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Reactor Vessel IntegrityVessels that house reactors are bombarded with nuclear materials and must be constructed of materials that can withstand exposure to neutron irradiation and heat (the thermal environment) that occurs during fission. Licensees are required to establish surveillance programs for their reactor vessels that meet certain standards. During years of reactor operational experience licensees have sometimes experienced problems maintaining optimum reactor vessel integrity. From this experience, NRC has accumulated information about the integrity of reactor vessels and, in 1992, developed a reactor vessel integrity database (RVID). On this page: Source of the InformationNRC developed the RVID following staff review of licensee responses to Generic Letter (GL) 92-01, Revision 1, "Reactor Vessel Structural Integrity." The database reflects the current status of reactor vessel integrity for each commercial nuclear power plant in the United States. The data are consolidated in a convenient and accessible manner. The RVID summarizes the properties of the reactor vessel beltline materials for each plant. PurposeThe staff uses the RVID to review information submitted by licensees. The reviewers note applicable data and information revisions before updating the RVID. Access to the DataStaff. Updates to the RVID are internal until the staff determines that sufficient amounts of new surveillance data, chemistry data, or fluence evaluations warrant a new release to the public. The application version and "last data update" date are designated for each release. The RVID is a FoxPro application that executes on Microsoft Windows computers. Only a few NRC staff members may update the database. Public. For ease of distribution to licensees and the public, the database is provided as four downloads called virtual diskettes (each download will fit onto a diskette), which are available via the RVID page. Users of the publicly distributed database application, however, cannot change or update RVID data. If a licensee's data or information does not agree with the data in the RVID, the licensee can submit letters to the NRC that outline the discrepancies. Last UpdateThe updated RVID virtual diskettes were last released for public distribution in July 2000. The NRC staff continues to note data and information revisions for internal database updates in preparing for the future releases. Related Information
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