Pressurised
Heavy Water Reactor
It
will meet country’s demand for Clean Energy in the immediate and the long-term
future
*Srikumar
Banerjee
Government’s announcement for the plan
of construction of ten new Pressurised Heavy Water Reactors (PHWR) of 700 MWe
capacity vindicates the confidence in the indigenous PHWR technology which has
been built over a period of nearly four decades. The performance of the present
sixteen indigenously built PHWRs is demonstrated by an average capacity factor
of about 80% over last five years, their uninterrupted operation over extended
periods, the longest being 765 days for a Rajasthan Reactor, RAPS-5 securing
the second world ranking and a very low average electricity tariff which is next
to that of the hydroelectric power. More than anything else, is the fact that
100% of all their components are manufactured by the Indian industry. Dr.
M.R.Srinivasan in a recent column in The Hindu (appeared on May 19,2017) has
succinctly outlined the history of the development of the PHWR technology and
the near-term strategy of the growth of nuclear power capacity. The evolution
of the PHWR technology and the upgradation of their safety features have been
covered in a series of scientific papers published in a special section of the
April ‘17 Issue of “Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science’- a journal
published by American Society of Mechanical Engineers.
The PHWR technology in India started in
the late nineteen sixties with the construction of the first 220 MWe reactor,
Rajasthan Atomic Power Station, RAPS-1 with a design similar with that of the
Douglas Point reactor in Canada under the joint Indo-Canadian nuclear
co-operation. Canada supplied all main equipment for this first unit. India
retained responsibility for construction, installation and commissioning
activities. For the second unit (RAPS-2), import content was reduced
considerably and indigenization was taken up for major pieces of equipment.
Following the complete withdrawal of the Canadian support in 1974 after
Pokhran-1, Indian nuclear engineers completed the construction and the plant
was made operational with majority of the components made in India. From the
third PHWR unit (Madras Atomic Power Station, MAPS-1) onwards, the evolution
and indigenisation of the design began with the objective of keeping abreast
with evolutionary changes taking place worldwide and of meeting new safety
criteria. Improvements were also incorporated for reduction of the construction
time and cost, and enhancing reliability of operation leading to better
capacity factors. The first two units of PHWR using indigenously developed
standardized 220 MWe design were set up at the Narora Atomic Power Station
(NAPS). This standardized and optimised design had several new safety systems
which have been incorporated in five more twin-unit atomic power stations with
capacity of 2 x 220 MWe located at Kakrapar, Kaiga and Rawatbhata. For
realising the economics of scale, the design of 540 MWe PHWR was developed and
two such units were constructed at Tarapur. Further optimisations were carried
out by utilising the excess thermal margins and improve the economics and NPCIL
modified the 540 MWe PHWR design to that of 700 MWe capacity without much
design changes. Four units of this design are being constructed at Rawatbhata
and Kakrapar at present.
As far as the safety is concerned, the
PHWR technology scores well in terms of its several inherent safety features.
The biggest advantage of the PHWR design is the use of thin walled pressure
tubes instead of large pressure vessels used in pressure vessel type reactors.
This results in a distribution of pressure boundaries to large number of small
diameter pressure tubes. The consequence of an accidental rupture of the
pressure boundary in such a design will have a much less severity than that in
a pressure vessel type reactor. The PHWR core is always uniquely surrounded by
huge quantity of low temperature and low pressure water in the calandria vessel
and in the calandria vault. These coolant inventories significantly delay the
progression of the event and, thereby, provide adequate time for interventions
and corrective actions by operators to mitigate the consequences. In fact, the
large quantity of vault water can serve as a core catcher for in-vessel
retention of disintegrated fuel debris in the case of a very low probability
core melt accident. These inherent heat sinks are required only when the
primary heat sink through steam generators or the shutdown cooling system
becomes unavailable in the most severe accident scenario.
In addition, the Indian 700 MWe PHWR
design has enhanced safety through dedicated Passive Decay Heat Removal System
which has the capability of removing decay heat from core without requiring any
operator actions similar with the technology adopted for Generation III+ plants
to address the Fukushima type accident. The 700 MWe Indian PHWR has steel-lined
containment to reduce the leakages and containment spray system to reduce the
containment pressure in case of a loss of coolant accident and for scrubbing
radio nuclides in case of their release beyond the design limit.
The main reasons for selecting PHWRs in
the 1960s for the First Stage of the Indian nuclear power programme have been
the use of natural uranium oxide as the fuel, the best utilisation of mined
uranium in energy production and the prospect of establishing a completely
self-reliant technology. Over four decades of relentless research, design and
development work in Bhabha Atomic Research Centre and Nuclear Power Corporation
and the matching contributions of some of their industry partners who had shown
the courage in taking up the challenging manufacturing and construction work
have enabled India in establishing the technology in totality. Mastering the
entire fuel cycle including prospecting of minerals, mining, processing and
manufacturing of fuel and structural materials, reprocessing of spent nuclear
fuel and immobilization of radioactive waste has given India a unique position
of self-reliance in the atomic energy domain. The constraint of a limited
reserve of uranium in the country which earlier impeded a rapid growth in
nuclear power has now been eased by augmented production of indigenous uranium
and import of uranium under the civil nuclear co-operation agreements with
several countries. During the last financial-year Nuclear Fuel Complex had a
record production of nuclear fuel exceeding 1500 tonne and new uranium deposits
discovered by Atomic Mineral Division for Exploration and research have taken
the uranium reserve in the country to a level of 200000 tonne.
