Lecture 8
Safety Practices in Chemical and
            Nuclear Industries
              Nuclear Safety
                                 Dr. Raghuram Chetty
                   Department of Chemical Engineering
                  Indian Institute of Technology Madras
                                      Chennai- 600 036.
    Why concerned about nuclear safety?
   The fission products and their radiation effects are too
    dangerous and it can be considered as poisons,
    carcinogens, mutagens, teratogens.
   Nobody wants any more Chernobyl accident                  or
    Hiroshima/Nagasaki nuclear weapons explosions.
   The fission products have half lives from a fraction of
    second to millions of years. So, engineers are also worried
    about storage of these radioactive wastages until they
    reach at a safe level of decay.
   So, nuclear industries strongly believe in “Safety first and
    foremost” slogan.
Operation vs. Nuclear Accidents
Major Nuclear Accidents
The three significant accidents in the 50-year history of
nuclear power generation are:
   Three Mile Island (USA 1979) where the reactor was
    severely damaged but radiation was contained and there
    were no adverse health or environmental consequences.
   Chernobyl (Ukraine 1986) where the destruction of the
    reactor by steam explosion and fire killed 31 people and
    had significant health and environmental consequences.
Major Nuclear Accidents
   Fukushima (Japan 2011) where three old reactors
    (together with a fourth) were written off and the effects of
    loss of cooling due to a huge tsunami were inadequately
    contained.
These are the only major accidents to have occurred in over
14,500 cumulative reactor-years of commercial nuclear
power operation in 32 countries.
Safety
   It should be noted that a commercial nuclear power
    reactor simply cannot under any circumstances explode
    like a nuclear bomb - the fuel is not enriched beyond
    ~5%.
   The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) was set
    up by the United Nations in 1957. One of its functions
    was to act as an auditor of world nuclear safety. It
    prescribes safety procedures and the reporting of even
    minor incidents. Every country which operates nuclear
    power plants (NPP) has a nuclear safety inspectorate
    and all of these work closely with the IAEA.
Safety
   While nuclear power plants are designed to be safe in
    their operation and safe in the event of any malfunction
    or accident, no industrial activity can be represented as
    entirely risk-free. Incidents and accidents may happen,
    and as in other industries, will lead to progressive
    improvement in safety.
 Basic Safety
Protect public health and safety
 Reduce the risk from releases of radioactivity to acceptable
  levels.
Protect plant worker health and safety
 Provide a safe working environment and reduce risk of injury.
Protect the environment
 Provide a design that complies with all federal, state, and local
  requirements.
 Build, operate, and decommission the plant in a way that
  preserves environmental quality.
Protect the plant investment
 Provide plant designs, equipment, and operating/maintenance
  practices to preserve investor equity and return reward.
 Associated Risks
The risks associated with nuclear power plants derive from
the following:
1)   The production of energy occurs by fission of fissile
     material. Radioactive fission products represent an
     inventory of hazardous material which remains in the
     core. The activity of the amount left in the core at
     equilibrium is of the order of thousands of millions of
     curies (1019-1020 Bq); some of the fission products are
     hazardous at a level of microcuries or less (104-105 Bq).
 Associated Risks
2. During normal operation, energy is produced continuously
in the core of the reactor. A mismatch between power
production and cooling of the core liberates energy which
can disrupt the barriers retaining the hazardous fission
products.
3. After shutdown, fission products continue to undergo
radioactive decay and to release energy at a gradually
declining rate. This energy, too, if not appropriately
transferred to a heat sink, can damage the barriers.
Objective of Nuclear Safety
 (1) Fundamental Nuclear Safety:
    To protect individuals, the members of the general
     public and natural environment from harm resulting
     from     the     commissioning,      operation     or
     decommissioning of a nuclear facility by establishing
     and maintaining in all nuclear facilities effective
     defenses against radiological hazards.
Objective of Nuclear Safety (cont’d)
 (2) Radiation Protection:
    To ensure that during all operations states of a
     nuclear facility the radiation exposure of persons
     working within the facility as well as living in the
     environs of the facility due to any planed or
     unplanned release of radioactive material, in either
     waterborne or airborne effluents, are controlled
     below prescribed limits and are as low as
     reasonably achievable (ALARA).
