News | March 30, 2017

Diakont Completes Successful Underwater Robotic Decontamination Service, Demonstrating New Dose-Saving And Outage-Shortening Technology

Diakont successfully provided underwater robotic decontamination services on a nuclear power plant’s refueling cavity and dryer-separator pool in Spring 2017 using a new tool system.

San Diego, CA (PRWEB) - Diakont, a leading provider of refueling outage tooling and services to the nuclear industry, successfully provided underwater robotic decontamination services on a nuclear power plant’s refueling cavity and dryer-separator pool in Spring 2017 using a new tool system. Historically, nuclear plant operators have conducted cleaning and decontamination of these surfaces manually, after draining water from the space. However manual decon is slow, and can result in excessive personnel dose exposure. Diakont’s underwater robotic decon services present a vast improvement over manual decon because it reduces personnel dose exposure, reduces radwaste, doesn’t impact plant chemistry, and doesn’t risk inadvertently spreading contamination. Also Diakont’s decon method avoids the risk of personnel injury and component damage associated with hydrolasing. And by performing the decon robotically while the cavities are flooded, in many cases the critical path outage schedule can be shortened.

The robotic decon system is just one of Diakont’s latest nuclear tooling innovations, providing a leap-forward from legacy methods. Able to decontaminate horizontal, vertical, and curved surfaces, Diakont’s tools easily navigate to areas within flooded cavities that are inaccessible to previous solutions, performing decon in parallel to other activities including fuel movement. Also, unlike other legacy solutions, the Diakont tools do not require continuous use of an overhead crane or other method of suspension while performing the decon activities.

The ROV-type decontamination tool attaches and drives along the cavity and component surfaces using a high-force, no-flow vortex generator, even in the presence of Residual Heat Removal (RHR) or shutdown cooling flow. Efficient, effective cleaning is performed using a rugged brushing action to detach the crud, while vacuuming it away at high flow rates to a submerged filter.

At the Spring 2017 refueling outage, Diakont’s decontamination services were so effective that no additional manual cavity decon was required after drain-down. Using the tool’s ability to swim, attach, and crawl, Diakont decontaminated the majority of the surfaces designated by the plant operator. Preliminary surveys indicated that all contamination levels were reduced to <50K dpm/100 cm2, helping the utility meet their INPO/Industry collective radiation exposure goals.

Applications

Diakont cleaning and decontamination services are ideal for servicing various underwater areas within nuclear power plants:

  • Refueling cavity
  • BWR-6 drywell head, and other curved surfaces
  • Equipment pools/pit
  • Spent fuel pool
  • Cask loading pool
  • Fuel transfer canal

“Diakont’s remote decontamination service helped the plant operator meet the INPO/Industry collective radiation exposure goals,” says Jacco Goemans, Director of Nuclear Solutions for Diakont. “Diakont’s new robotic tooling paves the way for plant operators to perform a safer, more efficient, and more effective method of reactor plant decontamination.”

About Diakont
Diakont is a leading designer, manufacturer and provider of high-technology products and services for the nuclear power industry, providing radiation-tolerant cameras and robotics, as well as inspection, maintenance and repair services for plants of all designs. With a mission of enhancing safety while improving the overall efficiency of the nuclear industry, Diakont has been deploying state-of-the-art robotics and world-class service to solve inspection and repair challenges for over 25 years.

Source: PRWeb

View original release here: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2017/03/prweb14198296.htm