AP1000
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The AP1000 is a nuclear power plant designed and sold by Westinghouse Electric Company. The plant is a pressurized water reactor with improved use of passive nuclear safety and many design features intended to lower its capital cost and improve its economics.
The design traces its history to the Westinghouse 4-loop SNUPPS design, which was produced in various locations around the world. (Note: System 80 was a similar vintage nuclear steam supply system made by Combustion Engineering.) Further development of the 4-loop reactor and the ice-condenser containment initially led to the AP600 concept, with a smaller 600 to 700 MWe output, but this saw limited interest. In order to compete with other designs that were scaling up in size in order to improve capital costs, the design re-emerged as the AP1000 and found a number of design wins at this larger size.
Twelve AP1000s are currently in operation or under construction. Four are in operation at two sites in China, two at Sanmen Nuclear Power Station and two at Haiyang Nuclear Power Plant. As of 2019[update], all four Chinese reactors were completed and connected to the grid, and as of 2024, six more are under construction. Two are in operation at the Vogtle Electric Generating Plant near Augusta, Georgia, in the United States, with Vogtle 3 having come online in July 2023, and Vogtle 4 in April 2024. Construction at Vogtle suffered numerous delays and cost overruns. Construction of two additional reactors at Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Generating Station near Columbia, South Carolina, led to Westinghouse's bankruptcy in 2017 and the cancellation of construction at that site. It was reported in January 2025 by The Wall Street Journal and The State that Santee Cooper, the sole owner of the stored parts and unfinished construction, is exploring construction and financing partners to finish construction these two reactors. The need for large amounts of electricity for data centers is said to be the driving factor for their renewed interest.
Twenty-four more AP1000s are currently being planned, with six in India, nine in Ukraine, three in Poland, two in Bulgaria, and four in the United States.[1] [2]
China is currently developing more advanced versions and owns their patent rights. The first AP1000 began operations in China at Sanmen, where Unit 1 became the first AP1000 to achieve criticality in June 2018,[3] and was connected to the grid the next month. Further builds in China will be based on the modified CAP1000 and CAP1400 designs.[4]
History
[edit]Previous work
[edit]The AP1000 design traces its history to two previous designs, the AP600 and the System 80.
The System 80 design was created by Combustion Engineering and featured a two-loop cooling system with a single steam generator paired with two reactor coolant pumps in each loop that makes it simpler and less expensive than systems which pair a single reactor coolant pump with a steam generator in each of two, three, or four loops.[5] Three completed reactors in the US and another four in South Korea made it the most successful Generation II+ design.
ABB Group bought Combustion Engineering in 1990[6] and introduced the System 80+, with a number of design changes and safety improvements.[7] As part of a series of mergers, purchases, and divestitures by ABB, in 2000 the design was purchased by Westinghouse Electric Company, who had itself been purchased in 1999 by British Nuclear Fuels Ltd (BNFL).[8]
Through the 1990s, Westinghouse had been working on a new design known as the AP600 with a design power of about 600 MWe. This was part of the United States Department of Energy's Advanced Light Water Reactor program that worked on a series of Generation III reactor designs. In contrast to Generation II designs, the AP600 was much simpler, with a huge reduction in the total number of parts, and especially pumps. It was also passively safe, a key feature of Gen III designs.[9]
The AP600 was at the small end of the reactor scale. Smaller plants are periodically introduced because they can be used in a wider variety of markets where a larger reactor is simply too powerful to serve the local market. The downside of such designs is that the construction time, and thus cost, does not differ significantly compared to larger designs, so these smaller designs often have less attractive economics. The AP600 addressed this through modular construction and aimed to go from first concrete to fuel load in 36 months. In spite of these attractive features, Westinghouse had no sales of the AP600.[9]
With the purchase of the company by BNFL and its merger with ABB, a design combining the features of the System 80+ with the AP600 started as the AP1000. BNFL in turn sold Westinghouse Electric to Toshiba in 2005.[10]
AP1000
[edit]In December 2005, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) approved the final design certification for the AP1000.[11] This meant that prospective US builders could apply for a Combined Construction and Operating License before construction starts, the validity of which is conditional upon the plant being built as designed, and that each AP1000 should be identical. Its design is the first Generation III+ reactor to receive final design approval from the NRC.[12] In 2008 China started building four units of the AP1000's 2005-design.