Objective of Nuclear Safety (cont’d)
 (3) Technical Safety:
    To take all reasonably practicable measures and to
     mitigate their consequences should they occur; to
     ensure with a high level of confidence that, for all
     possible accidents taken into account in the design
     of the installation including those of very low
     probability.
Plant core-damage frequency
   One mandated safety indicator is the calculated probable
    frequency of degraded core or core melt accidents.
   The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission specifies that reactor
    designs must meet a 1 in 10,000 year core damage frequency,
    but modern designs exceed this.
   US utility requirements are 1 in 100,000 years, the best
    currently operating plants are about 1 in 1 million and those
    likely to be built in the next decade are almost 1 in 10 million.
   While the calculated core damage frequency has been one of
    the main metrics to assess reactor safety, European safety
    authorities prefer a deterministic approach, focusing on actual
    provision of back-up hardware, though they also undertake
    probabilistic safety analysis for core damage frequency.
Philosophy & analytical approach to nuclear
safety:
  The comprehensive safety analysis and evolution
  involve, examination of:
    a)   All planned normal operational modes of the
         facility.
    b)   Expected plant performance during normal
         operation and in response to abnormal operation
         occurrences.
    c)   Design basis failure.
    d)   Failure sequences that may lead              to
         consequences beyond prescribed limits.
Defense in Depth
   Defense in Depth is a safety philosophy that multiple
    methods of high quality assurance are required in nuclear
    plant design, construction, operation and maintenance.
   The central tenet of Defense in Depth is to protect the health
    and safety of the public and plant workers.
   Other objectives include protecting the environment and
    ensuring the operational readiness of the facility.
   Successful Defense in Depth requires creating, maintaining,
    and updating multiple independent and redundant layers of
    protection to compensate for potential human and mechanical
    failures so that no single layer, no matter how robust, is
    exclusively relied upon.
Defense in Depth
Key aspects of the approach are:
      High-quality design & construction,
      Equipment which prevents operational disturbances or human
       failures and errors developing into problems,
      Comprehensive monitoring and regular testing to detect
       equipment or operator failures,
      Redundant and diverse systems to control damage to the fuel
       and prevent significant radioactive releases,
      Provision to confine the effects of severe fuel damage (or any
       other problem) to the plant itself.
These above can be summed up as: Prevention, Monitoring,
and Action (to mitigate consequences of failures).
Defense in Depth
Defense in Depth
   Nuclear safety must be ensured with five protective barriers
    (levels) as a safe philosophy:
a) The first protective barrier is to prevent occurrence of an
    anomaly or failure by providing a nuclear power plant with
    high quality and reliability and verified facilities.
b) The second protective barrier is to provide facilities to early
    detect an occurring anomaly or failure and shutdown the
    reactor in order to prevent it from escalating to an accident.
c) The third protective barrier is to provide facilities such as
    emergency core cooling systems etc. to mitigate the
    consequence of an accident in case of a trouble escalation.
Defense in Depth (cont’d)
d) The fourth protective barrier is establishment of the
   severe accident management such as installation of
   a containment to contain radioactivity, preparation of
   alternative methods with diversities in response to a
   multiple-failure event, preparation of the operation
   procedure, and training of operators.
e) The fifth protective barrier is off-site emergency
   measures for protection of residents in the vicinity
   from radiation exposure when the fourth protective
   barrier is broken.
    Multiple Barriers to Prevent Radioactivity
   Multiple Barriers Facility designers
    include multiple, successive physical
    barriers to prevent the release of
    radioactive material.
   The primary barriers are the fuel (1) and
    cladding (2), which is designed to
    contain radioactive material under the
    extreme conditions inside the reactor
    core.
   The secondary barrier is the reactor
    vessel (3), which contains the coolant
    used to carry away heat for generating
    electricity.
    Multiple Barriers to Prevent Radioactivity
   The final barrier is the primary
    containment building (4,5), which is
    designed to mitigate the release of
    radioactive material in the event that
    both the primary and secondary
    barriers are compromised.
   The primary containment is designed
    to withstand the most severe,
    credible event -- either internal or
    external -- for the location of the
    plant.
