Information Notice No. 84-55: Seal Table Leaks at PWRs
SSINS: 6835 IN 84-55 UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION OFFICE OF INSPECTION AND ENFORCEMENT WASHINGTON, DC 20555 July 6, 1984 Information Notice No. 84-55: SEAL TABLE LEAKS AT PWRs Addressees: All power reactor facilities holding an operating license (OL) or construction permit (CP). Purpose: This information notice is provided as notification of a potentially generic problem involving reactor coolant leaks from incore probe seal tables. The leaks have occurred during maintenance on these systems while the reactor coolant system was at an elevated pressure and temperature. The events described have resulted in personnel hazards and also degraded plant safety. It is expected that recipients will review the information for applicability to their facilities and consider actions, if appropriate, to preclude a similar problem occurring at their facilities. However, suggestions contained in this information notice do not constitute requirements and, therefore, no specific action or written response is required. Description of Circumstances: On January 20, 1984 (reported by LER No. 50-295/1984-005), a reactor coolant leak was observed in the seal table room at Zion Generating Station Unit 1. The unit was in hot shutdown with a plant heatup in progress. The reactor coolant system temperature was 445F and pressure was 2,235 psi. Inspection of the seal table by plant personnel revealed that a leak was located at a point where the high-pressure seal mates to the conduit for incore thimble E-11. An attempt to repair the leak was made when the system pressure was reduced to 1,000 psi. These efforts reduced but did not stop the leak. The system pres sure and temperature were reduced to 400 psi and 370 F and another attempt to repair the leak was made. The repairmen noticed a slight bowing between the high-pressure seal and the thimble isolation valve. It was believed that this bowing caused the Swagelok fitting to be improperly seated, thus causing the leak. To correct the problem, two bolts holding the isolation valve to the valve bracket were removed to allow straightening of the thimble tube. However, the two bolts and bracket were the primary support devices holding the fitting in place. When they were removed, the fitting broke loose causing an unisolatable reactor coolant leak of approximately 18 gpm to the containment. The area was immediately evacuated. Later, upon examination of the fittings, it was found that the ferrules on all but seven of the thimbles had moved 1/32" to 3/8" up from their original position toward the edge of the conduits. 8407050274 . IN 84-55 July 6, 1984 Page 2 of 3 Review of the procedure for assembly of the high-pressure and low-pressure seals within the Swagelok fittings revealed that the low-pressure fittings could pull up the ferrules causing improper fitting of the high-pressure seals. This is believed to have caused the initial leak. Overtorquing of the fittings during the initial attempt to correct the leak probably overstressed the ferrule and allowed it to break loose when the restraint was removed. Another event occurred at the Sequoyah Nuclear Plant Unit 1 (reported in LER SQRD-50-327/84030). On April 19, 1984 workmen were in the seal table room brush cleaning the incore probe thimble guide tubes. The reactor was critical at 30% power and normal operating temperature and pressure. The thimble guide cleaning procedure had made it necessary to disconnect the thimble tubes leading from the seal table to the 10 path selection device such that the high-pressure Swagelok fitting at the Seal Table was the only device restraining the thimble. Because it was not known if the cleaning brush was being fully inserted during the cleaning process, an unblocked tube was used to obtain information on brush travel. The cleaning assembly was installed and inserted 15 ft. into this tube before a shift change occurred. Following the shift change personnel again began inserting the brush. On the 78th turn (10 inch insertion per turn) the tool handler noted that an increased pressure was needed to turn the crank. On the 79th turn (approximately 80.8 ft. into the tube) the water was noticed on the seal table. Water was noticed on the seal table around the Swagelok fitting holding the guide tube that was being cleaned. This prompted an immediate evacuation of the seal table room. Subsequently, the fitting broke loose ejecting the entire thimble tube and cleaning equipment from the core. An unisolatable reactor coolant leak ensued; the leak rate during this time was approximately 30 gpm. The leak continued for approximately 11 hours until the reactor was cooled down with the pressure reduced to nitrogen blanket pressure and the reactor water level was reduced to a level below the seal table. A total of approximately 16,000 gallons of reactor coolant leaked into the containment. Radiation surveys conducted the following day indicated 2-3 rem at the entrance to the seal table room, 200-300 rem at the end of the tube near the seal table and greater than 1,000 rem in the center of the ejected tube. The tip of the thimble tube was reading approximately 4,000 rem. A very difficult cleanup operation followed as well as an elaborate failure evaluation and analysis which included mock-up tests, with identical fittings, tubing, pressures and forces applied to the thimble tubing. The tests simulated as near as practical the events at the time of the incident. Based on the results of these tests, TVA concluded that the separation of the failed assembly appears to be the result of extraordinary and unanticipated loads on the assembly, caused by the cleaning fixture that was being used when the separation occurred. The assembly mock-up testing demonstrated that strains of considerable magnitude resulted from applied forces on the manually operated fixture crank handle. As a result of the tests, TVA recommends that the use of this tube cleaning fixture in its present form be discontinued. If cleaning is required, . IN 84-55 July 6, 1984 Page 3 of 3 modifications to this fixture or other techniques should be employed that do not transmit bending forces through the fittings. Discussion: Even though the above incidents appear to be caused by different circumstances, both events point out the need for adequate controls and precautions to ensure personnel and plant safety while performing maintenance on high-pressure systems, especially activities involving the seal table. Both of these events occurred with the reactor at elevated pressures and temperatures, and in the case of Sequoyah the reactor was at 30% reactor power. In both cases maintenance was conducted on a high-pressure system with what was equivalent to single valve protection. For both personnel and plant safety considerations, maintenance is not normally conducted on high-pressure systems while at high-pressure and temperature and with only single valve protection. To preclude the type of events just described from occurring, every effort should be made to schedule seal table maintenance during cold shutdown conditions. Also, the need for maintenance of any system under hot, pressurized conditions should be thoroughly evaluated before allowing personnel to perform the work. Licensees are urged to review their maintenance procedures to ensure that maintenance under these conditions is minimized. No one was injured during these events and the operators brought the plants to cold shutdown without undue problems. However, both of these events have caused problems associated with the radiological cleanup efforts. In the case of Sequoyah, a highly radioactive piece of equipment was ejected from the core. This required that extraordinary measures be taken during the decontamination of the room and the removal of the thimble. In both events, decontamination of the room was required. Increased personnel exposure and down time of the plant due to the cleanup and repair efforts provide additional incentives for precautions against maintenance under similar conditions. No written response to this notice is required; however, licensees should review the information contained in this notice for applicability to their facilities, especially if plants have performed maintenance on the incore probe guide tubes under similar plant conditions. If you have any questions regarding this matter, please contact the Regional Administrator of the appropriate NRC regional office or the Technical Contact listed in this notice. Edward L. Jordan Director Division of Emergency Preparedness and Engineering Response Office of Inspection and Enforcement Technical Contact: D. R. Powell, IE (301) 492-7155 Attachment: List of Recently Issued IE Information Notices
Page Last Reviewed/Updated Tuesday, March 09, 2021
Page Last Reviewed/Updated Tuesday, March 09, 2021