mheslep said:
My question is, why not more frequently?
Since the 1960s, the industry has worked to identify and mitigate failures. In the 60s and 70s, corrosion, fuel rod collapse and primary hydriding (hydriding from sources within the fuel rod) were main failure modes. Improvements in alloys and manufacturing methods reduced and eliminated these modes of failure. Debris fretting and occasional grid-to-rod fretting became persistent failure modes in the 1980s and 1990s, respectively.
Some early experience with commercial nuclear fuel:
http://www.iaea.org/inis/collection/NCLCollectionStore/_Public/07/272/7272606.pdf
Debris fretting was resolved by fuel design features such as debris filter bottom nozzles (on PWR fuel) and tie-plates (on BWR fuel), and some PWR fuel designs employed a lower grid to capture the debris and hold it. The lower end plugs were lengthened such that the fuel cladding was above the debris-trap. Utilities developed programs to reduce the generation of debris. The debris is metal wires, turnings or shavings from maintenance operations.
Grid-to-rod fretting (GTRF) was mitigated through improved PWR grid spacer designs. GTRF has not been a problem in BWRs where the flow is about half that of PWR fuel.
There have been a few events of failures due crud intrusions leading to severe corrosion failures. These are rare.
Fuel rod failure rates used to be in the range of 1 E-4, but these days they are down in the 1 E-6 range. Some plants have never had a fuel failure, whereas most plants have had some failures in the past but not now or in a long time, while some plants have had persistent failures or periodic failure events.
mheslep said:
it seems like every atom in the cladding wall must suffer dislocation dozens of times over the couple years of fuel life in core, and the internal pressure from fission product gasses IIRC builds to many tons over the entire rod.
The peak regions of cladding may experience about 19-22 displacements per atom (dpa) over 4.5 to 6 years. The atoms are displaced, but most return to proper lattice positions. Irradiation leads to increase strength and reduced ductility, but does not lead to failure. Failure may occur if corrosion reaches certain levels in conjunction with hydriding, which is why the burnup and residence times are limited. Rod internal pressure is also limited based on the fuel design, service limits and core design practices.
mheslep said:
Similarly, the structural supports directly in contact with the fuel assembly have no coolant-moderator separation to thermalize fast neutrons, so that those structural supports would also appear to be subject to rapid disintegration.
In PWRs, the guide tubes and in-core spacer grids are made of the same or similar alloy as the cladding tubes. The top most and bottom most grids are often Inconel (usually 718). In BWRs, spacer grids are Inconel (X750 or 718) and Zircaloy-2 with Inconel springs. They experience about the same level of dpa as the cladding, but this does not lead to failure, and as a matter of fact, since the spacer-grids reduce moderation, the local fission rate is suppressed and the neutron flux is slightly less by a few percent as compared to the fuel region between the spacer grids.
It is a bit misleading to characterize atomic displacements as damage, although strictly speaking the displacements do disrupt or damage the order in the lattice. However, the damage does not cause failure or loss of function. Rather, the atomic displacement contributes to irradiation creep, and growth in the case of Zr-alloys, or voids and some swelling in the case of austenitic stainless steels.