In December 2011, the NRC approved construction of the first US plant to use the design.[13] On February 9, 2012, the NRC approved the construction of two new reactors.[14]
In 2016 and 2017 cost overruns constructing AP1000 plants in the U.S. caused Westinghouse's owner Toshiba to write down its investment in Westinghouse by "several billion" dollars.[15] On February 14, 2017, Toshiba delayed filing financial results, and Toshiba chairman Shigenori Shiga, formerly chairman of Westinghouse, resigned.[16][17][18] On March 24, 2017, Toshiba announced that Westinghouse Electric Company will file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy because of US$9 billion of losses from nuclear reactor construction projects, which may impact the future of the AP1000.[19] Westinghouse emerged from bankruptcy in August 2018.[20]
| Date | Milestone |
|---|---|
| January 27, 2006 | NRC issues the final design certification rule (DCR) |
| March 10, 2006 | NRC issues revised FDA for Revision 15 of the Westinghouse design |
| May 26, 2007 | Westinghouse applies to amend the DCR (Revision 16) |
| September 22, 2008 | Westinghouse updated its application |
| October 14, 2008 | Westinghouse provides a corrected set for Revision 17 of the design |
| December 1, 2010 | Westinghouse submits Revision 18 of the design |
| June 13, 2011 | Westinghouse submits Revision 19 of the design |
| December 30, 2011 | NRC issues the final DC amendment final rule |
| September 21, 2018 | Commissioning of the first AP1000 at the Sanmen Nuclear Power Station |
Design specifications
[edit]The AP1000 is a pressurized water reactor[11] with two cooling loops, planned to produce a net power output of 1,117 MWe.[21] It is an evolutionary improvement on the AP600,[12] essentially a more powerful model with roughly the same footprint.[11]
A design objective was to be less expensive to build than other Generation III reactor designs, by both using existing technology, and needing less equipment than competing designs that have three or four cooling loops. The design decreases the number of components, including pipes, wires, and valves. Standardization and type-licensing should also help reduce the time and cost of construction. Because of its simplified design compared to a Westinghouse generation II PWR, the AP1000 has:[21]
- 50% fewer safety-related valves
- 35% fewer pumps
- 80% less safety-related piping
- 85% less control cable
- 45% less seismic building volume
The AP1000 design is considerably more compact in land usage than most existing PWRs, and uses under a fifth of the concrete and rebar reinforcing of older designs.[21] Probabilistic risk assessment was used in the design of the plants. This enabled minimization of risks, and calculation of the overall safety of the plant. According to the NRC, the plants will be orders of magnitude safer than those in the last study, NUREG-1150. The AP1000 has a maximum core damage frequency of 5.09 × 10−7 per plant per year.[22] Used fuel produced by the AP1000 can be stored indefinitely in water on the plant site.[23] Aged used fuel may also be stored in above-ground dry cask storage, in the same manner as the currently operating fleet of US power reactors.[21]
Power reactors of all types continue to produce heat from radioactive decay products even after the main reaction is shut down, so it is necessary to remove this heat to avoid meltdown of the reactor core. In the AP1000, Westinghouse's Passive Core Cooling System uses a tank of water situated above the reactor. When the passive cooling system is activated, the water flows by gravity to the top of the reactor where it evaporates to remove heat. The system uses multiple explosively-operated and DC operated valves which must operate within the first 30 minutes. This is designed to happen even if the reactor operators take no action.[24] The electrical system required for initiating the passive systems doesn't rely on external or diesel power and the valves don't rely on hydraulic or compressed air systems.[11][25] The design is intended to passively remove heat for 72 hours, after which its gravity drain water tank must be topped up for as long as cooling is required.[21] The reactor uses canned motor pumps that are hermetically sealed, use no reactor coolant pump seals and are mounted directly on the bottom of the steam generators. This reduces the amount of large diameter primary loop piping.[26][27][28]
Revision 15 of the AP1000 design has an unusual containment structure which has received approval by the NRC, after a Safety Evaluation Report,[29] and a Design Certification Rule.[30] Revisions 17, 18, and 19 were also approved.[31]
Design disputes
[edit]In April 2010, some environmental organizations called on the NRC to investigate possible limitations in the AP1000 reactor design. These groups appealed to three federal agencies to suspend the licensing process because they believed containment in the new design is weaker than existing reactors.[32]
