Japan Earthquake: Nuclear Plants at Fukushima Daiichi

In summary: RCIC consists of a series of pumps, valves, and manifolds that allow coolant to be circulated around the reactor pressure vessel in the event of a loss of the main feedwater supply.In summary, the earthquake and tsunami may have caused a loss of coolant at the Fukushima Daiichi NPP, which could lead to a meltdown. The system for cooling the reactor core is designed to kick in in the event of a loss of feedwater, and fortunately this appears not to have happened yet.
  • #5,146
About explosions, I am not expert, I write only on base of observations: #1 explosion, big pressure in reactor building from venting then small, centered hydrogen explosion. #3 explosion, yest we can see it on video, first fireball from SFP location, then big explosion going up, but I don't think that it was from recriticality in SFP, I think that first explosion in SFP damaged drywell and reactor vessel so there was big release of pressure and maybe hydrogen explosion. If there would be so big explosion from SFP then there would be more very hight radioactive pieces of fuel rods, but they found only 300 and 900 mSv/h mayby from reactor cap... Also the big "up" explosion appear to be from center of building/core location not from sfp like fireball...
 
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  • #5,147
elektrownik said:
[...]If there would be so big explosion from SFP then there would be more very hight radioactive pieces of fuel rods, but they found only 300 and 900 mSv/h mayby from reactor cap... Also the big "up" explosion appear to be from center of building/core location not from sfp like fireball...

Yeah, although they apparently haven't done a complete search of the area yet (otherwise they wouldn't accidently find debris more than a month later).

What puzzles me about a "fuel-fizzle" is, the SFP is in one of the least damaged corner of the building.

biffvernon said:
Maybe there was a spike:


From http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-04-25/japan-s-terrifying-day-saw-unprecedented-exposed-fuel-rods.html

He shuttled between the offsite and the Dai-Ichi bunker. When the No. 3 reactor housing exploded on the morning of March 14, levels inside the bunker jumped as much as 12-fold, he said, checking dates and times in a pocket diary.

"Inside the bunker", yeah, gamma spike.
 
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  • #5,148
Thanks for the ideas about fission/not fission difference.

About explosion/recriticality: IMHO every explosion were hydrogen explosion and maybe containment damage, but none of them were originated directly from any SFP. It would scatter at least some fuel, and scattered/damaged fuel rods would cause much more serious contamination nearby than the actually observed. It would end in Chernobyl-style radiation zones around the affected unit (with much stronger Uranium and Plutonium presence).

However low scale pulsing recriticality by Tokaimura-style cannot be excluded. But: it cannot be proved too. IMHO.

About the picture of blue flash: fresh spent fuel is glowing even without recriticality, so without further observations it proves nothing. Is the glowing still visible? Has it happened any more times? Any similar observations from satellites, maybe?
 
  • #5,149
The idea of "nuclear explosion" or I should say massive recricitality is interesting, also in case of Chernobyl and Fukushima. For example we have research reactor in Poland, science many years it was runing on 80% enriched uranium, from the last refuling they change it to 36%, I think that 80% wouldn't be safe in case of accident... 80% is enought for nuclear bomb
 
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  • #5,150
elektrownik said:
The idea of "nuclear explosion" or I should say massive recricitality is interesting, also in case of Chernobyl and Fukushima. For example we have research reactor in Poland, science many years it was runing on 80% enriched uranium, from the last refuling they change it to 20%, I think that 80% wouldn't be safe in case of accident... 80% is enought for nuclear bomb

It is terrible to hear what experiments are done in europe. Who will take the responsibility if something happens? Is this military or private stuff?
 
  • #5,151
I don't think that fuel was ejected from SFPs. It would give very hight radiation, not 300 or 900mSv, and for example, if there is ~1500 fuel racks in #4 sfp, (or #3) then for example if only 10% fuel would be ejected it would give us 150 fuel racks so they would be everywhere, we could see them on thermal images and also radiation from them would kill workers very fast.
 
