Overview of CANDU Pressurized Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR) … · 2009. 8. 12. · RAPP 1,2 Douglas...

1
Overview of CANDU Pressurized Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR) and the Canadian Nuclear Industry Mikko I. Jyrkama and Mahesh D. Pandey Department of Civil Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3G1, Canada Steam (light water) Steam Generator Pressurizer Pump/Motor Assembly Feedwater (light water) Calandria Fueling Machine Fueling Machine Moderator (heavy water) Fuel Channels Feeders From Fuel Channels High Presure Turbine Feedwater Pump Assembly Condenser Moderator Pump Moderator Heat Exchanger Low Pressure Turbines Cooling Water Generator Switchyard Power to Grid To Fuel Channels Fuel CANDU ® - CANada Deuterium Uranium Calandria End Shield Tubesheet End Fitting Feeder Pipe Channel Closure Liner Tube Positioning Assembly Heavy Water Moderator Fuel Bundles Shield Plug Fuel Channel Lattice Tube Calandria Tube Pressure Tube Annulus Gas (CO 2 ) Fuel Bundle Heavy Water Coolant Annulus Spacer 2005 2007 2008 2009 2010 2006 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 Pickering 2,3 Restart IMO Median Demand Growth ~0.9% p.a. MW Dispatchable (after avg. Capacity Factors applied) 36,000 34,000 32,000 30,000 28,000 26,000 24,000 22,000 20,000 18,000 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 Resources (MW) Coal (as shutdown) New Hydro (incl. ~1,400 MW from Manitoba) Existing Resources (2005) 11,000 MW 7,700 MW 7,600 MW 5,100 MW Nuclear Hydro Coal Gas Total Gas ~12,000 MW (~30% of Installed MW) New Gas Builds ~7,000 MW Installed Nuclear Refurbishment Bruce & Darlington (Pickering A&B run to end of current life) New Nuclear (6,100 MW net) Six ACR-1000 units Wind/Renewable ~10% of Installed MW Reactor Assembly Acknowledgements This work is part of the NSERC-UNENE Industrial Research Chair (IRC) program at the University of Waterloo. The Chair is one of the six university professorships established by UNENE in Ontario. The program is funded by UNENE in partnership with NSERC. Industrial sponsorship is provided by Ontario Power Generation, Bruce Power, and Atomic Energy of Canada Limited. Regulation 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Steam Outlet Nozzle Shroud Cone Tube Bundle Tube Bundle Hot Leg Tubesheet D 2 O Inlet D 2 O Outlet Feedwater Inlet Nozzle Preheater Section Tube Bundle Cold Leg Grid Tube Support Plate Shroud U Bend Primary Cyclone Separators Secondary Cyclone Separators Manway CANDU Evolution 800 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 900 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 Years Power (MWe) 900 MW Class Reactors 600 MW Class Reactors Research & Prototype Reactors ZEEP NRX NPD NRU RAPP 1,2 Douglas Point KANUPP Pickering A Pickering B Gentilly 2 Embalse Pt. Lepreau Wolsong 1 Cernavoda 1 Wolsong 2,3,4 Qinshan 1,2 Bruce A Bruce B Darlington CANDU 9 Demand for Electricity UNENE Nuclear Nucléaire Gross Capacity (per unit) Net Capacity (per unit) Construction Start Start-up Fuel: Elements in bundle/bundles per channel Total number of fuel bundles in core Fuel Channels: Number Calandria tube material Calandria tube ID/wall thickness (mm) Pressure tube material Pressure tube ID/wall thickness (mm) Heat Transport System Number of loops Reactor inlet/outlet temperature (°C) Number of heat transport pumps Number of steam generators Number of SG tubes/material 791 MW 740 MW Operator Reactor Unit Bruce A Bruce B 1-4 Dec 1970 Jul 1976 37/13 6240 480 a. Zircaloy-2 129/1.37 cw. Zr-2.5%Nb 103.4/4.06 4 250-265/304 4 8* 4200/Inconel 600 4 250-265/304 4 8* 4200/Inconel 600 * Bruce A and B steam generators have separate preheaters 807 MW 750 MW 5-8 Jan 1978 May 1984 37/13 6240 480 a. Zircaloy-2 129/1.37 cw. Zr-2.5%Nb 103.4/4.11 Pickering A 2 249/293 12 plus 4 spare 12 2600/Monel 542 MW 508 MW 1-4 Jun 1966 Feb 1971 28/12 4680 390 a. Zircaloy-2 130.8/1.55 cw. Zr-2.5%Nb 103.4/4.06 Pickering B 540 MW 508 MW 5-8 Nov 1974 Oct 1982 Darlington 4 267/310 4 4 4663/Incoloy 800 935 MW 881 MW 1-4 Sep 1981 Nov 1989 37/13 6240 480 a. Zircaloy-2 129/1.37 cw. Zr-2.5%Nb 103.4/4.19 Point Lepreau 2 266/310 4 4 3542/Incoloy 800 680 MW 635 MW N/A May 1975 Jul 1982 37/12 4560 380 a. Zircaloy-2 129/1.37 cw. Zr-2.5%Nb 103.4/4.19 Gentilly 2 266/310 4 4 3542/Inconel 600 675 MW 640 MW 2 Apr 1974 Sep 1982 37/12 4560 380 a. Zircaloy-2 129/1.37 cw. Zr-2.5%Nb 103.4/4.19 2 249/293 12 plus 4 spare 12 2573/Monel 28/12 4560 380 a. Zircaloy-2 129/1.37 cw. Zr-2.5%Nb 103.4/4.01 Cross-Section Steam Generator Uses natural uranium as fuel and deuterium oxide (D 2 O) or "heavy water" as coolant and moderator Started as the Canadian contribution to the War effort Designed by AECL (Atomic Energy of Canada Limited) All nuclear power reactors in Canada are CANDUs Can be refuelled at full power Multiple shutdown systems for added safety The steam turns tthe turbines and the turbines turn the generator to produce electricity. Uranium atoms are split in the core under controlled conditions to produce a chain reaction, providing large amounts of energy in the form of heat. Heavy water coolant circulates in the Primary Heat Transport System through the reactor core. The hot heavy water