SBIR-STTR Award

Development of a methodology for analyzing precursors to earthquake initiated and fire initiated accident sequences
Award last edited on: 2/19/02

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
NRC
Total Award Amount
$237,573
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
-----

Principal Investigator
Robert J Budnitz

Company Information

Future Resources Associates Inc

2039 Shattuck Avenue Suite 402
Berkeley, CA 94704
   (510) 644-2700
   N/A
   N/A
Location: Single
Congr. District: 13
County: Alameda

Phase I

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase I year
1994
Phase I Amount
$50,000
Although the ASP (Accident Sequence Precursor) methodology for analyzing operational data and events for precursors to severe accidents has been in existence for about a decade, it does not now incorporate the analysis of precursors to earthquake initiated and internal-fire-initiated accident sequences. This project's objective is to fill this gap by developing such a methodology. The objective of the Phase I effort is to demonstrate that developing such a methodology for earthquakes and internal fires is fully feasible, and to lay out the steps required for its development. The actual step-by-step methodology will be developed, documented, and a users' guide provided in Phase II. The Phase I project will also determine the types of data and precursor events whose collection and analysis are required, and the PRA-type models whose development is necessary to carry out the methodology. The Phase I project will also provide two stylized case-study examples, one for earthquakes and one for fires, to demonstrate how the fully-developed methodology would work in practice.

Anticipated Results:
If this proposed Phase I project is successful, it will demonstrate the feasibility of incorporating earthquake-initiated and internal-fire-initiated events into the analysis of accident sequence precursors. The overall step-by-step structure of this methodology will be established, the types of data and models needed to carry it out will be identified, and the follow-on Phase II development tasks necessary for the complete methodology will also be identified. This represents a substantial new commercial business opportunity for the developers because many nuclear-power utilities are beginning to perform accident precursor analysis and will need the new methodology.

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: 00/00/00    Completed: 00/00/00
Phase II year
1995
Phase II Amount
$187,573
Although the ASP (Accident Sequence Precursor) methodology for analyzing operational data and events for precursors to severe accidents has been in existence for about a decade, it does not now incorporate the analysis of precursors to earthquake-initiated and internal-fire-initiated accident sequences. This project's objective is to fill this gap by developing such a methodology. The objective of the successful Phase I effort was to demonstrate that developing such a methodology for earthquakes and internal fires is fully feasible, and to lay out the steps required for its development. The actual step-by-step methodology will be developed and documented in Phase II. The Phase II project will provide screening criteria; methodologies for ASP fire-location screening, fire damage-time, detection-time, and suppression-time analyses; benchmark cases for both fire-ASP and seismic-ASP analysis; a compilation of seismic fragilities; and guidance on determining conditional core-damage frequencies.

Anticipated Results:
If this proposed Phase II project is successful, it will provide the methodological guidance necessary for incorporating earthquake-initiated and internal-fire-initiated events into the analysis of accident sequence precursors (ASP). The project will provide screening criteria; standard ASP methodologies; and ASP-type benchmark cases. This represents a substantial new commercial business opportunity for the developers because many nuclear power utilities are beginning to perform accident precursor analysis and will need the new methodology.