  • #5,152
Rive said:
About the picture of blue flash: fresh spent fuel is glowing even without recriticality, so without further observations it proves nothing. Is the glowing still visible? Has it happened any more times? Any similar observations from satellites, maybe?

the cherenkov light is still visible (a faint blue shadow on the webcam pics).
this is the normal glow of a (outdoor) spent fuel pool. i would worry, if it is NOT visible (that could mean, the pool is dry)
 
  • #5,153
Samy24 said:
It is terrible to hear what experiments are done in europe. Who will take the responsibility if something happens? Is this military or private stuff?
The reactor (only one in Poland) is old (from 70s) and it is research reactor, it have small power (30MW) but it generate 80% more neutrons than normal reactor. It is not military or private, it owner is government. Also this reactor is only 30km from Warsaw (capital of Poland)... Good that they change this fuel from 80 to 36%, they fuel is from Russia...
You can see some pictures here: http://iea.cyf.gov.pl/nowa/index.php?option=com_wmtsimpleflashgallery&Itemid=93
And here video:
 
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  • #5,154
Samy24 said:
It is terrible to hear what experiments are done in europe. Who will take the responsibility if something happens? Is this military or private stuff?
Low power research and/or training reactors (up to dozen megawatts) are 'common', even in the US. If you google 'TRIGA' or 'TRIGA flash' you can see some really nice vids about them.

80% enrichment is unusual, but such fuels are being withdrawn for now and used only special military or scientific reactors AFAIK.
 
  • #5,155
bytepirate said:
the cherenkov light is still visible (a faint blue shadow on the webcam pics).
this is the normal glow of a (outdoor) spent fuel pool. i would worry, if it is NOT visible (that could mean, the pool is dry)

This is from the evening of April 1. Play 00:42 to 00:45 and you'll see the glow in the dark spot. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CtgRBpgbZww&feature=related. I believe it's been visible on a few other occasions. Is that the SW corner of #4?
 
  • #5,157
Rive said:
Low power research and/or training reactors (up to dozen megawatts) are 'common', even in the US. If you google 'TRIGA' or 'TRIGA flash' you can see some really nice vids about them.

80% enrichment is unusual, but such fuels are being withdrawn for now and used only special military or scientific reactors AFAIK.

Maybe it is a research breeder reactor? 20% Plutonium and 80 % Uranium is normal. Many countries experiment with this. So it must be safe.
 
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  • #5,158
Samy24 said:
It is terrible to hear what experiments are done in europe. Who will take the responsibility if something happens? Is this military or private stuff?

http://www.iea.cyf.gov.pl/index_ang.html

http://www.iea.cyf.gov.pl/historia_ang.html
 
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  • #5,159
Samy24 said:
Maybe it is a research breeder reactor? 20% Plutonium and 80 % Uranium is normal. Many countries experiment with this. So it must be safe.

No, there is no plutonium, only uranium.
 
  • #5,160
SteveElbows said:
I hate the sort of headlines such stories generate, talking about 'rising levels'. Without knowing whether the robot(s) visited exactly the same locations at reactor 1 as they did on their first visit, we don't know if anything has risen, or whether the robots just stumbled upon a more contaminated area this time.

Either way its not a good number, but numbers even higher than this would not surprise me as they slowly explore further.

These sorts of numbers are also a reason not to stretch the complaints of PR and coverups too far. In theory there may be plenty we are not being told but they have also released plenty of info that was not good news by any stretch of the imagination. The explosions somewhat reduced the temptation to do a complete and utter coverup, and although I am not overjoyed with the quality of data that is available to us, its a lot more than I might have imagined we would get.

"The explosions somewhat reduced the temptation to do a complete and utter coverup, and although I am not overjoyed with the quality of data that is available to us, its a lot more than I might have imagined we would get."

