Abstract

When nuclear power plants with heavy coolants are brought to operating mode as well as during their operation, it is necessary to control and maintain the oxygen content in the coolant within the specified limits. As a rule, the oxygen content in metal melts is controlled by sensors based on solid oxygen-ionic electrolytes. The article presents an analysis of the methodological aspects of dissolved oxygen control in non-isothermal circulating loops with metal coolants, using such sensors. It is shown that in the presence of dissolved loop wall materials and suspensions of their various oxides in the coolant, control over the values of the oxygen activity and concentration calculated for a pure coolant is in general unjustified. The authors present the experimental results of the distribution of oxidation potentials along the loop depending on the coolant temperature, obtained during long-term tests of cladding samples in a lead melt in two circulation facilities – SM2-M and TsU1-M – which differ in principal methods for maintaining specified oxygen conditions. In the low temperature region, the experimental values of the oxidation potential in both facilities are lower than those calculated for pure lead, which leads to a difference by two or more times of the calculated oxygen concentrations for the regions of the loop with Тmin and Тmax, i.e., the so-called oxygen ‘non-isoconcentration’ is observed along the loop. In deoxidation mode during hydrogen ejection into the coolant, the oxidation potential in the loop changes in a complex way, and it makes no sense to talk about the oxygen concentration. It is concluded that in long-life facilities, the coolant parameters for oxygen must be controlled not by the calculated oxygen activity or concentration but by the oxidation potential in the maximum temperature region. To obtain the correct values of the oxidation potential, measurements should be carried out in temperature-stable modes of throughout the facility.

Highlights

  • When nuclear power plants with heavy coolants are brought to operating mode as well as during their operation, it is necessary to control and maintain the oxygen content in the coolant within the specified limits

  • In nuclear power plants with heavy coolants, it is necessary to continuously maintain optimal conditions for the formation of oxide protective films on all surfaces exposed to the melt

  • The dissolved oxygen concentration in the melt is controlled by the EMF method using electrochemical cells based on solid electrolytes (Talanchuk et al 1992)

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Summary

Research Article

Academic editor: Boris Balakin ♦ Received 21 May 2019 ♦ Accepted 20 July 2020 ♦ Published 11 September 2020.

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