A characterization of check valve degradation and failure experience in the nuclear power industry: 1984-1990. Volume 1
Author(s) -
D.A. Casada,
M. D. Todd
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/145819
Subject(s) - reliability (semiconductor) , nuclear power , reliability engineering , nuclear industry , service (business) , nuclear power plant , check valve , commission , engineering , key (lock) , risk analysis (engineering) , operations management , computer science , power (physics) , forensic engineering , business , mechanical engineering , computer security , nuclear engineering , finance , ecology , physics , quantum mechanics , marketing , nuclear physics , biology
Check valve operating problems in recent years have resulted in significant operating transients, increased cost and decreased system availability. As a result, additional attention has beau given to check valves by utilities (resulting in the formation of the Nuclear Industry Check Valve Group), as well as the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers Operation and Maintenance Committee. All these organizations have the fundamental goal of ensuring reliable operation of check valves. A key ingredient to an engineering-oriented reliability improvement effort is a thorough understanding of relevant historical experience. A detailed review of historical failure data, available through the Institute of Nuclear Power Operation`s Nuclear Plant Reliability Data System, has been conducted. The focus of the review is on check valve failures that have involved significant degradation of the valve internal parts. A variety of parameters are considered, including size, age, system of service, method of failure discovery, the affected valve parts, attributed causes, and corrective actions
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