georgeh said:
What safety systems are there to prevent a LOCA??
(Loss Of coolant Accident)
I've googled but nothing has surfaced that relates to LOCA.
George,
One of the design philosophies for nuclear power plants is that one has to have
systems to mitigate events - even when one can't identify a mechanism for it.
The "design basis accident" for a LOCA is that a main coolant pipes breaks clean
through - and the ends of the pipe are displaced a few feet so as to allow coolant to
escape from both broken pipe ends.
I don't know of anyone that could give you a scenario of HOW that would happen -
let alone how one would prevent it from happening. There's no mechanism or
physics in the plant that would tend to drive one toward breaking a pipe like that.
So there's no causality mechanism that one tries to prevent.
However, the philosphy of designing a nuclear power plant is that, even in the absence
of a mechanism to cause the accident - the plant has to be designed to mitigate the
accident.
The philosophy is to mitigate accidents - even when you can't envision how they
would happen. If you can imagine some way for the accident to happen - then you
design the system so that it won't.
Now the one major accident the USA has had - Three Mile Island Unit 2 - was
a small-scale LOCA. Instead of the coolant pipe splitting - a valve stuck open.
this small scale LOCA could easily have been handled by the emergency cooling
systems designed to mitigate a large break accident.
The one thing the plant's designers hadn't counted on was that the operators would
TURN OFF the emergency cooling systems before they had investigated and found
out what problem these automatically triggered systems were responding to.
Dr. Gregory Greenman
Physicist