coolant from the reactor is transferred to the steam generators to produce steam. Feeders - inlet and outlet feeders connect each fuel channel individually to connectors (headers) above the core and then to the steam generators Calandria - a horizontal, cylindrical, single-walled, 6 m long stepped shell enclosed at each end by tubesheets and spanned by calandria tubes and filled with the heavy water moderator Moderator - consists of heavy water at near atmospheric pressure and at a temperature of 70°C, used for moderating (slowing down) the high energy fission neutrons Calandria Tubes - provide access through the calandria for the fuel channel assemblies and also support the pressure tubes by means of four garter spring spacers per channel Fuel Channels - the fuel channels contain the pressure tubes that hold the fuel bundles in the neutron flux of the reactor core 1. Calandria 2. Calandria end shield 3. Shut-off and control rods 4. Poison injection 5. Fuel channel assemblies 6. Feeder pipes 7. Vault CANDU Nuclear Power Plant Schematic The condenser turns the steam back into water which is then returned to the steam generators through the feedwater system. The heavy water coolant in the primary heat transport system removes heat from the reactor core by circulating in the pressure tubes and cooling the fuel bundles The HTS operating pressure is ~10 MPa and the typical variation of coolant temperature is from 266°C at the channel inlet to 312°C at the channel outlet The HT water has a pH above 10 and a very low oxidation potential in order to protect the HT piping such as pressure tubes, steam generator tubes, feeders, and fuel Steam Generators - transfer the heat from the hot heavy water (D 2 O) circulating in the primary heat transport system to ordinary "light" water in the steam generator The CANDU fuel consists of natural uranium, which contains a fraction of 0.72 % (isotopic abundance) of isotope 235 U, with the remaining fraction in the form of 238 U The fuel is fabricated into small UO 2 pellets which are then placed inside 0.5 m long fuel rods (small Zircaloy tubes) The tubes are then arranged into fuel bundles consisting of an assembly of 37 elements Spacer pads on the surface of the tubes prevent direct contact of the fuel rods with the pressure tube walls and allow space for coolant flow through the bundles Heat Transport System Fuel Close-up Fuel Bundle Zircaloy Fuel Rod (fuel sheath) UO 2 Fuel Pellet End Plate End Cap Spacer Pad (Sources: Atomic Energy of Canada Limited AECL and Canadian Nuclear Association CNA) U N E N E University Network of Excellence in Nuclear Engineering Point Lepreau Turbine-Generator (image courtesy of AECL) (image courtesy of AECL) CANDU Reactor Assembly (during construction) (image courtesy of AECL) The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC), an independent agency of the Government of Canada operates and enforces regulations under the Nuclear Safety and Control Act (NSC Act) As the federal regulator, the CNSC executes licensing decisions made by the Commission or its designates continually monitors licensees to ensure they comply with safety requirements that protect workers, the public, and the environment uphold Canada’s international commitments on the peaceful use of nuclear energy The CNSC functions as a tribunal, taking into account the views, concerns and opinions of interested parties and intervenors when establishing regulatory policy, making licensing decisions and implementing programs In addition to the NSC Act, the CNSC also administers other nuclear related regulations and bylaws in the form of policies, standards, guides and notices Current energy infrastructure in Ontario will be unable to meet future supply requirements coal phase-out will place additional strains on supply imports can only meet fluctuations in demand Future demand can be met with a mix of sources, including Nuclear (Source: Atomic Energy of Canada Limited) (Sources: International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA and Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission CNSC) (image courtesy of CANTEACH) (image courtesy of CANTEACH) (image courtesy of AECL) (CANDU 6’s) ACR Advanced CANDU Reactor Gas Annulus - the gap between the fuel channel pressure tubes and the calandria tubes insulates the hot pressure tubes from the relatively cool moderator University Network of Excellence in Nuclear Engineering UNENE is an alliance of universities, nuclear power utilities, research and regulatory agencies for the support and development of nuclear education and R&D capability in Canadian universities The main purpose of UNENE is to assure a sustainable supply of qualified nuclear engineers and scientists to meet the current and future needs of the Canadian nuclear industry UNENE has created a fully accredited course-based Master's of Engineering (MEng) program in Nuclear Engineering which is offered jointly by the member universities UNENE has established Industrial Research Chairs (professorships) in six Ontario universities through a partnership with NSERC and generous support from the Canadian nuclear industry Nuclear Research and Development Nuclear Engineering Education Program