 Fuel Pellet and Fuel Assembely
The smallest unit of the reactor is    Fuel assemblies are bundles of fuel
the fuel pellet. These are typically   rods. Fuel is put in and taken out of
uranium-oxide (UO2). They are          the reactor in assemblies. The
often surrounded by a metal tube       assemblies have some structural
(called the cladding) to keep          material to keep the pins close but not
fission products from escaping         touching, so that there’s room for
into the coolant.                      coolant
     Barriers to Prevent Radioactivity
As the nuclear plants are more concerned about radioactivity
protection, the following five barriers are built into the station design to
prevent radioactivity as a part of defense-in-depth concept as
prevention of the radio activities.
1.   Ceramic Fuel - The ceramic uranium dioxide fuel pellets entrap
     most of the fission products. These fission products would be
     released if the fuel were to melt. Fortunately, the fuel has a high
     melting point, but continuous cooling is nevertheless required,
     whether the reactor is at power or not, to prevent fuel failures.
     Another safety feature of the ceramic fuel is that it is relatively
     chemically inert with the heavy water coolant. Therefore, dispersion
     of fission products via corrosion and erosion when a sheath defect
     permits contact between the fuel pellets and the coolant is a
     relatively slow process.
 Barriers to Prevent Radioactivity
2. Fuel Rod & Cladding - The fuel pellets are enclosed in a
high integrity, welded zircaloy sheath. This sheath contains
the gaseous and volatile fission products which escape from
the pellets. It also prevents corrosion and erosion of the
pellets by the coolant, and hence dispersion of fission
products from the pellets which would result from these
processes. The sheath is designed to withstand the stresses
resulting from pellet thermal expansion, gaseous fission
product build-up, external hydraulic pressure, and forces
imposed by fire.
     Barriers to Prevent Radioactivity (cont’d)
3.    Heat Transport System Boundary - The high integrity pressure
      tubes, piping, and reactor vessel contain most fission products
      escaping via sheath defects.
4.    Containment Boundary -This is designed to withstand the
      pressure surge of a worst case ‘loss of coolant accident’ (LOCA),
      with a small ‘puff release’ during the overpressure transient.
      Post LOCA containment venting via a filtered, monitored
      pathway minimizes the environmental radioactive release.
5.    Exclusion/Sterlized Zone - No permanent residence is allowed
      within a 5 km radius from any reactor. This ensures significant
      dilution of an airborne radioactive release before it reaches any
      public habitation, thus reducing further effect.
Major Failures
Complexity: Nuclear power plants are some of the most
sophisticated and complex energy systems ever designed.
Any complex system, no matter how well it is designed and
engineered, cannot be deemed failure-proof.
In nuclear power plant, there are two major failures to be
considered in a broad sense.
      Design Basis Accidents
      Single Failure Criterion
Design Basis Accident/Failures
   Nuclear power plants are designed to maintain their integrity
    and performance of safety functions for a bounding set of
    normal operational events as well as abnormal events that are
    expected to occur or might occur during the lifetime of the plant.
   Design basis accidents (DBA) are postulated accidents to which
    a nuclear plant, its systems, structures and components must
    be designed and built to withstand loads during accident
    conditions without releasing the harmful amounts of radioactive
    materials to the outside environment. Any DBA is controlled by
    the reactor safety systems with insignificant off-site
    consequences, but may require long shutdown for correction or
    repair.
Design Basis Accident/Failures
   They are very unlikely events. DBA are mainly the
    following:
    a) Reactivity control
    b) Positive void coefficient
    c) Loss of coolant accident
    d) Core melting
Design Basis Accidents
(a) Reactivity Control: The power output of the reactor is adjusted by
controlling how many neutrons are able to create more fissions. The
effective neutron multiplication factor, keff, is the average number of
neutrons from one fission that cause another fission.
        Reactivity ρ = (keff -1 )/ keff
        Reactor power P = exp(ρ/l)
          where l=average life time of neutrons in the reactor.
   As one can easily see that if reactivity increases, power will increase
    at an exponential rate. And reactor will become over critical. To
    maintain just criticality, keff should be one. So, control rods should be
    designed accurately.
(b) Positive void coefficient: As the temperature of the coolant rises,
reactivity must come down as the part of negative feedback control
system. But in some reactors, the reverse is there due to faulty design.
