Abstract

The DISCOMS project, which stands for “DIstributed Sensing for COrium Monitoring and Safety”, considers the potential of distributed sensing technologies, based on remote instrumentations and Optical Fiber Sensing cables embedded into the concrete floor under the reactor vessel, to monitor the status of this third barrier of confinement. This paper focuses on the selection and testing of singlemode (SM) optical fibers with limited RIA (Radiation Induced Attenuation) to be compliant with remote distributed instruments optical budgets, the ionizing radiation doses to sustain, and their reduction provided by the concrete basemat shielding. The tests aimed at exposing these fibers and the corresponding sensitive optical cables, to the irradiation doses expected during the normal operation of the reactor (up to 60 years for the European Pressurized Reactor), followed by a severe accident. Several gamma and mixed (neutron-gamma) irradiations were performed at CEA Saclay facilities: POSÉÏDON irradiator and ISIS reactor, up to a gamma cumulated dose of about 2 MGy and fast neutron fluence (E > 1 MeV) of 6 x 1015 n/cm2. The first gamma test permitted to assess the RIA at various optical wavelengths, and to select three radiation tolerant singlemode fibers (RIA < 5 dB/100 m, at 1550 nm operating wavelength). The second one was performed on voluminous strands of sensitive cables encapsulating the selected optical fibers, up to approximately the same accumulated dose, at two temperatures: 30°C and 80°C. A significant increase of the RIA, without any saturation tendency, appeared for fibers inserted into cables, correlated with the increase of the hydroxyl attenuation peak at 1380 nm. Molecular hydrogen generated by the radiolysis of compounds of the cable is at the origin of this phenomenon. A third gamma irradiation run permitted to measure the radiolytic hydrogen production yield of some compounds of a dedicated temperature cable sample. The efficiency of a carbon coating layer over the silica cladding, acting as a barrier against hydrogen diffusion, was also successfully confirmed. Finally, the efficiency of this carbon coating layer has also been tested under neutron irradiation, then qualified as a protection barrier against hydrogen diffusion in the optical fiber cores.

Highlights

  • In our safety related project, even if optical fibers sensing cables are intended to be embedded into the reactor pit concrete basemat, and even if quite short lengths (100 m) are considered for corium monitoring, it is necessary to assess the RIA (Radiation Induced Attenuation) levels and to select the less sensitive fibers to be compliant with the radiation doses to be sustained and the measurement systems optical budgets, in the frame of 60 years of normal operation of the NPP, followed by a severe accident

  • Even if the RIA observed with fiber into cables remains acceptable for this project, mainly because the embedment in the concrete will drastically decrease the dose received by the fibers, avoiding or reducing the amount of hydrogen diffusing towards the fiber core, it remains of scientific interest

  • The efficiency of the carbon coating layer has been tested under neutron irradiation, showing its good efficiency as a protection barrier against hydrogen diffusion in the core of silica optical fibers

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

I N case of severe accident in a Nuclear Power Plant leading to both reactor vessel failure and corium spreading, the loss of power supply can lead most of the instrumentations to be out of order with no way to monitor the status and the evolution of the accident. One of the solutions investigated in the project [2] is based on distributed OFSs (Optical Fiber Sensors) to detect both the beginning of the severe accident, the corium pouring on the containment building concrete basemat, and its interaction with the concrete floor, until its spreads in the core catcher This project, with reference number ANR-11-RSNR-0007, was carried out within the framework of the RSNR (research on nuclear safety and radiation protection) research program launched after the Fukushima accident, co-funded by the French Programme d'Investissements d'Avenir and managed by the ANR (National Research Agency). We present the RIA measurements and the corresponding analysis, including the measurements of the radiolytic hydrogen production yield of some compounds of the cable

OPTICAL FIBERS AND CABLES
IRRADIATIONS – EXPERIMENTAL TEST PROCEDURE
Irradiation level to withstand
Four successive irradiation tests
RESULTS AND ANALYSIS
CONCLUSION
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