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TBM Costing Lessons from Recent ITER Activities. Scott Willms Los Alamos National Laboratory Presented at INL August 10, 2005. Outline of preparing ITER TEP scope/schedule/budget. Establish mission - functional specifications Establish key quantitative design specifications
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TBM Costing Lessons from Recent ITER Activities Scott Willms Los Alamos National Laboratory Presented at INL August 10, 2005
Outline of preparing ITER TEP scope/schedule/budget • Establish mission- functional specifications • Establish key quantitative design specifications • Assess the state-of-the-art-Make technology choices • Consider the phases of the project-conceptual, preliminary, final • Identify key interfaces • Establish basic organization • Establish work elements (beginnings of work breakdown structure) • Completeness-Categories explicitly included in the TEP procurement package • Establish WBS • Costing • Schedule • Expenditure profile • Cost savings • Risk • Risk results in cost • Finalize package Note that this is iterative process
Establish mission- functional specifications • What is the qualitative purpose of the system? • Example: TEP must • Recover hydrogen isotopes from impurities such as water and methane • Deliver purified, mixed hydrogen isotopes to the ISS • Dispose of non-tritium species • Elements of TBM mission statement • Fundamental data collection? • Testing of interfaces? • Integrated operation?
Establish key quantitative design specifications • The major design specifications can be a relatively short list • TEP Design Specifications • Lose no more than 1 Ci/day to the Vent Detritiation System • Overall decontamination factor (DF) of 108 • Process gas from 450 s and 3000 s pulses at a flowrate of 150 SLPM (253 Pam3/s).
Assess the state-of-the-art/make technology choices Caper-FzK PMR-US JFCU-JA(US)
Prepare key system drawings -TEP process flow diagram (preliminary design)
TEP- Process and instrumentation diagram (preliminary design)
Identify key interfaces • Who sends something to us and what are they sending? • Who are we sending stuff to and what are we sending? • TEP examples • TEP accepts gas from the torus vacuum pumping system • TEP sends pure DT to the isotope separation system and to the vent detritiation system • Tritium plant sends material to fueling, etc.
Establish basic organization • What are the key roles and responsibilities? • Who needs to be involved? • TEP examples • The ITER International Team is • The design authority (adopting specifications) • Change control • Responsible for the overall success of the project • A technical team is responsible for • Technical expertise • Recommend design and design changes (specifications) • Interfacing with other systems • A fabrication entity (e.g. industry) is responsible for • Fabrication to design specifications
Establish work elements (beginnings of work breakdown structure)
Work Elements-Categories explicitly included in the TEP procurement package • Overhead costs • Detailed design (limited to manufacturing design) • Purchasing/fabrication • Factory testing • Packaging and transportation • On-site installation/assembly • On-site testing • Documentation and QA • Technical supervision • Recommended spares • AFI (Allowance for Indeterminants)
Work Elements-Categories not explicitly included in the TEP procurement package • Contingency • Supporting R&D • Detailed design (pre-manufacturing design) • Engineering follow: Preparing, awarding and following procurement package contracts • Installation • Design basis documentation • Design integration • Cost savings • Special categories: For TEP FMEA results need to be incorporated into design
Cost estimation methods and sources • Conceptual/preliminary design • Scale from existing experience • Compare to similar estimates from others • Estimate is rough and has large contingency • Preliminary/final design • Full bottoms up estimate • Industrial bids • Estimate is more accurate and has lower contingency
When developing schedule consider • Consider if this is a “first-of-a-kind” or “nth-of-a-kind” system • Consider all elements in WBS • But also consider many other things that take time • Staffing • training program completion • completion of operator training (five shifts) • readiness reviews • corrective actions • nuclear facility license completion • tritium inventory management systems • Calibrations • control system tuning • as-built performance characterization • as-built drawing completion • operating procedure preparation, shake-down, revision and publication • alarm/interlock testing • rework/replacement of systems • incorporation of Tritium Plant control into overall ITER control system • etc.
Expenditure profile • With cost and schedule done, an expenditure profile can be prepared
Cost savings • There may be opportunities to save cost by • Revising specifications • Leveraging with existing work • Moving the work elsewhere (e.g. to the operations phase)
Risk • Every project has risk (i.e. likelihood that project goals will not be met on schedule and budget) • There is relatively straight forward risk • Rain • Key individuals quit • Supplier delays • Contingency for n-th of a kind construction is 5-10% • And there is more complicated risk • Various possibilities • We tried this once on a lab bench and it worked • We’re pretty sure this technology will work • We’re sure we can make it work, but we don’t yet know how • We have no idea how to make this work • Contingency for first-of-a-kind work might typically run 20-50% • (Apollo contingency ended up being 100%)
Risk results in cost. Risk can be managed • List technologies and processes needed for the project • Identify the risk associated with each step • Where risk is unacceptable it must be mitigated by: • Perform R&D (adds cost) • Design around it (adds cost if redesign is needed) • Add contingency (adds cost) • In this way risk is “quantified” as additional cost to the project • Note: Fundamental R&D drives to discovery. Project R&D drives to minimizing risk so that project goals are met. While both are called R&D, the two types of R&D are quite different.
Summary of preparing ITER TEP scope/schedule/budget • Establish mission- functional specifications • Establish key quantitative design specifications • Assess the state-of-the-art-Make technology choices • Consider the phases of the project-conceptual, preliminary, final • Identify key interfaces • Establish basic organization • Establish work elements (beginnings of work breakdown structure) • Completeness-Categories explicitly included in the TEP procurement package • Establish WBS • Costing • Schedule • Expenditure profile • Cost savings • Risk • Risk results in cost • Finalize package Note that this is iterative process