I don't think a 'cover-up' is the way most Japanese would perceive selective information dissemination. I think that most would either believe, or like to believe that information is controlled in the best interests of workers, people displaced, long term economic factors and the desire not to bring nuclear contamination shame to those exposed.

There are many Japanese who never reported suspected radiological effects upon they're children (Hiroshima, Nagasaki) because of stigma. There are some in Japan who might believe these events to be punishment for arrogance.

If there are errors in the degree of timely reporting of events, it most likely has to do with what (persons in the position of responsibility) feel is the path of least harm. TEPCO has no financial future, so no motive to be irresponsible. Their employees, however, are aware of their future financial difficulties and never forget that almost all have suffered personal loss. If errors did not occur in this situation I would wonder if they (TEPCO personnel) were human.

I make no criticism of you Steve, but thought that we all could apply some perspective to our analysis'. Many errors are made when one faces enemies on multiple fronts...
 
  • #5,161
Rive said:
Thanks for the ideas about fission/not fission difference.

About explosion/recriticality: IMHO every explosion were hydrogen explosion and maybe containment damage, but none of them were originated directly from any SFP. It would scatter at least some fuel, and scattered/damaged fuel rods would cause much more serious contamination nearby than the actually observed. It would end in Chernobyl-style radiation zones around the affected unit (with much stronger Uranium and Plutonium presence).

There's nothing visible on the IR pictures. Spent fuel is quite hot. Particles thrown out of the SFP are either very small, or very few.
The IR pictures show only the SFP itself to be hot, nothing around it. Ballistic fuel would likely disintegrate and spread pellets all over the place, leaving a lot of traces around the SFP (and not "just" 1 mile away).
 
  • #5,162
Questions: What is radiation in core at max reactor power, what is radiation in core after shutdown, what would be radiation of fuel rod/set from sfp, without water or any other protection ?
 
  • #5,163
PietKuip said:
"Damage" was a highly misleading euphemism. That is what I come to understand now.
Not to me. As a nuclear engineer, fuel designer and fuel analyst, damage simply means 'Failure!', particularly in the context of an 'accident'. It means something happened that shouldn't have, so it is a failure - a violation of the prime directive - 'Thou shall not allow fission products into the environment!'. In the context of core damage, that is a BIG deal, and I would expect cladding breach (fuel failure).

More importantly is the fraction of core that has breached/ruptured cladding, and for that one has to go look at the activities being measured.
 
  • #5,164
Astronuc said:
Not to me. As a nuclear engineer, fuel designer and fuel analyst, damage simply means 'Failure!', particularly in the context of an 'accident'. It means something happened that shouldn't have, so it is a failure - a violation of the prime directive - 'Thou shall not allow fission products into the environment!'. In the context of core damage, that is a BIG deal, and I would expect cladding breach (fuel failure).

More importantly is the fraction of core that has breached/ruptured cladding, and for that one has to go look at the activities being measured.
My interpretation (I am not in the industry) of "damaged fuel rods" would be rather conservative. It could mean that they were bent or corroded. A damaged car can still be functional: a scratch, a dent. Maybe worse. But one would not describe a burnt-out car wreck as "a damaged car".

Of course, all the emissions meant that volatiles had escaped, so they would have burst open, I realized that. But I had not realized that it meant that rods had desintegrated, that their fuel pellets had fallen out.
 
  • #5,165
ascot317 said:
We're not in the 80ies or 90ies anymore, making information available to masses is the easiest thing to do. In this situation, there's absolutely no reason to withhold information. We're beyond the stage of possible mass panic.

There have been decades of collusion between the nuclear industry, regulators, and the media in Japan. There are ample reasons having nothing to do with mass panic for them to want to withold information.

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-17/japan-s-nuclear-disaster-caps-decades-of-faked-safety-reports-accidents.html

People are fired from their jobs if they dare to question the official company line.

http://japanfocus.org/-Makiko-Segawa/3516

M. Bachmeier said:
I don't think a 'cover-up' is the way most Japanese would perceive selective information dissemination. I think that most would either believe, or like to believe that information is controlled in the best interests of workers, people displaced, long term economic factors and the desire not to bring nuclear contamination shame to those exposed.