 Design Basis Accidents (Cont’d)
(c) Loss of coolant accident (LOCA):
A loss-of-coolant accident (LOCA) is a mode of failure for a
nuclear reactor. If not managed properly and effectively, the
results of a LOCA could result in reactor core damage. If sufficient
amount of the coolant is not there in the core, temperature of the
core will rise dramatically which in turn result in core melting.
(d) Core melting: It is considered as the worst scenario as
radioactive fission products directly expose to the environment if
sufficient provisions are not there.
Once the fuel elements of a reactor begin to melt, the primary
containment has been breached, and the nuclear fuel (such as
uranium, plutonium, or thorium) and fission products (such as
cesium-137, krypton-88, or iodine-131) within the fuel elements
can leach out into the coolant.
Loss Of Coolant Accident (LOCA)
   The heat generated by fission reaction is removed by a
    coolant system to produce steam and is converted into
    useful electrical power.
   If this coolant flow is reduced or lost, the nuclear reactor's
    emergency shutdown system is designed to stop the
    fission chain reaction automatically.
   Moreover, even after reactor shut down, due to radioactive
    decay of the fission products, the nuclear fuel will continue
    to generate a significant amount of heat. This decay heat
    needs to be taken out through secondary cooling system
    to maintain integrity of the fuel.
Loss Of Coolant Accident (LOCA)
   In every nuclear reactor, a separate Emergency Core
    Cooling System (ECCS) exists specifically to deal with the
    situation like LOCA.
   If all of the independent cooling systems of the ECCS fail
    to operate as designed due to some reason such as failure
    of the pumps, this heat can increase the fuel temperature
    to the point of damaging the fuel and the reactor.
Initiating Events
   Design Basis Events (DBE), which form the basis of design of
    Nuclear Power Plant (NPP), include normal operations,
    operational transients and Postulated Initiating Events (PIE).
   Various initiating events are as follows.
       Decrease in heat removal
       Increase in system pressure
       Decrease in coolant flow
       Reactivity anomalies
       Multiple failure events
       Station blackout (SBO)
Beyond Design Basis Events
   DBE can be classified on the basis of their consequence
    and expected frequency of occurrence.
   Consequences of a rare event can be permitted to be
    severe while those of a frequent event can be accepted
    only at very low severity.
   Acceptance criteria for consequences of a DBE, thus,
    also depend on frequency of their occurrence.
   Events of very low probability of occurrence which are
    considered only for offsite emergency plan or site
    selection issues, are called as Beyond Design Basis
    Events (BDBE).
Design Basis Safety
 Nuclear reactor safety includes control of reactor,
 removal of heat generated in the core and containing
 the radioactivity. The design basic safety principles
 are:
 1.   Fail safe philosophy
 2.   Redundancy, diversity and independency
 3.   Two out of three logic
 4.   Physical separation
 5.   Reliability and quality assurance.
(1)Fail safe philosophy:
   Fail safe philosophy: Components or systems are
    designed to bring them to safe conditions automatically,
    if they fail.
   Fail-safe reactors do not rely on human judgment to shut
    them down but on the laws of nature.
(2) Redundancy, diversity and independency
   Redundancy: It is a concept to provide more numbers of
    equipment/subsystems in safety system than that are
    needed so that if one equipment/subsystem fails, the
    other can do the function.
   Thus "Redundancy" is a concept that important-to-safety
    facilities are composed from independent multiple trains
    with sufficient capability, and a failure of one train does
    not cause loss of their safety functions.
   For example, design is such that multiple trains of power
    source required in an emergency are provided, and even
    if one of them failed, other power source would be
    available.
(2) Redundancy, diversity and independency
   Diversity: It is a concept to have two or more systems
    based on different design or functional principle to does
    a particular safety function.
   Thus "Diversity” is a design concept to prevent the
    function loss of multiple facilities simultaneously due to
    one common cause by providing different types of
    facilities.
   For example, two driving sources of cooling-water
    injection pump systems are to be different types such
    that one is electric drive and another is steam-turbine
    drive, so injection of a required amount of cooling water
    is ensured.
(2) Redundancy, diversity and independency
   Independency: Independency means to maintain each
    independency of multiple trains so that facilities formed
    in multiple do not loose their function simultaneously
    due to a single failure.
   For example, power sources, control circuits etc. of
    cooling-water injection pumps in multiple systems to
    cool a reactor core in an emergency are designed such
    that they consist of a power source, detectors and
    control devices independent from each other, and even
    if one of them were lost, the other independent cooling-
    water injection pump could be operable.
(3) Two out of three logic
    Two out of three logic: In order to reduce the
     number of unnecessary firings, a two out of
     three logic is used by each of the shutdown
     systems.
    Each shutdown parameter is related to three
     measuring devices, and each of these devices is
     associated to one of three electrical chains of
     the shutdown system.
    Another advantage of the two out of three logic
     is to permit the verification, by frequent tests, of
     the availability of different parts of the system,
     from transmitters up to the last relays of the
     shutdown system.
Physical separation & Reliability
 4)   Physical separation: Components or systems
      intended to perform the same function can be
      separated physically, so that they are protected
      against simultaneous failures due to extraneous
      events like fire.
 5)   Reliability & quality assurance: This ensures the
      availability of equipment or system to perform the
      function.
    Multiple safety systems
   Serious accidents such as reactor failure, a meltdown of
    the reactor core, and a jet aircraft crashing into the site are
    all being taken into account in the design of new nuclear
    reactors.
   Quadruple redundancy – featuring four parallel, physically
    separated sub-systems, each capable of handling safety
    operations independently – supports all aspects of the
    design. Quadruple redundancy covers components,
    equipment, and electrical and control systems.
    Multiple safety systems
   The containment will be completely pressure-proof,
    ensuring safety in the event of a failure in the reactor's
    main circulation or steam pipes. The containment will be
    automatically isolated should an accident occur.
   In the very unlikely event of a severe reactor accident and
    the failure of associated safety systems, the melted core
    will be led into a “core catcher”, which will carry it to the
    lower part of the reactor building.
 State-of-the-art safety systems
                                                    European Pressurized
                                                    Water Reactor (EPR),
                                                    Olkiluoto 3: Finland’s
                                                      Nuclear Reactor
The safety system consists of four redundant trains, each capable of
handling safety requirements independently. They are located in different
parts of the reactor building to eliminate the possibility of simultaneous
failure.
Single Failure Criterion
   A single failure means an occurrence which results in the
    loss of capability of a component to perform its intended
    safety functions.
   Fluid and electric systems are to be designed against an
    assumed single failure if neither a single failure of any
    active component nor a single failure of a passive
    component, results in a loss of the capability of the
    system to perform its safety functions.
   The intent is to achieve high reliability (probability of
    success) without quantifying it. Human errors are not
    considered to be single failures.
 Severe Accident in Nuclear Plant
Courtesy: Google Images
   Schematic representation of the major physical phenomena that may occur during
                  severe accident, and the safety systems involved.
Hydrogen Control and Mitigation
Main counter measures are:
 Inertization of the atmosphere (pre or post inertization)
 Dilution of burnable gases
   Removal of hydrogen by burning or recombination
   Inertization
      Containment atmosphere is filled with nitrogen
      Dilution of Containment atmosphere by CO2
      Some plants can inert/dilute Containment atmosphere
       by venting
      Venting is a process in which Containment is vented
       deliberately when the pressure of the Containment
       atmosphere exceeds design pressure.
  Passive Autocatalytic Recombiner (PAR)
 • Catalytic recombiners use catalysts to recombine hydrogen and oxygen
 • Passive Autocatalytic Recombiners (PAR) do not need external power or
   operator action
Courtesy: Google Images
Safety facilities
   To prevent any of the above Design Basis Accident
    situation(s), and/or in case of a certain trouble in a nuclear
    power plant, in order to prevent it from developing to a big
    accident, safety facilities to safely shutdown the reactor,
    cool the reactor core, contain radioactive materials and
    the equipment that supplies electricity and cooling water to
    those safety facilities are provided as
(1) facilities to control and shutdown a reactor,
(2) facilities to cool a reactor,
(3) facilities to contain radioactive materials.
Safety facilities in the nuclear plant
                                 Courtesy: Google Images
(1) Facilities to control and shutdown a reactor
   A reactor shall not go out of control (an excessive power
    by an abnormal-rate nuclear fission reaction) during
    operation.
   Moreover, in case of a trouble, it is required to
    immediately stop nuclear fission reaction. Therefore,
    reactor control systems to maintain the nuclear fission
    reaction rate at a constant level, and if necessary,
    facilities to shutdown the reactor by immediately
    inserting control rods are provided.
    SCRAM
   SCRAM is an emergency
    shutdown of a nuclear reactor.
   This emergency shutdown is
    often referred to as a "SCRAM"
    at boiling water reactors
    (BWR), and as a "reactor trip"
    at pressurized water reactors
    (PWR).
   SCRAM is achieved by a large
    insertion of negative reactivity.
    This is achieved by inserting
    neutron-absorbing control rods
    into the core.                      Courtesy: Google Images
(2) Facilities to cool a reactor
   In a reactor core, decay heat (7% of rated power) is
    generated even after shutdown of the reactor in the decay
    process for radioactive materials to become more stable
    nuclei. Therefore, it is necessary to continue cooling of the
    reactor core not only during power operation but also after
    shutdown.
   Especially, if a break of reactor cooling system piping, etc.
    causing loss of cooling water occurred, the reactor core
    would become dry-out and reach a high temperature,
    probably resulting in core damage. In preparation for such
    a case, facilities to immediately inject cooling water into the
    reactor core in an emergency are provided.
(2) Facilities to cool a reactor
   ECCS (Emergency core cooling systems) are provided
    to prevent melting of fuel cladding tubes containing
    radioactive materials due to residual heat even in case of
    an accident and the resulted emergency reactor shutdown.
    The ECCSs immediately inject cooling water into the
    reactor pressure vessel and to cool the fuel by flooding the
    core when the water cooling the fuel has flowed out of the
    core due to the accident. When the cooling water in the
    reactor core decreases, this is detected and ECCSs are
    actuated automatically.
 ECCS
   An emergency core cooling system (ECCS) comprises a
    series of systems that are designed to safely shut down a
    nuclear reactor during accident conditions.
   These systems allow the plant to respond to a variety of
    accident conditions, and additionally introduce redundancy
    so that the plant can be shut down even with one or more
    subsystem failures.
In most plants, ECCS is composed of the following systems:
   Coolant injection system: This system consists of pumps
    that inject coolant in high-pressure and low-pressure
    modes into the reactor vessel .
ECCS
   Core-spray system: This system uses special spray
    nozzles within the reactor pressure vessel to spray water
    directly onto the fuel rods, suppressing the generation of
    steam. Reactor designs can include core-spray in high-
    pressure and low-pressure modes.
   Containment spray system: This system consists of a
    series of pumps and nozzles which spray coolant into the
    primary containment structure. It is designed to condense
    the steam into liquid water within the primary containment
    structure to prevent overpressure, which could lead to
    involuntary depressurization.
  Emergency core cooling system
Courtesy: Google Images
             Emergency core cooling systems for PWR
    (3) Facilities to contain radioactive materials
   A core catcher is a device
    provided to catch the molten
    core material (Corium) of a
    nuclear reactor in case of a
    nuclear meltdown and prevent
    it   from       escaping     the
    containment building.
   A core catcher is made from a
    special concrete ceramic to
    prevent material from dripping
    through; it also uses material
    of cooler construction to cool
    down the core material.
                                       Courtesy: Google Images
Core catcher
               Courtesy: Google Images
  Core catcher
Courtesy: Google Images
                          Construction in China
(3) Facilities to contain radioactive materials
    Nuclear power plants are provided with the barriers
     such as a containment etc. in preparation for an
     accident releasing radioactive materials from their
     reactor cores. These barriers will close immediately
     in an abnormal event, and constitute an airtight
     container. Moreover, in order to avoid the damage
     by internal pressure rise due to decay heat etc., it is
     designed to be cooled appropriately as needed.
  Monitoring
     Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear                    Russian Nuclear Power Plant
    Power Station Control Room                           Control Room
Provide two control rooms from either of which:
     the plant can be shut down
     decay heat can be removed
     barriers to release of radioactivity can be maintained
     the plant state is known                            Courtesy: Google Images
Computer Simulation/Code
     fully integrated real time desktop systems thermal
                 hydraulic simulation package
Courtesy: Google Images
                                                    RELSIM-
                                                    RELAP/
                                                    SCDAPSIM
                                                    desktop
                                                    simulator
Computer Code Development
                            Various
                            organizations
                            collaborate on
                            the development
                            and assessment
                            of codes to
                            describe the
                            complete
                            evolution of a
                            nuclear reactor
                        Courtesy: Google Images
International Nuclear and Radiological Event
Scale (INES)
The International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale
(INES) is a scale of nuclear incident and accidents to report to
the public like earthquake scales.
   Level 1: Anomaly. This level is when minor problems with
    safety components, breach of operating limits at a nuclear
    facility, loss or theft of low activity radioactive sources.
   Level 2: Incident. 10 times higher than Level-1. Exposure
    rate more than 50 mSv/hour with significant contamination
    within the facility.
International Nuclear and Radiological Event
Scale (INES)
   Level 3: Serious Incident. 10 times higher than Level-2.
    Exposure rate is more than 1 Sv/hour in an operating area
    with severe contamination. Low probability of significant
    public exposure.
   Level 4: Accident with local consequences. 10 times higher
    than level-3. Fuel melt or damaged and release of
    significant quantities of radioactive material within an
    installation with high probability of public exposure. Level-4
    is called for if at least one death from radiation and minor
    release of radioactive material so only local controls are
    necessary.
International Nuclear and Radiological Event
Scale (INES)
   Level 5: Accident with Wider Consequences. This level is
    10 times higher than level-4 and is called for when the
    reactor core is severely damaged and large amount of
    radioactive materials are released with a high probability
    of significant radiation exposure to the public. And also
    when several deaths from radiation exposure and planned
    radiation control is needed.
International Nuclear and Radiological Event
Scale (INES)
   Level 6: Serious Accident. 10 times higher than level-5.
    This level is declared when significant amount of
    radioactive material is released in the environment and
    planned controlling procedures need to be taken.
   Level 7: Major Accident. This is 10 times higher than
    level-6 and the highest level of accident. This is declared
    when significant amount of radioactive material is released
    into the environment which can affect public health.
    Implementation of planned and extended radiation safety
    programs are needed at this level.
 INES Scale
                                                           Courtesy: Google Images
The purpose of INES Scale is to facilitate communication and understanding
between the technical community, the media and the public on the safety
significance of events. The aim is to keep the public, as well as nuclear authorities,
accurately informed on the occurrence and potential consequences of reported
events.
Licensing of nuclear power plant
    The regulatory process for nuclear power plant
     evolved into following specific stages of licensing:
        Site evaluation
        Design
        Construction (Construction License)
        Commissioning
        Operation (Operating License)
        Decommissioning
        Release from Regulatory Control
Licensing
Two major players in Licensing
   Regulatory    Body      defines   the    safety   criteria,
    requirements, guidelines and documents to be provided
    by the applicant (operating organization) and establish a
    mechanism to solve safety issues with the applicant.
   Operating Organization: Prepare and submit the
    required documentation and also be prepared to respond
    to the requests of the regulatory body.
   The public will be given an opportunity to provide their
    views during certain steps of the licensing process.
Licensing of nuclear power plant
Site evaluation
   To verify the acceptability of the site, whether the selected
    site is suitable to host a nuclear installation. The following
    parameters are very important:
       Characteristics of the site, including surrounding
        population, seismology, meteorology, geology and
        hydrology, distance from airports, water bodies;
       Design of the nuclear plant;
       Anticipated response of the plant to hypothetical
        accidents;
       Discharges from the plant into the environment (i.e.,
        radiological effluents);
       Emergency plans.
Dose Limits
                                                              Courtesy:
                                                               Google
                                                               Images
Serious accident: accident possible to occur in worst case.
Hypothetical accident: The accident beyond serious accident. There is no
possibility to occur in terms of technical commonsense.
Site Elevation at Kudankulam
  Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant
Courtesy: Google Images
In the basements of turbine and reactor buildings, diesel generators
shuddered to a halt as the floodwaters drowned them. Other generators cut
out when their power distribution panels were drenched leading to station
blackout (SBO).
Design
The following important considerations must be made at the
design stage:
   Design should be developed according to the “defense in
    depth” approach
   Be in accordance with the design basis (conditions,
    events manageable by the installation)
   Be in compliance with relevant standards, codes and
    regulatory requirements
Design
   Consider the replacement of heavy and large components
    during its life (steam generator, reactor pressure vessel
    heads, etc.) by taking into account: buried pipes and
    conduits, openings in structures for equipment access,
    obstructions.
   Consider the access of components important to safety
    for maintenance, inspection and testing, replacement
    occupational exposure, decommissioning consider
    transport of radioactive materials
   Based on site characteristics.
Construction
   Before granting an authorization for the construction,
    followings should be reviewed, assessed and inspected
    by the Regulatory Body (AERB):
       Site evaluation.
       Demonstration of the selected design meets safety
        objectives and criteria.
       Appropriate organizational and financial arrangements
        for mid/long-term issues (decommissioning, radioactive
        waste and spent fuel management).
       Management system of licensee and vendors as
        necessary in place covering all aspects of construction.
    Commissioning & Operation
Commissioning can be divided into main stages:
   Non nuclear testing: Before introducing nuclear/radioactive
    material to ensure, to the extent possible, the installation has been
    constructed and equipment manufactured and installed properly.
   To prove the design performances should be put into service after
    being inspected, tested and approved by the licensee in
    accordance with the requirements set out in the design as agreed
    by the AERB.
   Nuclear testing: after introducing of nuclear or radioactive
    material to confirm the nuclear installation is safe before
    proceeding to routine operation, may require an authorization from
    the RB.
Commissioning & Operation
Operation
   Based on the results of commissioning tests and
    arrangements the following two things to be considered:
   To operate safely (Management           of   installation
    modifications –Significant or not).
   To face an emergency situation (Long-term shutdown).
Decommissioning
   Decommissioning: Preparation and approval of an
    updated decommissioning plan, which may comprise
    several sub-stages. Installation remains licensed
    throughout the decommissioning period.
   Release from Regulatory Control: After completion of
    the decontamination and dismantling and/or removal of
    radioactive material, including waste and contaminated
    components and structures. Before delicensing the
    nuclear installation, a radiological survey should be
    carried out to guarantee regulatory criteria and
    decommissioning objectives have been fulfilled.
Uranium Fuel Cycle
                            Courtesy: Google Images
                                          PHWR Fuel
                                           Bundle
                 Disposal
  Natural
  Uranium
                                        LWR Fuel
                                        Assembly
The Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Waste management and storage
   The nuclear waste management (NWM) plays a key role
    in the nuclear power industry. The NWM strategy involves
    short-term management which deals with immediate
    treatment of the waste and long-term management which
    involves storage, disposal or transformation of the waste
    into a non-toxic form.
Waste management and storage
   The immediate nuclear waste treatment methods are as
    follows
       Vitrification – where high-level waste is mixed with
        sugar and then calcined to evaporate the water from
        the waste and denitrate the fission products to assist
        the stability of the glass produced.
       Ion exchange – used for medium active wastes in the
        nuclear industry to concentrate the radioactivity into a
        small volume. For example, it is possible to use a ferric
        hydroxide flocculation to remove radioactive metals
        from aqueous mixtures.
Long-term nuclear waste management
The long-term nuclear waste management has the
following options:
   Storage: high-level radioactive waste is stored
    temporarily in spent fuel pools and in dry cask storage
    facilities. This allows the shorter-lived isotopes to decay
    before further handling.
   Geological disposal: it is a process of selecting
    appropriate deep final repositories. There are other
    options such as: sea-based options and filling empty
    uranium mines.
Long-term nuclear waste management
   Transmutation: there are possible nuclear reactor
    designs that consume nuclear waste and transmute it to
    other, less-harmful nuclear waste.
   Reuse of waste: there are isotopes in nuclear waste
    that can be reused, such as cesium-137 and strontium-
    90 in the food irradiation and radioisotope thermoelectric
    generators.
Nuclear Safety: 3Cs
     Control
     Cool
     Contain
Absolute safety??
  Zero risk is unattainable: There is no such thing as
          absolute safety, only relative safety.