Piqua Nuclear Generating Station Explained

Piqua Nuclear Generating Station
Coordinates:40.1323°N -84.2348°W
Country:United States
Location:Springcreek Township, Miami County, near Piqua, Ohio
Commissioned:1963
Decommissioned:1966

The Piqua Nuclear Power Facility was an organic cooled and moderated nuclear reactor which operated just outside the southern city limits of Piqua, Ohio in the United States. The plant contained a 45.5-megawatt (thermal) organically cooled and moderated nuclear reactor (terphenyl, a biphenyl like oil).[1] The Piqua facility was built and operated between 1963 and 1966 as a demonstration project by the Atomic Energy Commission. The facility ceased operation in 1966. It was dismantled between 1967 and 1969, and the radioactive coolant and most other radioactive materials were removed. The remaining radioactive structural components of the reactor were entombed in the reactor vessel under sand and concrete.

Background

The plant was first proposed February 1, 1956 when the local public utility company in Piqua, Ohio proposed to build a 12,500 kilowatt nuclear power plant using an organically moderated reactor by asking to join the U.S. government's small reactor construction program which provided joint government-utility participation.[2] It was in response to the second round of the Atomic Energy Commission's (AEC) Power Demonstration Reactor Program. The six other municipalities who applied were revealed when Senator Clinton P. Anderson of New Mexico accused the AEC of trying to impose an 'absolute Iron Curtain around thought' regarding nuclear secrecy.[3] At the same committee meeting the locations of the seven proposed power plants were announced:

By September 27, 1956 the AEC authorized contract negotiations for the $8M plant. $4M would come from the AEC to finance the reactor construction and $4M would be from the city of Piqua for facilities, land and building. The Atomics International division of North American Aviation was selected to design the plant.[4] Their experience building and operating the Organic Moderated Reactor Experiment uniquely qualified them for the job.

Plant operating events

As the plant was only in operation for three years, a summary of key operating events is included[5]

Date Action
June 1963 First criticality achieved.
July 1963 Fuel loading completed.
January 27, 1964 Full power achieved; reactor operated steadily but with one scram.
May 21, 1964 First scheduled shutdown for routine maintenance and inspection. During this period of operation, POMR contributed ~ 40% of the energy generated by the City of Piqua.
December 7, 1964 Reactor was shut down to renew fifteen in-vessel filters and remove the fuel element in Core position F-13 for examination.
January 28, 1965 Reactor was shut down for complete replacement of in-vessel filters, maintenance, and for relocation of the instrumented fuel element from position E-12 to position D-5.
April 2, 1965 Several malfunctioning control rod drive units repaired. Concern over possible plugged condition of the inner process tube of the control rod-bearing elements led to the movement of the six inner ring control rod elements to peripheral positions. The core size was increased from 61- 67 fuel elements.
May 6 – 12, 1965 Scram occurred on May 6, 1965. During this time, the reactor coolant level had been lowered by operational error, which resulted in a temporary loss of circulation through three elements. Shutdown was extended until May 12 so the three fuel elements could be removed to spent-fuel storage.
May 13, 1965 (est) Immediately upon restart, excessive surface temperatures were noted, necessitating additional fuel element removal. Because of the fuel element removal, the system operated with only one coolant pump during the latter half of June and into July.
July 18, 1965 Reactor shut down for modifications, maintenance, and in-vessel filter replacement; performed extensive modifications of the in-core control rod circuitry.
September 6, 1965 Reactor operation resumed.
October 12, 1965 Reactor shut down, fuel rearrangements were made, increasing the core loading to 70 fuel elements.
October 23, 1965 Reactor restarted. Operation of the reactor continued at an average power level of about 24 MWt.
January 13, 1966 Reactor scrammed because of a spurious signal. At this time, there was no indication of any unusual condition in the reactor core. Prior to restarting the reactor, an abnormal in-core condition was identified during the performance of a rod-drop test.

Technical problems

In 1966, problems with control rods and fouling in cooling surfaces led to ceased operations. The neutron flux within the reactor core induced polymerization of Terphenyl, leading to increased viscosity of the coolant and fouling.

Plant decommissioning

After the plant ceased operations in 1966, Atomics International was performing work that would allow the plant to restart operations. However, the AEC decided to terminate the operating contract, citing higher-priority needs for manpower and funding, lack of programmatic interest, and technical problems.[6] The site's buildings were decontaminated, except for the containment vessel, which was entombed in concrete.

Ongoing environmental inspections and dose reconstruction projects have been undertaken by the CDC and other entities.

Site today

The facility's buildings that were not entombed are now used as a warehouse and office space for the City of Piqua. The US Department of Energy has proposed removal of the dome. The facility is currently being torn down by the City of Piqua.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: U.S. Atomic Energy Commission . Small nuclear power plants . Tid4500 . 1966-10-01 . 246 . The Commission . 1 January 2020.
  2. The Lima News, February 2, 1956, page 3, column 2
  3. The Billings Gazette, February 8, 1956, page 1, column 1
  4. The Portsmouth Times, September 28, 1956, page 26, column 2
  5. https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/ocas/pdfs/arch/sec/piquaer-126-r0.pdf
  6. Book: Congress of the United States . AEC authorizing legislation, fiscal year 1969 . 1968-01-30 . Washington, D.C. . 471 . 1 January 2020.