There are many Japanese who never reported suspected radiological effects upon they're children (Hiroshima, Nagasaki) because of stigma. There are some in Japan who might believe these events to be punishment for arrogance.

If there are errors in the degree of timely reporting of events, it most likely has to do with what (persons in the position of responsibility) feel is the path of least harm.

Wow. They are certainly under tremendous pressure from many sides. I do not agree that their culture absolves irresponsible actions on their part in the name of some "path of least harm". If shame is necessary then it needs to be felt, and strongly, by those responsible. They should be shamed where appropriate. They NEED to be shamed where appropriate.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/27/world/asia/27collusion.html?_r=1&hpw=&pagewanted=all

Does anyone think TEPCO's plan to remediate the situation over the next 3, 6 and 9 months is realistic? They barely got off of square one and found their plan to fill Unit 1's containment with water may be compromised by a leak. They are only now coming to the realization that Unit 4's SFP is probably leaking.

Here is what Japanese leaders have to fear: that at some point an international consensus develops that they are no longer capable of managing the ongoing problems on their own. At some point, perhaps, the international community may find it desirable to take away the keys to the car, so to speak, and TELL them how to proceed with the cleanup.

Patience does not last forever, and Japans's political and industrial institutions are well aware of that. The longer they are able to prolong a "fog of war" type atmosphere surrounding this fiasco, the longer they can put off their day of reckoning.
 
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  • #5,166
Astronuc said:
Not to me. As a nuclear engineer, fuel designer and fuel analyst, damage simply means 'Failure!', particularly in the context of an 'accident'. It means something happened that shouldn't have, so it is a failure - a violation of the prime directive - 'Thou shall not allow fission products into the environment!'. In the context of core damage, that is a BIG deal, and I would expect cladding breach (fuel failure).

More importantly is the fraction of core that has breached/ruptured cladding, and for that one has to go look at the activities being measured.

Which I assume to mean fuel breaking up, but not melting. I'm sure it is not possible from the data (questionable, instruments and all, as it is) to know that melting has occurred? It may be sitting in lower containment, but not core melt? However, the events around #3 are disturbing and unresolved.
 
  • #5,168
TCups said:
Question for Astronuc et al:

As I think about this, if the shape and depth of the SFP could focus the blast into a vertical mushroom, then the shape and depth of the SFP, particularly if there were water covering all or part of the spent fuel would also tend to focus the force of an explosion toward the bottom of the SFP. Might it be that either a blast from the primary containment or a blast from hydrogen + air in the service floor, "amplified" by the geometry of the SFP and efficiently transmitted by water in the SFP did indeed exert a hydrostatic, crushing force on the spent fuel assemblies?

This wouldn't be a shaped HE charge crushing two subcritical hemispheres of plutonium, but on a much larger scale, a large explosion crushing several tons of spent fuel racks -- at least in theory, the hypothesis of a sudden criticality in the SFP doesn't seem too far fetched to a lay person.
The fuel in the SFP is 'spent', in addition to the fact that is started with low enrichment. The available reactivity is low because it is 'spent'. The rate a which positive reactivity could be inserted is relatively low, so a prompt critical event is unlikely. Coming out of a subcritical configuration with a very low neutron source, rather than starting at a critical configuration, I don't believe the configuration in the SFP supports prompt supercritical.

The explosions at Units 1 and 3 occurred well before the pools would have dried out, and it is more likely the hydrogen came from oxidation of the cladding in the cores.

I don't see the explosions being nuclear.

If the pools had dried out, there certainly wouldn't be any moderator to allow criticality. If there was water covering the fuel at the time of the explosion, the pressure in the pool would have been more of an increase in hydrstatic pressure, and that would crush the fuel into a more critical configuration.