In April 2010, Arnold Gundersen, a nuclear engineer commissioned by several anti-nuclear groups, released a report which explored a hazard associated with the possible rusting through of the containment structure steel liner. In the AP1000 design, the liner and the concrete are separated, and if the steel rusts through, "there is no backup containment behind it" according to Gundersen.[33] If the dome rusted through the design would expel radioactive contaminants and the plant "could deliver a dose of radiation to the public that is 10 times higher than the N.R.C. limit" according to Gundersen. Vaughn Gilbert, a spokesman for Westinghouse, has disputed Gundersen's assessment, stating that the AP1000's steel containment vessel is three-and-a-half to five times thicker than the liners used in current designs, and that corrosion would be readily apparent during routine inspection.[33]
Edwin Lyman, a senior staff scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists, has challenged specific cost-saving design choices made for both the AP1000 and ESBWR, another new design. Lyman is concerned about the strength of the steel containment vessel and the concrete shield building around the AP1000, claiming its containment vessel does not have sufficient safety margins.[34]
John Ma, a senior structural engineer at the NRC was quoted on his stance about the AP1000 nuclear reactor.[34]
In 2009, the NRC made a safety change related to the events of September 11, ruling that all plants be designed to withstand the direct hit from a plane. To meet the new requirement, Westinghouse encased the AP1000 buildings concrete walls in steel plates. Last year Ma, a member of the NRC since it was formed in 1974, filed the first "non-concurrence" dissent of his career after the NRC granted the design approval. In it Ma argues that some parts of the steel skin are so brittle that the "impact energy" from a plane strike or storm driven projectile could shatter the wall. A team of engineering experts hired by Westinghouse disagreed...[34]
In 2010, following Ma's initial concerns, the NRC questioned the durability of the AP1000 reactor's original shield building in the face of severe external events such as earthquakes, hurricanes, and airplane collisions. In response to these concerns Westinghouse prepared a modified design.[35] This modified design satisfied the NRC, with the exception of Ma, hence the "non-concurrence". In contrast to the NRC's decision, Ma believed that the computer codes used to analyze the modified design were not precise enough and some of the materials used were too brittle.[36]
The NRC completed the overall design certification review for the amended AP1000 in September 2011.[37]
In May 2011, US government regulators found additional problems with the design of the shield building of the new reactors. The chairman of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission said that: computations submitted by Westinghouse about the building's design appeared to be wrong and "had led to more questions."; the company had not used a range of possible temperatures for calculating potential seismic stresses on the shield building in the event of, for example, an earthquake; and that the commission was asking Westinghouse not only to fix its calculations but also to explain why it submitted flawed information in the first place. Westinghouse said that the items the commission was asking for were not "safety significant".[38]
In November 2011, Arnold Gundersen published a further report on behalf of the AP1000 Oversight Group, which includes Friends of the Earth and Mothers against Tennessee River Radiation. The report highlighted six areas of major concern and unreviewed safety questions requiring immediate technical review by the NRC. The report concluded that certification of the AP1000 should be delayed until the original and current "unanswered safety questions" raised by the AP1000 Oversight Group are resolved.[39]
In 2012, Ellen Vancko, from the Union of Concerned Scientists, said that "the Westinghouse AP1000 has a weaker containment, less redundancy in safety systems, and fewer safety features than current reactors".[40] In response to Ms. Vancko's concerns, climate policies author and retired nuclear engineer Zvi J. Doron, replied that the AP1000's safety is enhanced by fewer active components, not compromised as Ms. Vancko suggests.[40] As in direct contrast to currently operating reactors, the AP1000 has been designed around the concept of passive nuclear safety. In October 2013, Li Yulun, a former vice-president of China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC), raised concerns over the safety standards of the delayed AP1000 third-generation nuclear power plant being built in Sanmen, due to the constantly changing, and consequently untested, design. Citing a lack of operating history, he also questioned the manufacturer's assertion that the AP1000 reactor's "primary system canned motor pumps"[41] were "maintenance-free" over 60 years, the assumed life of the reactor and noted that the expansion from 600 to 1,000 megawatts has not yet been commercially proven.[42]