Transcript of Overview of CANDU Pressurized Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR) … · 2009. 8. 12. · RAPP 1,2 Douglas...

  • Overview of CANDU Pressurized Heavy Water Reactor (PHWR)and the Canadian Nuclear Industry

    Mikko I. Jyrkama and Mahesh D. PandeyDepartment of Civil Engineering, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, N2L 3G1, Canada

    Steam (light water)

    SteamGenerator

    PressurizerPump/MotorAssembly

    Feedwater(light water)

    Calandria

    Fueling MachineFueling Machine

    Moderator (heavy water)Fuel Channels

    Feeders

    From FuelChannels

    High PresureTurbine

    FeedwaterPump

    Assembly

    Condenser

    ModeratorPump

    ModeratorHeat Exchanger

    Low Pressure Turbines

    CoolingWater

    Generator

    Switchyard

    Powerto Grid

    To FuelChannels

    Fuel

    CANDU® - CANada Deuterium Uranium

    CalandriaEnd Shield

    Tubesheet

    End Fitting

    Feeder Pipe

    ChannelClosure

    Liner Tube

    PositioningAssembly

    Heavy Water Moderator

    Fuel Bundles

    Shield Plug

    Fuel ChannelLattice Tube

    Calandria Tube Pressure Tube

    Annulus Gas (CO2)Fuel Bundle

    Heavy Water CoolantAnnulus Spacer

    2005

    2007

    2008

    2009

    2010

    2006

    2011

    2012

    2013

    2014

    2015

    2016

    2017

    2018

    2019

    2020

    2021

    2022

    2023

    Pickering 2,3Restart

    IMO Median Demand Growth ~0.9% p.a.

    MW Dispatchable (after avg. Capacity Factors applied)36,000

    34,000

    32,000

    30,000

    28,000

    26,000

    24,000

    22,000

    20,000

    18,000

    16,000

    14,000

    12,000

    10,000

    Res

    ou

    rces

    (M

    W)

    Coal (as shutdown)

    New Hydro(incl. ~1,400 MW from Manitoba)

    Existing Resources (2005)11,000 MW

    7,700 MW7,600 MW5,100 MW

    NuclearHydroCoalGas

    Total Gas ~12,000 MW (~30% of Installed MW)New Gas Builds ~7,000 MW Installed

    Nuclear RefurbishmentBruce & Darlington

    (Pickering A&B run toend of current life)

    New Nuclear (6,100 MW net)Six ACR-1000 units

    Wind/Renewable ~10% of Installed MW

    Reactor Assembly

    AcknowledgementsThis work is part of the NSERC-UNENE Industrial Research Chair (IRC) program at the University of Waterloo. The Chair is one of the sixuniversity professorships established by UNENE in Ontario. The program is funded by UNENE in partnership with NSERC. Industrial sponsorship is provided by Ontario Power Generation, Bruce Power, and Atomic Energy of Canada Limited.

