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Page Title: Figure 1 Stress on Reactor Vessel Wall
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Thermal Stress
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Material Science Volume 2 of 2
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Thermal Stress  Summary

THERMAL STRESS DOE-HDBK-1017/2-93 Thermal Shock Thermal  stresses  are  a  major  concern  in Figure 1   Stress on Reactor Vessel Wall reactor systems due to the magnitude of the stresses  involved.    With  rapid  heating  (or cooling)  of  a  thick-walled  vessel  such  as the reactor pressure vessel, one part of the wall may try to expand (or contract) while the adjacent section, which has not yet been exposed to the temperature change, tries to restrain  it.    Thus,  both  sections  are  under stress.  Figure 1 illustrates what takes place. A vessel is considered to be thick-walled or thin-walled    based     on    comparing     the thickness of the vessel wall to the radius of the  vessel.    If  the  thickness  of  the  vessel wall  is  less  than  about  1  percent  of  the vessel's  radius,  it  is  usually  considered  a thin-walled  vessel.   If  the thickness of the vessel  wall  is  more  than  5  percent  to  10 percent    of    the    vessel's    radius,    it    is considered a thick-walled vessel.   Whether a   vessel   with   wall   thickness   between   1 percent    and    5    percent    of    radius    is considered    thin-walled    or    thick-walled depends  on the  exact  design, construction, and application of the vessel. When cold water enters the vessel, the cold water causes the metal on the inside wall (left side of Figure 1) to cool before the metal on the outside.  When the metal on the inside wall cools, it contracts, while the hot metal on the outside wall is still expanded.   This sets up a thermal stress, placing the cold side in tensile stress and the hot side in compressive stress, which can cause cracks in the cold side of the wall.  These stresses are illustrated in Figure 2 and Figure 3 in the next chapter. The heatup and cooldown of the reactor vessel and the addition of makeup water to the reactor coolant system can cause significant temperature changes and thereby induce sizable thermal stresses.   Slow  controlled  heating  and  cooling  of  the  reactor  system  and  controlled  makeup water  addition  rates  are  necessary  to  minimize  cyclic  thermal  stress,  thus  decreasing  the potential for fatigue failure of reactor system components. Operating procedures are designed to reduce both the magnitude and the frequency of these stresses.    Operational  limitations  include  heatup  and  cooldown  rate  limits  for  components, temperature  limits  for  placing  systems  in  operation,  and  specific  temperatures  for  specific pressures  for  system  operations.     These  limitations  permit  material  structures  to  change temperature at a more even rate, minimizing thermal stresses. MS-03 Page 4 Rev. 0

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