Chinese design extensions
[edit]In 2008 and 2009, Westinghouse made agreements to work with the Chinese State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation (SNPTC) and other institutes to develop a larger design, the CAP1400 of 1,500 MWe capacity, possibly followed by a 1,700 MWe design. China will own the patent rights for these larger designs. Exporting the new larger units may be possible with Westinghouse's cooperation.[43][44]
In September 2014, the Chinese nuclear regulator approved the design safety analysis following a 17-month review.[45] In May 2015 the CAP1400 design passed an International Atomic Energy Agency's Generic Reactor Safety Review.[46]
In December 2009, a Chinese joint venture was set up to build an initial CAP1400 near the HTR-PM at Shidao Bay Nuclear Power Plant.[43][47] In 2015, site preparation started, and approval to progress was expected by the end of the year.[48][49] In March 2017, the first CAP1400 reactor pressure vessel passed pressure tests.[50] Equipment for the CAP1400 is being manufactured, and as of 2020 preliminary construction is underway.[51][52]
In February 2019, the Shanghai Nuclear Engineering Research & Design Institute announced that it had begun the conceptual design process for the CAP1700.[53]
Construction plans or potential operators
[edit]China
[edit]
Four AP1000 reactors have been constructed in China, two at Sanmen Nuclear Power Plant in Zhejiang, and two at Haiyang Nuclear Power Plant in Shandong.[54] The Sanmen 1 & 2 AP1000s were connected to the grid on July 2, 2018, and August 24, 2018, respectively.[55] Haiyang 1 started commercial operation on October 22, 2018,[56] and Haiyang 2 on January 9, 2019.[57]
In 2014, China First Heavy Industries manufactured the first domestically produced AP1000 reactor pressure vessel, for the second AP1000 unit of Sanmen Nuclear Power Station.[58]
The first four AP1000s to be built are to an earlier revision of the design without a strengthened containment structure to provide improved protection against an aircraft crash.[59] China had officially adopted the AP1000 as a standard for inland nuclear projects.[60] Following Westinghouse's bankruptcy in 2017, China decided in 2019 to build the domestically designed Hualong One rather than the AP1000 at Zhangzhou.[61]
After 2019, all plans for future AP1000 units were superseded by CAP1000 units, which are a local standardization of the AP1000 design, transitional to the CAP1400. It is said to have reduced cost and improved operation and maintenance attributes.[4]
As of 2021, site preparations have been done for Haiyang, Lufeng, Sanmen, and Xudabao for the construction of eight additional CAP1000 units. However, most of these projects are at a standstill, as construction of all CAP-1000 units has been slowed down significantly.
At the Xudabao site, construction of two VVER-1200 units for Xudabao 3 & 4 was started in 2021 while the planned CAP1000 units for phase 1 & 2 are still on hold.[4] On 20 April 2022, the construction of Haiyang 3 & 4 and Sanmen 3 & 4 was approved by the State Council. However, Lufeng 5, using a Hualong One unit, was decided to be built first instead of the CAP1000 units for Lufeng 1-4 which had already been approved by the National Development and Reform Commission.[62][4] On 14 September 2022, the State Council approved construction of Lianjiang 1 & 2.[63]
Turkey
[edit]In October 2015 it was announced that technology for the İğneada Nuclear Power Plant in Turkey will come from US based firm Westinghouse Electric Company in the form of two AP1000 and two Chinese CAP1400.[64]
In 2016, the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources of the Republic of Turkey, Berat Albayrak, inspected the AP 1000 Shangdong Haiyang Nuclear Power Plant, which belongs to the China National State Nuclear Technology Corporation (SNPTC), a subsidiary of the China State Electricity Investment Corporation (SPIC).[2]
United States
[edit]Two reactors have been brought online at the Vogtle Electric Generating Plant in the state of Georgia (Units 3 & 4).
In South Carolina, two units were being constructed at the Virgil C. Summer Nuclear Generating Station (Units 2 & 3).[65] The project was abandoned in July 2017, 4 years after it began, due to Westinghouse's recent bankruptcy, major cost overruns, significant delays, and other issues.[66] The project's primary shareholder (SCANA) initially favored a plan to abandon development of Unit 3, while completing Unit 2. The plan was dependent on approval of a minority shareholder (Santee Cooper). Santee Cooper's board voted to cease all construction resulting in termination of the entire project.
All four reactors were identical and the two projects ran in parallel, with the first two reactors (Vogtle 3 and Summer 2) planned to be commissioned in 2019 and the remaining two (Vogtle 4 and Summer 3) in 2020.[67][68] After Westinghouse filed for bankruptcy protection on March 29, 2017, the construction has stalled.
