Was the Reactor Vessel Damaged in the TMI Accident?

AI Thread Summary
In the TMI accident, the reactor vessel itself remained largely intact, maintaining its major containment function, although the liner and part of the carbon steel shell sustained damage due to interactions with melted core material. The reactor pressure vessel was not perforated, but significant melting and chemical reactions occurred at the baffle and core support plate. Some fuel elements did disintegrate, with the upper portions exposed and damaged, but the vessel was not completely emptied of water. Fuel particles fell to the bottom of the reactor pressure vessel, interacting with the stainless-steel liner. Overall, while there was substantial damage within the core, the reactor vessel's integrity was preserved.
vanesch
Staff Emeritus
Science Advisor
Gold Member
Messages
5,109
Reaction score
20
I would like to check something. If I understand well, in the TMI accident, the reactor vessel was never damaged (in the sense of: having lost major containment function) ? Can someone confirm this, or correct my understanding ?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
AFAIK, the reactor pressure vessel was not perforated, but the liner and part of the carbon steel shell was damaged (partially melted or chemically reacted) from the core material that melted/interacted with the baffle and core support plate. I've seen pictures from the inside and it's a mess.
 
Ah, was at some point the vessel completely emptied from water ? I thought it was just the upper part of the fuel elements that was out of the water and melted ?
 
Certainly the upper half of some of the fuel had disintegrated along with the control rod clusters (SS and Ag-In-Cd), but I also seem to remember the damage at one corner of the core.

Here is picture of the damaged TMI-2 core - http://americanhistory.si.edu/tmi/images/10.01_enlarged.jpg

and - http://americanhistory.si.edu/tmi/tmi08.htm

from - http://americanhistory.si.edu/tmi/tmi10.htm

There was some fuel particles/chunks which fell to the bottom of the RPV, and I believe they interacted with the stainless-steel liner on the bottom.

There are other pictures, but I can't seem to find them at the moment, but similar to

http://www.mpra.com/graphics/d-d_tmi2coredamage.gif

This last one shows that the one or two of the baffle plates were perforated, but the core barrel is apparently intact.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hello, I'm currently trying to compare theoretical results with an MCNP simulation. I'm using two discrete sets of data, intensity (probability) and linear attenuation coefficient, both functions of energy, to produce an attenuated energy spectrum after x-rays have passed through a thin layer of lead. I've been running through the calculations and I'm getting a higher average attenuated energy (~74 keV) than initial average energy (~33 keV). My guess is I'm doing something wrong somewhere...
Back
Top