    Regulation

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    6

    7

    Steam Outlet Nozzle

    Shroud Cone

    Tube Bundle

    Tube Bundle Hot Leg

    Tubesheet

    D2O InletD2O Outlet

    Feedwater Inlet Nozzle

    Preheater Section

    Tube Bundle Cold Leg

    Grid Tube Support Plate

    Shroud

    U Bend

    Primary Cyclone Separators

    Secondary Cyclone Separators

    Manway

    CANDU Evolution

    800

    700

    600

    500

    400

    300

    200

    100

    900

    1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010Years

    Po

    wer

    (M

    We)

    900 MW ClassReactors

    600 MW ClassReactors

    Research & PrototypeReactors

    ZEEPNRX NPD

    NRU

    RAPP 1,2

    Douglas Point

    KANUPP

    Pickering A Pickering B

    Gentilly 2

    EmbalsePt. Lepreau

    Wolsong 1 Cernavoda 1

    Wolsong 2,3,4

    Qinshan 1,2

    Bruce A Bruce B

    Darlington

    CANDU 9

    Demand for Electricity UNENE

    NuclearNucléaire

    Gross Capacity (per unit)Net Capacity (per unit)

    Construction StartStart-up

    Fuel:Elements in bundle/bundles per channelTotal number of fuel bundles in core

    Fuel Channels:NumberCalandria tube materialCalandria tube ID/wall thickness (mm)Pressure tube materialPressure tube ID/wall thickness (mm)

    Heat Transport SystemNumber of loopsReactor inlet/outlet temperature (°C)Number of heat transport pumpsNumber of steam generatorsNumber of SG tubes/material

    791 MW740 MW

    Operator

    Reactor

    Unit

    Bruce A Bruce B

    1-4

    Dec 1970Jul 1976

    37/136240

    480a. Zircaloy-2129/1.37cw. Zr-2.5%Nb103.4/4.06

    4250-265/30448*4200/Inconel 600

    4250-265/30448*4200/Inconel 600

    * Bruce A and B steam generators have separate preheaters

    807 MW750 MW

    5-8

    Jan 1978May 1984

    37/136240

    480a. Zircaloy-2129/1.37cw. Zr-2.5%Nb103.4/4.11

    Pickering A

    2249/29312 plus 4 spare122600/Monel

    542 MW508 MW

    1-4

    Jun 1966Feb 1971

    28/124680

    390a. Zircaloy-2130.8/1.55cw. Zr-2.5%Nb103.4/4.06

    Pickering B

    540 MW508 MW

    5-8

    Nov 1974Oct 1982

    Darlington

    4267/310444663/Incoloy 800

    935 MW881 MW

    1-4

    Sep 1981Nov 1989

    37/136240

    480a. Zircaloy-2129/1.37cw. Zr-2.5%Nb103.4/4.19

    Point Lepreau

    2266/310443542/Incoloy 800

    680 MW635 MW

    N/A

    May 1975Jul 1982

    37/124560

    380a. Zircaloy-2129/1.37cw. Zr-2.5%Nb103.4/4.19

    Gentilly

    2266/310443542/Inconel 600

    675 MW640 MW

    2

    Apr 1974Sep 1982

    37/124560

    380a. Zircaloy-2129/1.37cw. Zr-2.5%Nb103.4/4.19

    2249/29312 plus 4 spare122573/Monel

    28/124560

    380a. Zircaloy-2129/1.37cw. Zr-2.5%Nb103.4/4.01

    Cross-Section

    Steam Generator

    Uses natural uranium as fuel and deuterium oxide (D2O) or "heavy water" as coolant and moderatorStarted as the Canadian contribution to the War effortDesigned by AECL (Atomic Energy of Canada Limited)All nuclear power reactors in Canada are CANDUsCan be refuelled at full powerMultiple shutdown systems for added safety

    The steam turns tthe turbines and the turbines turn the generator to produce electricity.

    Uranium atoms are split in the core under controlled conditions to produce a chain reaction, providing large amounts of energy in the form of heat.

    Heavy water coolant circulates in the Primary Heat TransportSystem through the reactor core.

    The hot heavy water coolant from the reactor istransferred to the steam generators to produce steam.