On April 9, 2008, Georgia Power Company reached a contract agreement with Westinghouse and Shaw for two AP1000 reactors to be built at Vogtle.[69] The contract represents the first agreement for new nuclear development since the Three Mile Island accident in 1979.[70] The license request for the Vogtle site is based on revision 18 of the AP1000 design.[71] On February 16, 2010, President Obama announced $8.33 billion in federal loan guarantees to construct the two AP1000 units at the Vogtle plant.[72] The cost of building the two reactors was projected to be $14 billion, but has since increased to $30B with only one reactor online and the second remaining under construction.[73][74] Georgia Power, which owns 45.7% of Vogtle, delayed the projected in-service dates to the fourth quarter of 2023, or first quarter of 2024, for Unit 4.[75]
Environmental groups opposed to the licensing of the two new AP1000 reactors to be built at Vogtle filed a new petition in April 2011 asking the Nuclear Regulatory Commission's commission to suspend the licensing process until more is known about the evolving Fukushima I nuclear accidents.[76] In February 2012, nine environmental groups filed a collective challenge to the certification of the Vogtle reactor design and in March they filed a challenge to the Vogtle license. In May 2013, the U.S. Court of Appeals ruled in favor of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC).
In February 2012, the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved the two proposed reactors at the Vogtle plant.[77]
For VC Summer, a delay of at least one year and extra costs of $1.2 billion were announced in October 2014, largely due to fabrication delays. Unit 2 was then expected to be substantially complete in late 2018 or early 2019, with unit 3 about a year later.[78]
In October 2013, US energy secretary Ernest Moniz announced that China was to supply components to the US nuclear power plants under construction as part of a bilateral co-operation agreement between the two countries. Since China's State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation (SNPTC) acquired Westinghouses's AP1000 technology in 2006, it has developed a manufacturing supply chain capable of supplying international power projects. Industry analysts have highlighted a number of problems facing China's expansion in the nuclear market including continued gaps in their supply chain, coupled with Western fears of political interference and Chinese inexperience in the economics of nuclear power.[79]
On July 31, 2017, after an extensive review into the costs of constructing Units 2 and 3, South Carolina Electric and Gas decided to stop construction of the reactors at VC Summer and will file a Petition for Approval of Abandonment with the Public Service Commission of South Carolina.[80]
On October 14, 2022, Georgia Power announced that loading of nuclear fuel at Vogtle Unit 3 had begun.[81]
On April 1, 2023, Georgia Power announced that Vogtle Unit 3 had made a connection to the grid and began supplying electricity for the first time,[82] and on May 29, Unit 3 reached its maximum designed power output.[83]
Hot functional testing on Vogtle Unit 4 was completed on May 1, 2023.[84] It went into commercial operation in March 2024.[85]
In 2025, Fermi America signed an agreement with Doosan Enerbility, a South Korean nuclear equipment firm to deploy four Westinghouse AP1000 nuclear reactors as part of its data center development in Amarillo, Texas.[86]
Ukraine
[edit]On August 31, 2021, the head of SE NNEGC Energoatom Petro Kotin and the President and chief executive officer of Westinghouse Patrick Fragman signed a memorandum of cooperation for building Westinghouse AP1000 reactors in Ukraine. The contract was signed on November 22, 2021. The memorandum and contract between the two companies concerns the completion of unit 4 of the Khmelnytskyi Nuclear Power Plant with the AP1000 as well as four more power units of other nuclear power plants in Ukraine.[87][88]
Poland
[edit]Poland plans to build three AP1000 reactors in Choczewo near the Baltic Sea,[89] the site is called Lubiatowo-Kopalino.[90]
Bulgaria
[edit]Bulgaria plans to build two AP1000 reactors in Kozloduy Nuclear Power Plant.[91]
Failed bid or ventures
[edit]India
[edit]In June 2016, the US and India agreed to build six AP1000 reactors in India as part of civil nuclear deal signed by both countries.[92] Westinghouse's parent company Toshiba decided in 2017 to withdraw from the construction of nuclear power plants, following financial difficulties, leaving the proposed agreement in doubt.[93] During a visit to India in February 2020 by U.S. President Donald Trump, Westinghouse was expected to sign a new agreement with state-run Nuclear Power Corporation of India for the supply of six nuclear reactors. However, because of disagreements over liability and layout, this did not take place.[94][95]
United Kingdom
[edit]In December 2013, Toshiba, through its Westinghouse subsidiary, purchased a 60% share of NuGeneration, with the intention of building three AP1000s at Moorside near the Sellafield nuclear reprocessing site in Cumbria, England, with a target first operation date of 2024.[96]
