Information Notice No. 91-11: Inadequate Physical Separation and Electrical Isolation of Non-Safety-Related Circuits From Reactor Protection System Circuits
UNITED STATES NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION OFFICE OF NUCLEAR REACTOR REGULATION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20555 February 20, 1991 Information Notice No. 91-11: INADEQUATE PHYSICAL SEPARATION AND ELECTRICAL ISOLATION OF NON-SAFETY- RELATED CIRCUITS FROM REACTOR PROTECTION SYSTEM CIRCUITS Addressees: All holders of operating licenses or construction permits for Westinghouse (W)-designed nuclear power reactors. Purpose: This information notice is intended to alert addressees of a potential failure mechanism that could adversely affect the ability of the reactor protection system and the engineered safety features actuation system to perform their safety functions. It is expected that recipients will review the information for applicability to their facilities and consider actions, as appropriate, to avoid similar problems. However, suggestions contained in this information notice do not constitute NRC requirements; therefore, no specific action or written response is required. Description of Circumstances: On May 31, 1990, the licensee for the Trojan Nuclear Plant (Portland General Electric Company) informed the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission's Operations Center of potential problems involving the circuits used to initiate reactor trip upon detection of undervoltage or underfrequency (UV/UF) conditions associated with the buses supplying power to the reactor coolant pump motors. The problems were discovered during a walkdown inspection of the solid state protection system (SSPS) as part of the design basis documentation program for the Trojan plant. The SSPS is a safety-related system used to automatically trip the reactor and to automatically initiate engineered safety features equip- ment. During the SSPS walkdown inspection, the licensee discovered that the circuits used to sense UV/UF conditions were installed as non-safety-related components and were not properly physically separated or electrically isolated from the safety-related SSPS circuits. There are four reactor coolant pumps in the Trojan design, with two pumps powered from each of two 12 kv buses. Each of the buses is monitored by two channels of UV detection circuitry and two channels of UF detection circuitry. The four channels of UV/UF circuits are arranged in a 1-out-of-2 taken twice logic for reactor trip. Each channel of UV/UF detection circuitry actuates an associated SSPS input relay upon detecting a degraded UV/UF condition. 9102130306 . IN 91-11 February 20, 1991 Page 2 of 3 The input relays in turn provide inputs to the logic. Power to the SSPS input relays is provided by four 120 vac safety-related power supplies (buses Y11, Y22, Y13 and Y24). The field contacts that actuate the SSPS input relays are non-safety-related, are located inside the 12 kv switchgear cabinets that house the 12 kv buses, are normally closed and carrying current supplied from the 120 vac safety buses, and are directly wired into the SSPS cabinets. The 12 kv switchgear cabinets are not safety-related and are not designed to withstand seismic events. Several concerns have been identified with this configuration at Trojan. First, the design uses non-safety-related components to perform safety- related reactor trip functions. Credit is taken for the reactor coolant pump bus UV/UF trip function in the Trojan Final Safety Analysis Report (FSAR) safety analysis to protect the core if forced coolant flow is lost. Second, inadequate physical separation and electrical isolation of non-safety-related circuits from safety-related SSPS circuits introduces the potential for challenges that can degrade the SSPS. At Trojan, the coordination (i.e., location and size) of overcurrent protection devices within the SSPS was such that the effects of an electrical fault that originates in the non-safety-related circuits inside the 12 kv switchgear cabinets may not have been limited to the UV/UF circuits. Because of inadequate isolation, such a fault could affect the SSPS slave relays. The SSPS slave relays, which are used to automatically actuate engineered safety features equipment, require power to accomplish their safety functions. The slave relays share a common supply fuse (from Y11 for SSPS train A, and from Y24 for SSPS train B) with the associated reactor coolant pump bus UV/UF SSPS input relays. Therefore, a fault in one of the 12 kv switchgear cabinets that causes the fuse to open to clear the fault in the UV/UF circuits could also result in the loss of power to that train of slave relays. Because the two non-safety-related 12 kv switchgear cabinets are adjacent to each other, there are postulated faults (such as could be caused by a seismic event or equipment failure) which could result in common mode failure of both switchgear cabinets. During an accident, such a common mode failure could simultaneously cause a loss of power to all four reactor coolant pumps, disable the UV/UF reactor trip function and, because of the loss of power to both trains of SSPS slave relays, could result in the common mode failure of the automatic initiation capability for redundant trains of ESF equipment. However, the affected equipment could be manually initiated because this capability is independent of the SSPS. After discovering this problem, the licensee isolated the SSPS circuits from non-safety-related circuits. This was accomplished by adding additional overcurrent protection and by improving coordination between protective devices in the SSPS circuits used to initiate reactor trip on reactor coolant pump UV/UF. The licensee is planning to upgrade the UV/UF circuits to safety-related status. . IN 91-11 February 20, 1991 Page 3 of 3 Apparently, the UV/UF circuitry was not properly designed because the reactor vendor and the architect-engineering firm did not communicate adequately with one another during the original design of the plant. The staff held discussions with the reactor vendor and the licensee and believes that other plants may have similar deficiencies in the UV/UF reactor trip circuitry. This information notice requires no specific action or written response. If you have any questions about the information in this notice, please contact one of the technical contacts listed below or the appropriate NRR project manager. Charles E. Rossi, Director Division of Operational Events Assessment Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation Technical Contact: Hulbert Li, NRR (301) 492-0846 Walton Jensen, NRR (301) 492-1157 Attachment: List of Recently Issued NRC Information Notices .
Page Last Reviewed/Updated Tuesday, March 09, 2021
Page Last Reviewed/Updated Tuesday, March 09, 2021