Re-criticality would have been a concern AFTER the hydrogen explosions, when they TEPCO was reintroducing water into the SFPs. However, I would have expected them to borate that water.

All I see are chemical (H2+O2) explosions, not nuclear.
 
  • #5,169
MiceAndMen said:
At some point, perhaps, the international community may find it desirable to take away the keys to the car, so to speak, and TELL them how to proceed with the cleanup.

Patience does not last forever, and Japans's political and industrial institutions are well aware of that. The longer they are able to prolong a "fog of war" type atmosphere surrounding this fiasco, the longer they can put off their day of reckoning.
I see the international nuclear industrial complex colluding with them. The Swedish nuclear authority says that the French regulator was out of line to regard Fukushima as an INES level 6 accident when the Japanese said 4 (or later 5).

It needs a British professor Busby to produce alarming graphs of uranium spreading out over the Pacific from tabular EPA data. The EPA that does not want to monitor the radioactivity in fish.

The IAEA (with its Japanese boss) is completely passive.
 
  • #5,170
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  • #5,171
clancy688 said:
So, let's take the following example for dummies like me:

Let's guess there's an RPV with only one fuel rod. Now there have been severe cooling problems. The fuel rod was uncovered for a short amount of time and has oxidated and ruptured. We don't know if it indeed has molten.
But because of the constant cooling, fission products such as iodine, cesium, cobalt, strontium etc. have been washed out and are now somewhere in the RPV, the dry- and wetwell.
CAMS is now measuring extremely high radiation, indicating that 30% of the radiating inventory is somewhere in the drywell and 5% somewhere in the wetwell.
Overall it doesn't necessarily mean that the fuel has molten. It's only indicating, that the fuel cladding ruptured and fission products can escape from the fuel rods?

Back to Fukushima: So 55% of Unit 1s core inventory of fission products is not contained by the fuel rods anymore but swimming in the cooling water? But there's NOT 55% of the core gone, like molten down? Or at least, those numbers do not indicate or show whether or how much of the core has molten?

You have it as I understand it. And if you have used the SRVs venting steam from the RPV to the suppression pool some of that radioactivity went along. And then there are vacuum breakers that may have returned some of that radioactivity to the drywell outside the RPV and much less shielded from the CAMS detectors. If there has been a break in piping or instrument lines outside the RPV, the liquid and steam released directly into containment releases more radioactivity into containment. That will increase pressure in the drywell and spill over into the vent lines to the torus. And all that can happen while most of the core metal and core pellets remain inside the RPV. And hydrogen gas can go everywhere the fission products do.
 
  • #5,172
M. Bachmeier said:
Which I assume to mean fuel breaking up, but not melting. I'm sure it is not possible from the data (questionable, instruments and all, as it is) to know that melting has occurred? It may be sitting in lower containment, but not core melt? However, the events around #3 are disturbing and unresolved.
Yes - I expect the fuel oxidized like heck, hydrided and broke apart. It might be rubble, but didn't necessarily melt - particularly if the actually had water in the bottom third of the core.

Jorge Stolti's figures are interesting. The plot the recorded/reported water levels. I don't necessarily trust them, because I don't know the state of the instrumentation.

If there was water, that precludes melting in the bottom of the core, and particularly the RPV.

However, I would imagine close to half, if not more, of the fuel is damaged to the point of cladding failure in Units 1, 2 and 3.
 
  • #5,173
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  • #5,174
Astronuc said:
I would very much like to be there in person.

Is that supposed to be ironic...? You saw the radiation maps. High radiation hotspots all over the plant. And now there's a plume... could be fog, could be a giant insect swarm, could be pure cesium... ^^;
 
  • #5,175
Astronuc said:
I would very much like to be there in person.
My wife and I would very much like you to stay right here state-side so maybe we can see you and yours in years to come.
 