On March 28, 2017, the Office for Nuclear Regulation (ONR, UK) issued a Design Acceptance Confirmation for the AP1000 design, stating that 51 issues identified in 2011 had received an adequate response.[97][98] However, the following day the designer, Westinghouse, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the U.S. because of $9 billion of losses from its nuclear reactor construction projects, mostly the construction of four AP1000 reactors in the U.S.[99] In 2018, following an unsuccessful attempt to sell NuGeneration Toshiba decided to liquidate the company and abandon the project.[100][101][102]
Operations
[edit]In March 2019, Sanmen Unit 2 was shut down because of a reactor coolant pump[41] defect. A replacement pump has been shipped from the U.S. by Curtiss-Wright. There have been previous problems with these pumps, with several pumps returned from China. The pumps are the largest hermetically sealed pumps used in a nuclear reactor. Westinghouse and Curtiss-Wright are in a financial dispute over responsibility for the costs of pump delivery delays.[103][104]
See also
[edit]References
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External links
[edit]- "AP1000: The Nuclear Renaissance Starts Here" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 23, 2014. Retrieved July 8, 2015. (Westinghouse AP1000 brochure).
- The AP1000 advanced 1000 MWe nuclear power plant
- AP1000 design review documents Revision 14.
- Fairewinds Associates Presentation AP1000 - extra risk of containment failure
AP1000
View on GrokipediaHistory
Development Origins
The AP1000 pressurized water reactor was developed by Westinghouse Electric Company as an advanced evolutionary design within the Generation III+ category, building directly on the earlier AP600 concept to achieve higher power output while retaining passive safety features and a compact footprint.[10] The AP600, a 600 MWe passive plant, originated in the late 1980s as part of Westinghouse's response to post-Three Mile Island regulatory demands for simplified, inherently safe reactors that minimized active components and operator intervention.[11] This smaller-scale predecessor incorporated natural circulation, gravity-driven cooling, and natural convection for decay heat removal, drawing from Westinghouse's decades of pressurized water reactor experience dating back to the 1950s Shippingport reactor and subsequent commercial deployments.[12] Westinghouse initiated the AP1000 program in the early 2000s, scaling the AP600's two-loop architecture to approximately 1,100 MWe net electrical output by optimizing core size, steam generator capacity, and thermal efficiency without proportionally expanding the containment or overall plant layout, which reduced construction costs and enhanced economic competitiveness.[13] Over $1 billion was invested in design, testing, and validation, leveraging more than 50 years of operational data from over 60 Westinghouse-supplied reactors to refine passive systems like the core makeup tanks and passive residual heat removal heat exchangers.[14] The design emphasized first-principles safety—relying on physical phenomena such as density-driven flow and condensation rather than pumps or external power—aiming for 72-hour coping without AC power or operator action following design-basis events.[1] This evolution addressed market needs for standardized, licensable reactors post-Chernobyl and amid rising energy demands, with the AP1000 incorporating modular construction techniques to shorten build times from the AP600's experimental basis.[15] Early development integrated feedback from U.S. Department of Energy advanced light water reactor programs, which funded passive safety R&D in the 1990s, ensuring the AP1000's features were empirically validated through integral tests at facilities like Oregon State University's thermal-hydraulics loop.[16] The result was a design certified by the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission in 2011, reflecting rigorous probabilistic risk assessments showing core damage frequencies below 10^{-7} per reactor-year.[10]Certification and Early Approvals
Westinghouse Electric Company submitted its application for certification of the AP1000 design to the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) on March 28, 2002, marking the first such application under the NRC's streamlined design certification process established by the Energy Policy Act of 1992.[17] The submission included detailed design control documents outlining the reactor's passive safety systems and modular construction features, intended to simplify licensing for future deployments.[3] The NRC completed its initial review and unanimously voted on December 22, 2005, to approve the final certification rule for the original AP1000 design, which was published in the Federal Register on December 30, 2005, and became effective 30 days later in January 2006.