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Clean Hydrogen Partnership

Fire at a generator of a power plant

Event

Event ID
493
Quality
Description
SYNOPTICs
The loss of the hydrogen side sealing oil pump and other problems in the sealing oil system resulted in the coolant hydrogen leaking from the generator. The hydrogen leaked for several minutes before it ignited and exploded. A fire followed the large explosion, which burned for five to eight minutes.
DETAILES SERIES OF EVENTS
The plant was operating at 92% power when a ground fault on a land steam exhauster caused the supply breaker to a motor control centre (MCC) to trip. This supply breaker could not be reclosed.
The loss of the MCC resulted in a loss of the hydrogen side seal oil pump for the main generator that is powered from that MCC. Nevertheless, the plant continued operation as the licensee procedures and technical manual of the turbine-generator manufacturer allowed full-load operation with the hydrogen side seal oil pump shut down.
When operators initiated implementation of a procedure to restore the seal oil system, a small hydrogen explosion occurred and a reactor power reduction was initiated.
Shortly thereafter, with the plant at 85% power, a large explosion and fire occurred and the turbine was immediately tripped.
Some of the equipment damaged during the fire and explosion caused several grounds in the i nth electrical power system, resulting in voltage degradation which hindered the fighting of the emergency.
Event Initiating system
Classification of the physical effects
Hydrogen Release and Ignition
Nature of the consequences
Macro-region
North America
Country
United States
Date
Root causes
Root CAUSE analysis
INITIATING CAUSE
The loss of the pump serving the hydrogen side seal oil was at the basis of the incidents.
ROOT CAUSE
The fact that the operation allowed even without the seal oil pump was probably a contributing or root cause, because is the responsible of hydrogen leak and accumulation before ignition. The fighting of the emergency resulted in additional deficiencies, probably due to loss of voltage capacity because of the fire. This suggests design or management root causes.

Facility

Application
Power Plant
Sub-application
Nuclear power plant
Hydrogen supply chain stage
All components affected
steam exhauster, turbine-compressor system
Location type
Unknown
Location description
Industrial Area
Operational condition
Pre-event occurrences
The plant was operating at 92% power when a ground fault on a land steam exhauster caused the supply breaker to a motor control centre (MCC) to trip. This supply breaker could not be reclosed. The loss of the MCC resulted in a loss of the hydrogen side seal oil pump for the main generator that is powered from that MCC. The plant continued operation as the licensee procedures and technical manual of the turbine-generator manufacturer (Westinghouse) allow full-load operation with the hydrogen side seal oil pump shut down.

Emergency & Consequences

Number of injured persons
0
Number of fatalities
0
Post-event summary
Following the large explosion, the fire burned for several minutes and was extinguished by the CO2 system.
The explosion resulted in the generator housing lower skirts being thrown into some neighbouring equipment. The missiles also broke two large hand wheels for valves and damaged some small test valves and non-safety-related level instruments.
Official legal action
US.NRC issued an information notice with suggestions but no NRC requirements. Therefore, no specific action or written response is required.
The notice is to alert recipients of potentially significant problems caused by failure of non-nuclear instrumentation (NNI) power supplies at B&W designed reactor facilities.
It is expected that recipients will review the information for applicability to their facilities and consider actions, if appropriate, to preclude similar problems occurring at their facilities.

Lesson Learnt

Lesson Learnt

The national nuclear authority issued suggestions but no legal requirements.
The suggestions regarded the need to consider and adopt measure regarding the potentially severe problems caused by failure of non-nuclear instrumentation power supplies at reactor facilities of the same type as the one affected.
For a generic , see HIAD ID = 042

Event Nature

Release type
gas
Involved substances (% vol)
H2 100%
Presumed ignition source
Not reported
Ignition delay
several minutes
High pressure explosion
Y
Flame type
Other

References

Reference & weblink

US.NRC Information Notice No. 84-80: Plant Transients Induced by Failure of Non-Nuclear Instrumentation Power

This event is listed in From T. VIROLAINEN, J. MARTTILA, H. AULAMO, "TURRBINE GENERATORS AT VVER-440 NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS”, in "Upgrading of fire safety in nuclear power plants", IAEA-TECDOC-1014, Proceedings of an International Symposium, Vienna (Austria), 18-21 November 1997<br />
https://www.iaea.org/publications/5310/upgrading-of-fire-safety-in-nucl… <br />
(accessed July 2024)

JRC assessment