Abstract

The precise evaluation of the potential damage caused by large commercial aircraft crash into civil structures, especially nuclear power plants (NPPs), has become essential design consideration. In this study, impact of Boeing 767 against rigid wall and outer containment building (reinforced concrete) of an NPP are simulated in ANSYS/LS-DYNA by using both force time history and missile target interaction methods with impact velocities ranging from 100 m/s to 150 m/s. The results show that impact loads, displacements, stresses for concrete and steel reinforcement, and damaged elements are higher in case of force time history method than missile target interaction method, making the former relatively conservative. It is observed that no perforation or scabbing takes place in case of 100 m/s impact speed, thus preventing any potential leakage. With full mass of Boeing 767 and impact velocity slightly above 100 m/s, the outer containment building can prevent local failure modes. At impact velocity higher than 120 m/s, scabbing and perforations are dominant. This concludes that in design and assessment of NPP structures against aircraft loadings, sufficient thickness or consideration of steel plates are essential to account for local failure modes and overall structural integrity. Furthermore, validation and application of detail 3D finite element and material models to full-scale impact analysis have been carried out to expand the existing database. In rigid wall impact analysis, the impact forces and impulses from FE analysis and Riera's method correspond well, which satisfies the recommendations of relevant standards and further ensure the accuracy of results in full-scale impact analysis. The methodology presented in this paper is extremely effective in simulating structural evaluation of full-scale aircraft impact on important facilities such as NPPs.

Highlights

  • Containment structures for nuclear power plants (NPPs) are designed and constructed to prevent unacceptable releases of radioactivity during an accident

  • The results show that impact loads, displacements, stresses for concrete and steel reinforcement, and damaged elements are higher in case of force time history method than missile target interaction method, making the former relatively conservative

  • At impact velocity higher than 120 m/s, scabbing and perforations are dominant. This concludes that in design and assessment of NPP structures against aircraft loadings, sufficient thickness or consideration of steel plates are essential to account for local failure modes and overall structural integrity

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Summary

Introduction

Containment structures for nuclear power plants (NPPs) are designed and constructed to prevent unacceptable releases of radioactivity during an accident. Full-scale impact analysis of aircraft is performed against the outer containment building (reinforced concrete) in LS-DYNA with both force time history and missile target interaction methods. The study highlights the comparison of two impact analysis methods, the behavior of aircraft and outer reinforced concrete containment building and availability of important aircraft data such as initial impact velocity and mass distribution in determining local failure modes and overall structural response. Such failure modes are outlined in NEI 07–13 [4]. In aircraft crash simulation, effect of damping is neglected because it does not affect the response against impulse loadings [21]

Methods of impact analysis
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