  • #5,176
PietKuip said:
My interpretation (I am not in the industry) of "damaged fuel rods" would be rather conservative. It could mean that they were bent or corroded. A damaged car can still be functional: a scratch, a dent. Maybe worse. But one would not describe a burnt-out car wreck as "a damaged car".

Of course, all the emissions meant that volatiles had escaped, so they would have burst open, I realized that. But I had not realized that it meant that rods had desintegrated, that their fuel pellets had fallen out.
Yes - damage means some abnormality - a dent or ding - such that one cannot use the fuel anymore because it's outside of design spec. A damage fuel rod could be corroded, but still hermetic (sealed), but one would not use it, because it might fail. Similarly, a damaged fuel assembly means that it got dinged/dented, therefore is out of spec, and could lead to failure if used, so it's gone. Damage implies that a fuel rod or fuel assembly may not be able to perform its intended function.

Fuel failure means the cladding is breached - and fission products have escaped the first barrier between them and the environment. The industry takes fuel failures, even one, very seriously.

Core damage is a more significant context. It is a gravely serious matter, and then one would asked how damaged? How many failures? What's the off-gas and coolant activity? . . . . That's a very BIG deal.
 
  • #5,177
clancy688 said:
Is that supposed to be ironic...? You saw the radiation maps. High radiation hotspots all over the plant. And now there's a plume... could be fog, could be a giant insect swarm, could be pure cesium... ^^;
No - I'm not being ironic. If TEPCO invited me, I'd be on-site ASAP.
 
  • #5,178
NUCENG said:
You have it as I understand it. And if you have used the SRVs venting steam from the RPV to the suppression pool some of that radioactivity went along. And then there are vacuum breakers that may have returned some of that radioactivity to the drywell outside the RPV and much less shielded from the CAMS detectors. If there has been a break in piping or instrument lines outside the RPV, the liquid and steam released directly into containment releases more radioactivity into containment. That will increase pressure in the drywell and spill over into the vent lines to the torus. And all that can happen while most of the core metal and core pellets remain inside the RPV. And hydrogen gas can go everywhere the fission products do.

I have never heard of a BWR or BWFF (Boiling Water Fossil Fuel) producing a directional force or equivalent to what happened at #3?

I've been present to see, first hand, what happens in an ordinary water boiler accident and am just lacking some explanation for #3 explosive sounds and two steam expansions? (five sounds)...
 
  • #5,179
Astronuc said:
Yes - damage means some abnormality - a dent or ding - such that one cannot use the fuel anymore because it's outside of design spec. A damage fuel rod could be corroded, but still hermetic (sealed), but one would not use it, because it might fail. Similarly, a damaged fuel assembly means that it got dinged/dented, therefore is out of spec, and could lead to failure if used, so it's gone. Damage implies that a fuel rod or fuel assembly may not be able to perform its intended function.

Fuel failure means the cladding is breached - and fission products have escaped the first barrier between them and the environment. The industry takes fuel failures, even one, very seriously.

Core damage is a more significant context. It is a gravely serious matter, and then one would asked how damaged? How many failures? What's the off-gas and coolant activity? . . . . That's a very BIG deal.

Have I understood you correctly?
You believe that there was no damage to the nuclei in the reactors, and therefore no meltdown?
 
  • #5,180
Astronuc said:
The fuel in the SFP is 'spent', in addition to the fact that is started with low enrichment. The available reactivity is low because it is 'spent'. The rate a which positive reactivity could be inserted is relatively low, so a prompt critical event is unlikely. Coming out of a subcritical configuration with a very low neutron source, rather than starting at a critical configuration, I don't believe the configuration in the SFP supports prompt supercritical.

The explosions at Units 1 and 3 occurred well before the pools would have dried out, and it is more likely the hydrogen came from oxidation of the cladding in the cores.

I don't see the explosions being nuclear.

If the pools had dried out, there certainly wouldn't be any moderator to allow criticality.
Would a fast-neutron chain reaction in the plutonium be absolutely excluded?
 

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