    Feeders - inlet and outlet feeders connect each fuel channel individually to connectors (headers) above the core and then to the steam generators

    Calandria - a horizontal, cylindrical, single-walled, 6 m long stepped shell enclosed at each end by tubesheets and spanned by calandria tubes and filled with the heavy water moderatorModerator - consists of heavy water at near atmospheric pressure and at a temperature of 70°C, used for moderating (slowing down) the high energy fission neutronsCalandria Tubes - provide access through the calandria for the fuel channel assemblies and also support the pressure tubes by means of four garter spring spacers per channelFuel Channels - the fuel channels contain the pressure tubes that hold the fuel bundles in the neutron flux of the reactor core

    1. Calandria2. Calandria end shield3. Shut-off and control rods4. Poison injection5. Fuel channel assemblies6. Feeder pipes7. Vault

    CANDU Nuclear PowerPlant Schematic

    The condenser turns the steam back into water which is then returned to the steam generators through the feedwater system.

    The heavy water coolant in the primary heat transport system removes heat from the reactor core by circulating in the pressure tubes and cooling the fuel bundlesThe HTS operating pressure is ~10 MPa and the typical variation of coolant temperature is from 266°C at the channel inlet to 312°C at the channel outletThe HT water has a pH above 10 and a very low oxidation potential in order to protect the HT piping such as pressure tubes, steam generator tubes, feeders, and fuel Steam Generators - transfer the heat from the hot heavy water (D2O) circulating in the primary heat transport system to ordinary "light" water in the steam generator

    The CANDU fuel consists of natural uranium, which contains a fraction of 0.72 % (isotopic abundance) of isotope 235U, with the remaining fraction in the form of 238UThe fuel is fabricated into small UO2 pellets which are then placed inside 0.5 m long fuel rods (small Zircaloy tubes)The tubes are then arranged into fuel bundles consisting of an assembly of 37 elementsSpacer pads on the surface of the tubes prevent direct contact of the fuel rods with the pressure tube walls and allow space for coolant flow through the bundles

    Heat Transport System

    Fuel

    Close-up

    Fuel Bundle Zircaloy Fuel Rod(fuel sheath)

    UO2 Fuel Pellet

    End Plate

    End Cap

    Spacer Pad

    (Sources: Atomic Energy of Canada Limited AECL and Canadian Nuclear Association CNA)

    U N E N EUniversity Network of Excellence

    in Nuclear Engineering

    Point Lepreau Turbine-Generator

    (image courtesy of AECL)

    (image courtesy of AECL)

    CANDU Reactor Assembly(during construction)

    (image courtesy of AECL)

    The Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission (CNSC), an independent agency of the Government of Canada operates and enforces regulations under the Nuclear Safety and Control Act (NSC Act)As the federal regulator, the CNSC

    executes licensing decisions made by the Commission or its designatescontinually monitors licensees to ensure they comply with safety requirements that protect workers, the public, and the environmentuphold Canada’s international commitments on the peaceful use of nuclear energy

    The CNSC functions as a tribunal, taking into account the views, concerns and opinions of interested parties and intervenors when establishing regulatory policy, making licensing decisions and implementing programs

    In addition to the NSC Act, the CNSC also administers other nuclear related regulations and bylaws in the form of policies, standards, guides and notices

    Current energy infrastructure in Ontario will be unable to meet futuresupply requirements

    coal phase-out will place additional strains on supplyimports can only meet fluctuations in demand

    Future demand can be met with a mix of sources, including Nuclear

    (Source: Atomic Energy of Canada Limited)

    (Sources: International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA and Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission CNSC)

    (image courtesy of CANTEACH)

    (image courtesy of CANTEACH)

    (image courtesy of AECL)

    (CANDU 6’s)

    ACRAdvanced CANDU

    Reactor

    Gas Annulus - the gap between the fuel channel pressure tubes and the calandria tubes insulates the hot pressure tubes from the relatively cool moderator

    University Network of Excellence in Nuclear Engineering

    UNENE is an alliance of universities, nuclear power utilities, research and regulatory agencies for the support and development of nuclear education and R&D capability in Canadian universitiesThe main purpose of UNENE is to assure a sustainable supply of qualified nuclear engineers and scientists to meet the current and future needs of the Canadian nuclear industry

    UNENE has created a fully accredited course-based Master's of Engineering (MEng) program in Nuclear Engineering which is offered jointly by the member universities

    UNENE has established Industrial Research Chairs (professorships) in six Ontario universities through a partnership with NSERC and generous support from the Canadian nuclear industry

    Nuclear Research and Development

    Nuclear Engineering Education Program