India is now poised for a rapid growth
in the nuclear power capacity which is essential for meeting the demand of
clean electricity. The per-capita electricity consumption in India (now close
to 1000 KWh) is nearly one-third of the world average and there is an obvious
need for a substantial enhancement of non-carbon electricity production to
improve the quality of life of our people. The impressive growth in the solar
and wind power has made a visible impact in increased availability of
electricity in many areas. However, it needs to be emphasized that the
distributed and intermittent sources of energy such as solar and wind cannot
meet the base load demand very effectively. The nuclear energy source is
concentrated, continuous and reliable and, therefore, can be complemented by
solar and wind energy in meeting the overall demand of electricity with
practically zero carbon foot-print. While the huge electricity demand from
large cities and industrial complexes require uninterrupted and concentrated
form of energy, there is an equally big demand of distributed energy in our
rural areas. Energy planners are, therefore, combining these different patterns
of energy requirement to achieve an optimised solution.
The next issue which needs to be
addressed is the speed at which we can grow our nuclear power capacity. In this
context one can examine the experience of France and USA in nineteen seventies
and of China in the recent years. They all have achieved very impressive rapid
growth by adopting a convoy or a serial mode of installation of nuclear power
plants of a few standardised designs. In such a strategy, the industry can gear
up their dedicated production lines for sophisticated nuclear components and
construction companies can deploy their manpower and skill-set most
effectively. The decision that 10 PHWRs of 700 MWe will be installed in the
immediate future will generate enough enthusiasm in the industry for taking up
the challenge of serial production of nuclear components of exacting
specifications. The expansion in nuclear power activity will not only broaden
the supplier base but also make the participating industry more quality
conscious. They can even qualify to be exporters of nuclear grade components. A
reduction in the gestation period of construction of nuclear plants will have a
strong impact in reducing the cost of electricity.
As has been mentioned by Dr.Srinivasan,
India is now in a position to embark upon building 900 MWe Pressurised Water
Reactors (PWRs) of her own design. The capability of making large size pressure
vessel is now available within the country and our own isotope enrichment
plants will be able to supply a part of the required enriched uranium fuel within
a decade. These will be in addition to imported PWRs from Russia, France and
USA with the aim of an accelerated growth of nuclear energy in the country. The
signing of the recent agreement between India and Russia for the construction
of two more 1000 MWe PWRs (Units 5 and 6) in Kudankulam confirms this overall
plan. The convenience of operation and a high average capacity factor have made
PWRs the most sought after nuclear power reactors in the world, nearly 85% of
all power reactors being the PWR type. There will be a special advantage of
operating a mix of PWRs and PHWRs in India as the spent fuel of the former
which will contain more than 1% of uranium-235 can be reprocessed and further
utilized as the fuel in PHWRs operating in tandem. This evolving fuel cycle
will eventually extend the power generation from the First Stage of the well-
known three stage programme quite significantly.
The merit of the closed fuel cycle which
has been adopted right from the beginning of the Indian programme is not only
in multiplying the fuel resource but also in reducing the radio-active burden
of the nuclear waste dramatically. In this context, the successful development
of separation of minor actinides from the nuclear waste in India, deployed in
pilot plant scale, has drawn world-wide attention. Plutonium recovered by
reprocessing of spent fuel from operating PHWRs has been used in making the
plutonium-uranium mixed oxide fuel for the full core of the Prototype Fast
Breeder Reactor (PFBR) which has initiated the commissioning activities before
commencing operation. With the entry of India in her Second Stage of nuclear
power programme in which Fast Breeder Reactors will not only enable the growth
of the installed nuclear capacity, but also generate more fissile materials,
plutonium-239 and uranium-233 by conversion of fertile isotopes, uranium-238
and thorium-232 respectively. An enhanced scope and an accelerated
implementation of the First Stage of the programme will make a far- reaching
impact on securing the energy self-reliance of the country. By operating
multiple recycles in the uranium-plutonium fuel cycle the supply of fissile
material is expected to be enhanced by a factor of 60 and by using the huge
reserve of thorium, the current estimate being four times that of uranium,
India can sustain the supply of clean nuclear energy for several centuries.
Dr Srikumar Banerjee is a former
Chairman AEC & Secretary DAE. Currently he is Homi Bhabha Chair Professor,
DAE; Chancellor, Homi Bhabha National Institute (HBNI) and Chancellor Kashmir
University.