DocumentCode
907517
Title
Design Strategy for Control of Inherently Safe Reactors
Author
Chisholm, G.H.
Author_Institution
Argonne National Laboratory P.O. Box 2528 Idaho Falls, ID 83401-2528
Volume
32
Issue
1
fYear
1985
Firstpage
992
Lastpage
996
Abstract
Reactor power plant safety is assured through a combination of engineered barriers to radiation release (e.g., reactor containment) in combination with active reactor safety systems to shut the reactor down and remove decay heat. While not specifically identified as safety systems, the control systems responsible for continuous operation of plant subsystems are the first line of defense for mitigating radiation releases and for plant protection. "Inherently safe" reactors take advantage of passive system features for decay-heat removal and reactor shutdown functions normally ascribed to active reactor safety systems. The advent of these reactors may permit restructuring of the present control system design strategy. This restructuring is based on the fact that authority for protection against unlikely accidents is, as much as practical, placed upon the passive features of the system instead of the traditional placement upon the PPS. Consequently, reactor control may be simplified, allowing the reliability of control systems to be improved and more easily defended.
Keywords
Accidents; Cogeneration; Control systems; Heat engines; Inductors; Power engineering and energy; Power generation; Power system protection; Power system reliability; Radiation safety;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9499
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TNS.1985.4336985
Filename
4336985
Link To Document