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Fire-Induced Pressure Response and Failure Characterization of PCV/SCV/3013 Containers - Phase 1

Mendoza, Hector M.; Gill, Walt; Sprankle, Ray; Shefferman, Alex; Figueroa Faria, Victor G.; Sanborn, Scott E.

This report discusses the test series performed at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) to test the response of Primary Containment Vessels (PCVs) under a hypothetical fire scenario. The PCV is the innermost container in a 9975 shipping package (NRC, 2014). This test series was the first of three phases aiming to characterize the PCV/SCV/3013 system, and it will be referred to as Phase 1. The purpose of these tests was to characterize the response of the PCV wall when filled with a bounding payload and exposed to an ASTM-E1529 (ASTM, 2014) standard fire environment. In particular, the goal was to test a working hypothesis for these PCVs: that, during a scenario where the PCV is exposed to an ASTM-E1529 standard fire environment, the accumulated internal pressure (resulting from the expansion of gases and vaporization of moisture/plastics during heat exposure) relieves through the O-ring segment of the PCV before PCV wall failure (rupture). Bounding internal and external conditions were purposefully established for this Phase 1 testing in order to maximize pressurization in the container. Specifically, this Phase 1 test series is designed to determine the worst case thermal stress conditions by exposing five SRNS PCVs with identical payloads to the severe ASTM-E1529 fire conditions in five different configurations with increasing potential to result in a release of the internal contents (i.e. failure). All five tests were successfully executed, and the failure modes were characterized for each test. This report discusses the details of the five tests performed in this phase, their outcomes, and their implications.