Technical Report

Technical Report
Author: Tennessee Valley Authority
Publisher:
Total Pages: 404
Release: 1940
Genre: Electric power-plants
ISBN:

Structures for Nuclear Facilities

Structures for Nuclear Facilities
Author: M.Y.H. Bangash
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 796
Release: 2011-08-05
Genre: Science
ISBN: 3642125603

This book provides a general introduction to the topic of buildings for resistance to the effects of abnormal loadings. The structural design requirements for nuclear facilities are very unique. In no other structural system are extreme loads such as tornadoes, missile and loud interaction, earthquake effects typical in excess of any recorded historical data at a site, and postulated system accident at very low probability range explicitly, considered in design. It covers the whole spectrum of extreme load which has to be considered in the structural design of nuclear facilities and reactor buildings, the safety criteria, the structural design, the analysis of containment. Test case studies are given in a comprehensive treatment. Each major section contains a full explanation which allows the book to be used by students and practicing engineers, particularly those facing formidable task of having to design complicated building structures with unusual boundary conditions.

The Watts Bar Steam Plant

The Watts Bar Steam Plant
Author: Tennessee Valley Authority
Publisher:
Total Pages: 404
Release: 1949
Genre: Electric power production
ISBN:

The Watts Bar Steam Plant is the first fuel-burning electric power plant constructed by the TVA. The first two of its four 60,000-kilowatt generating units were placed in commercial operation in February and March 1942 at a time when the products of industry and agriculture in the valley region were critical items in the war effort. These units increased the continuous energy capacity of the TVA system to approximately 830,000 kilowatts and the system peak to about 1,100,000 kilowatts. The further addition of Cherokee, Chatuge, and Nottely Dams and the down-river units raised the continuous energy of the system to 960,000 kilowatts and the peak capability to about 1,300,000 kilowatts by the fall of 1942. The third Watts Bar Steam Plant unit began operation in February 1943 and the fourth in April 1945 - important factors in keeping ahead of system demands.

The Nickajack Project

The Nickajack Project
Author: Tennessee Valley Authority
Publisher:
Total Pages: 774
Release: 1972
Genre: Knickajack Dam
ISBN:

Nickajack Dam was built by TVA in the mid-1960's at Tennessee River mile 424.7 to replace the old and leaking Hales Bar Dam located 6.4 miles upstream. The Nickajack site is located in Marion County, Tennessee, 18 air miles west of Chattanooga and about 2 miles northwest of the junction of the Alabama-Georgia-Tennessee State lines. Historically, the ancient Indian town of Nickajack was located at Shellmound, about a mile and a half upstream from the dam on the left bank of the reservoir. Nickajack was inhabited by the Cherokees as early as 1730. In 1784 the warlike Chief Dragging Canoe, who had earlier broken with the Cherokees, launched his marauding Chickamaugas from the town and used the nearby Nickajack Cave as a hideout. Later, during the Civil War, saltpeter was mined in the cave for Confederate gunpowder.

Structural Service Book

Structural Service Book
Author: American Institute of Architects. Structural Service Dept
Publisher:
Total Pages: 252
Release: 1918
Genre: Building
ISBN: