August 13, 2024
Report
Radiation Aging of Cable Insulation Systems to Support Extension of Cable Electrical Assessment Techniques - CRADA 562 (Final Report)
Abstract
Radiation aging (primarily gamma radiation) affects a small subset of the LV cable population based on a 40-year operation. Increasing plant operating life to 60 or 80 years will result in additional cables experiencing degradation, either from radiation or from combined thermal and radiation effects. Previous research work done by EPRI and other researchers focuses on electrical diagnostics of thermal effects. However, the electrical diagnostic response of the cable system to radiation aging is minimally understood. In order to study the electrical responses from XLPE and EPR cabling and correlate these responses with radiation dose and level of thermal exposure, gamma radiation testing was performed at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL). This report covers the radiation testing performed at PNNL, which involved irradiation of 30-foot long cables and short witness samples. The cabling was irradiated, at room temperature, using cobalt-60 gamma-rays to intervals of 10 million rads (10 Mrads), for a maximum of 70 Mrads. The results can be used to determine cable conditions (extent of damage) more accurately and localize where the degradation exists along the length of the cable (axial location). These insights can provide operators with the options to focus repair, mitigation, or replacement efforts locally.Published: August 13, 2024