[18][19] This certification affirmed the design's compliance with NRC safety standards, including probabilistic risk assessments demonstrating core damage frequencies below regulatory thresholds, though it preceded significant post-9/11 aircraft impact requirements incorporated in later amendments.[3] Subsequent amendments to the design, submitted by Westinghouse starting in 2007 to address evolving safety evaluations and incorporate enhancements such as improved shielding and aircraft resilience, underwent further NRC scrutiny.[20] The NRC finalized its review of Design Control Document Revision 19 on August 5, 2011, culminating in a unanimous vote on December 22, 2011, to certify the amended AP1000 as the first new U.S. reactor design approved in over three decades, enabling combined construction and operating license applications for specific sites.[3][21] This amended certification resolved prior concerns over issues like concrete containment integrity and digital instrumentation reliability, validated through integrated testing and independent audits.[20]Initial Commercial Pursuits
Westinghouse Electric Company initiated commercial pursuits for the AP1000 reactor design in the mid-2000s, leveraging its advanced passive safety features to compete in international tenders amid growing global demand for Generation III+ nuclear technology. The design's first major success occurred in December 2006, when China's State Nuclear Power Technology Corporation (SNPTC) selected the AP1000 over competitors including Areva's EPR for a demonstration program comprising four units—two at Sanmen Nuclear Power Station in Zhejiang Province and two at Haiyang Nuclear Power Plant in Shandong Province.[22] Formal contracts were signed on July 24, 2007, between Westinghouse, its consortium partner The Shaw Group, and Chinese state-owned entities including SNPTC and China National Nuclear Corporation (CNNC), with an estimated value of $8 billion.[23][24] This agreement not only committed to supplying the reactors but also mandated technology transfer provisions, enabling Chinese firms to localize manufacturing of key components such as reactor coolant pumps.[25] Each unit was rated at approximately 1,100 megawatts electric, positioning the project as the inaugural commercial deployment of the AP1000 and a testbed for its modular construction approach.[26] In parallel, Westinghouse targeted the U.S. market during the early 2000s nuclear renaissance, where utilities sought advanced designs certified by the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC). Initial efforts included partnerships for early site permits (ESPs) and combined operating license (COL) applications; for instance, component supply agreements were secured in 2008 for prospective domestic plants, such as reactor coolant pumps for multiple AP1000 units.[27] Utilities like South Carolina Electric & Gas and Georgia Power advanced selections for the AP1000 at sites including Virgil C. Summer and Vogtle, with planning and preliminary contracts preceding full construction approvals in the late 2000s.[28] These pursuits underscored the AP1000's appeal for cost reduction through standardization, though they faced challenges from regulatory timelines and financing uncertainties.[29]Technical Design
Core Specifications and Components
The AP1000 is a two-loop pressurized water reactor (PWR) with a thermal power rating of 3415 megawatts thermal (MWt) and a nominal net electrical output of 1110 megawatts electric (MWe).[30] The reactor core consists of 157 fuel assemblies arranged in a 17x17 lattice, each containing 264 fuel rods made of uranium dioxide pellets clad in zircaloy tubing, along with 24 control rod guide tubes and one instrument tube per assembly.[30][31] The core design supports a 24-month refueling cycle and incorporates optimized fuel management for efficient burnup.[32] The reactor pressure vessel (RPV) houses the core and internals, measuring approximately 12 meters in length with an inner diameter of about 4 meters and weighing around 340 tons.[9][33] The vessel features an integrated head package for simplified maintenance and is constructed from low-alloy steel to withstand high pressures up to 2500 pounds per square inch.[34] Two steam generators, model-derived from Westinghouse Delta-125 designs, transfer heat from the primary coolant to the secondary side using thermally treated Alloy 690 tubes for enhanced corrosion resistance.[35] The reactor coolant system (RCS) includes two hot legs, four cold legs, four canned-motor reactor coolant pumps, and a pressurizer to maintain system pressure.[36] These components operate within a steel containment vessel with an internal diameter of 39.6 meters, designed to isolate fission products during accidents.[35] Control rods, made of hafnium or silver-indium-cadmium alloys, are inserted via bottom-mounted drive mechanisms to regulate reactivity.[31]| Key Parameter | Specification |
|---|---|
| Thermal Power | 3415 MWt[30] |
| Net Electrical Output | 1110 MWe[30] |
| Fuel Assemblies | 157[30] |
| Rods per Assembly | 264 (17x17 array)[31] |
| Loops | 2[36] |
| Steam Generators | 2 (Alloy 690 tubes) |
