspected. After removal of the orifice internals, partial blockage was observed in 24 of the 54 holes in theoutermost sleeve. No particles were found on any of the inner sleeves. Samples of the

particles removed from the orifice were retained for analysis. A boroscope inspection of the

recirculation piping at the orifice location revealed no evidence of debris. Following cleaning

and reassembly, the orifice was reinstalled and the P38A AFW pump was successfully retested.

Testing was successfully completed on the other three AFW pumps to verify acceptable

recirculation flow by October 25, 2002.During the next several days, PBNP personnel evaluated the implications of the orifice pluggingevent. An apparent cause evaluation was initiated with specific directions to assess and

evaluate the potential extent of condition. An action plan was developed to identify the source

of the debris found in the orifice and to determine what other testing or flushing would be

required to assure that future plugging did not occur. As the investigations continued, questions developed concerning the operability of the AFWsystem while supplied by its safety-related water supply, the service water (SW) system.

Although the service water supply was provided through a basket strainer, it was recognized

that the strainer mesh was larger than the much finer RO channel holes and could allow debris

to pass that could clog the RO. These concerns culminated in a meeting on October 29, 2002, at which PBNP personnel concluded that there was no longer a reasonable assurance that

operation of the AFW system using its safety-related suction source of service water would not

result in potential AFW recirculation line orifice clogging.In a worst case scenario, Point Beach personnel determined that it may be possible, althoughunlikely, for each of the four flow control orifices, each associated with one of the four AFW

pumps, to restrict the flow through the associated recirculation line. Under such conditions, it

was hypothesized that if the discharge valves for the AFW pumps were throttled, adequate flow

might be unavailable through the recirculation line and pump damage could occur due to

overheating.On October 29, 2002, all four AFW pumps were declared inoperable. Both units entered theirtechnical specification action statements and required actions which directs immediate action to

restore an AFW system to operable status. Immediate corrective actions consisted of briefing

the on-shift crew of the potential consequences of restricted recirculation flow and initiating

procedure changes. The operators were also directed to secure a running AFW pump if the

pump discharge flows should be decreased to less than 50 gpm for the motor-driven pumps or

75 gpm for the turbine-driven pumps. These flow rates were substantially above the point at

which pump damage could occur. Information tags were placed at the AFW pump flow

indicators on the main control boards to convey that information. With these administrative

controls in place, operations declared the AFW system operable, about four hours after the pumps had been declared inoperable. An incident investigation was initiated to collect andconfirm the facts of this event description beginning with the discovery of the P-38A AFW pump

degraded recirculation flow during post-maintenance testing and concluding with the decision to

declare the AFW system inoperable.In accordance with 10 CFR 50.72(b)(3)(v), an eight-hour ENS notification (EN #39330) wasmade on October 29, 2002. The LER is available in ADAMS (Accession Number

ML032890115).A PBNP multi-discipline event resolution team was formed to identify and resolve the issuesassociated with the discovery of this condition. Activities included initiation of a root cause

evaluation (RCE) to determine the root and contributing causes for the postulated

common-mode failure that would render all AFW pump recirculation lines with restricted

flow rates. The RCE concluded that this event had a direct root cause and an organizational

root cause. The direct root cause was the failure by design engineering to properly evaluate

the potential for orifice plugging within the design process. Instead of revisiting the design for

adequacy and evaluating the potential for plugging of the proposed orifices within the rigor of

the design process, the 10 CFR 50.59 safety evaluation was revised to justify the proposed

design. The organizational root cause was less than adequate management oversight of the

design modification process. Also, in January and February 2003, a specially fabricated orifice was tested at a contractorlaboratory in an effort to determine a plugging probability with service water. Definitive testing

occurred on February 21 when a debris mixture of sand, silt, and zebra mussel shells, representative of what would exist in the Point Beach SW system, was injected into a closed

loop configuration of piping, an orifice, and a centrifugal pump. The orifice plugged in much

less than one minute after the mixture was injected into the loop. These results were contrary

to those of a previously performed computational particle fouling model analysis that indicated

that plugging was unlikely because of the particle size distribution of debris in SW and the

shear forces in the holes and channels of the orifices developed with the minimum flow required

through the orifice for pump cooling. Discussion:A special inspection was conducted by the NRC to evaluate the facts, circumstances, andlicensee actions, and documented in NRC Inspection Report 50-266/02-15 and 50-301/02-15 (Accession Number ML030920128). This issue was determined to be of Yellow risk

significance for Unit 1, an issue with substantial importance to safety, and Red risk significance

for Unit 2, an issue of high importance to safety. The difference in significance between the

Units was a result of the longer period of time that the AFW recirculation line pressure reduction

orifices were installed in Unit 2. (See Final Determination Letter, dated December 11, 2003,Accession Number ML033490022). This information notice requires no specific action or written response. If you have anyquestions regarding the information notice, please contact the technical contacts listed below or

the appropriate Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR) project manager./Original signed by: Terrence Reis/William D. Beckner, Chief

Reactor Operations Branch

Division of Inspection Program Management

Office of Nuclear Reactor RegulationTechnical contacts:Jerry Dozier, NRRPaul Krohn, Region III(301) 415-1014(920) 755-2309 E-mail: jxd@nrc.govE-mail: pgk1@nrc.govAttachment: List of Recently Issued NRC Information Notices This information notice requires no specific action or written response. If you have anyquestions regarding the information notice, please contact the technical contacts listed below or

the appropriate Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation (NRR) project manager./Original signed by: Terrence Reis/William D. Beckner, Chief

Reactor Operations Branch

Division of Inspection Program Management

Office of Nuclear Reactor RegulationTechnical contacts:Jerry Dozier, NRRPaul Krohn, Region III(301) 415-1014(920) 755-2309 E-mail: jxd@nrc.govE-mail: pgk1@nrc.govAttachment: List of Recently Issued NRC Information NoticesDISTRIBUTION:ADAMS

IN FileDOCUMENT NAME: G:\RORP\OES\Staff Folders\Dozier\InformationNoticeonPointBeachOrifice.wpdAdams Accession No.:ML040140460OFFICEOES:IROB:DIPMTech EditorDLPMSRI:RIIINAMEIJDozierPKleeneDWSpauldingPKrohnDATE12/03/200312/09/200301/14/200401/13/2004OFFICEBC:RIIISC:OES:IROB:DIPMC:IROB:DIPMNAMEAVegelTReisWDBecknerDATE01/13 /200401/14/200401/21/2004OFFICIAL RECORD COPY

______________________________________________________________________________________OL = Operating License

CP = Construction PermitAttachment LIST OF RECENTLY ISSUEDNRC INFORMATION NOTICES_____________________________________________________________________________________InformationDate of

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Nozzles01/08/2004All holders of operating licensesor construction permits for

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certified that fuel has been

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reactor.2003-22Heightened Awareness forPatients Containing Detectable

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Medical Administrations12/09/2003All medical licensees and NRCMaster Materials License medical

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and have certified that fuel has

been permanently removed from

the reactor vessel; applicable

decommissioning reactors, fuel

facilities, and independent spent

fuel storage installations.Note:NRC generic communications may be received in electronic format shortly after they areissued by subscribing to the NRC listserver as follows:To subscribe send an e-mail to <listproc@nrc.gov >, no subject, and the followingcommand in the message portion:subscribe gc-nrr firstname lastname