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contributor authorDuffey, Romney B.
date accessioned2019-09-18T09:06:06Z
date available2019-09-18T09:06:06Z
date copyright5/3/2019 12:00:00 AM
date issued2019
identifier issn2332-8983
identifier otherners_005_03_031601
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4258870
description abstractThis paper gives a complete account of recent work on the prediction of power restoration in severe accidents and events, and quantifies the benefits and impact of deploying back-up or emergency power systems in nuclear reactors. The overall outage data for all types of major events and disasters follow the same fundamental trends based on statistical learning theory, and are correlated by simple theoretically based exponential equations that include the degree of difficulty. This trend is shown to be completely independent of severe event type (e.g., hurricanes, ice storms, flooding, earthquakes, cyclones, and fires) but the rate systematically depends on the degree of difficulty. The paper emphasizes that the physics of learning, analytical methodology, technical statistical theory, and extensive event database already implicitly and fully include all human errors, actions, and decisions made during power restoration for the extremely adverse conditions prevalent in severe events and actual disasters. The theory shows flexible coping strategies/emergency power system FLEX/EPS reliability, deployment timescale, and severe event power restoration rate are intrinsically coupled together. The analytical results can be used to define the EPS design and reliability requirements and the potential risk benefit and deployment timescales in terms of the probability change in the risk of extended power loss.
publisherAmerican Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleThe Risk of Extended Power Loss and the Probability of Emergency Restoration for Severe Events and Nuclear Accidents
typeJournal Paper
journal volume5
journal issue3
journal titleJournal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science
identifier doi10.1115/1.4042970
journal fristpage31601
journal lastpage031601-14
treeJournal of Nuclear Engineering and Radiation Science:;2019:;volume( 005 ):;issue: 003
contenttypeFulltext


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