Nuclear Engineering and Technology (Jun 2019)

Nuclear reactor vessel water level prediction during severe accidents using deep neural networks

  • Young Do Koo,
  • Ye Ji An,
  • Chang-Hwoi Kim,
  • Man Gyun Na

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51, no. 3
pp. 723 – 730

Abstract

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Acquiring instrumentation signals generated from nuclear power plants (NPPs) is essential to maintain nuclear reactor integrity or to mitigate an abnormal state under normal operating conditions or severe accident circumstances. However, various safety-critical instrumentation signals from NPPs cannot be accurately measured on account of instrument degradation or failure under severe accident circumstances. Reactor vessel (RV) water level, which is an accident monitoring variable directly related to reactor cooling and prevention of core exposure, was predicted by applying a few signals to deep neural networks (DNNs) during severe accidents in NPPs. Signal data were obtained by simulating the postulated loss-of-coolant accidents at hot- and cold-legs, and steam generator tube rupture using modular accident analysis program code as actual NPP accidents rarely happen. To optimize the DNN model for RV water level prediction, a genetic algorithm was used to select the numbers of hidden layers and nodes. The proposed DNN model had a small root mean square error for RV water level prediction, and performed better than the cascaded fuzzy neural network model of the previous study. Consequently, the DNN model is considered to perform well enough to provide supporting information on the RV water level to operators. Keywords: Deep neural networks, Genetic algorithm, Reactor vessel water level, Safety-critical instrumentation signals, Severe accident