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.
  • #4,061
Has anyone had the time to take an informed look at the TEPCO road map?
It reads as a logical wish sequence, but the specifics of how anything gets done are scant.
Looking at the rubble strewn site it is difficult to reconcile the three months expectation for a clean up phase with the means thus far deployed.
Three decades might be more correct at the current rate of progress.
 
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  • #4,062
TCups said:
It is hard to escape the conclusion that water flashing to steam occurred at Bldg 3 and that the source of the explosion in Bldg 4 had to ultimately be the spent and un-spent fuel in the SFP.

Hi,

Just two points to consider:

- by the look of the third floor (from top) it's interesting that the panels were blown off right and left around the SFP - but not where the SFP is. Was it the SFP itself what protected those panels from the blastwave, or just there was not enough place between the SFP and the wall to generate enough blast power?

- there is a door (I don't know where it leads) on the FHM of U4 - the door is barely bent, but the wall and pillars opposite the door are completely gone. How is such a thing possible?
 
  • #4,063
PietKuip said:
Maybe the want to flood the drywell because there are holes in connections that are at or below the level of the fuel rods? Holes that prevent increasing the water level?

That was the reason offered on the news tonight (NHK), for what it's worth.
 
  • #4,064
How this is possible ? Unit 4 core location is 5C more than SFP, how empty core can be so hot ?
This can't be water from SFP becouse it temperature is bigger than this in SFP.
This shouldn't be exploded fuel from SFP becouse tepco tell us that fuel is not much damaged.
[PLAIN]http://img191.imageshack.us/img191/6088/sssssssd.jpg
 
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  • #4,065
TCups said:
As for Unit 4, the shattered upper mast of the FHM seems to indicate a violent event in the SFP with lots of energy transferred to the mast, but perhaps not so much damage to the remainder of the FHM.

I'm not convinced the mast is broken. Several views from around the 3:00 mark onwards in the following video suggest, to me at least, that the upper part of the mast ends naturally there. The end looks too flat and clean to be a break:

 
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  • #4,066
rowmag said:
I'm not convinced the mast is broken. Several views from around the 3:00 mark onwards in the following video suggest, to me at least, that the upper part of the mast ends naturally there. The end looks too flat and clean to be a break:



Yes, I think you may be right. At first glance, I had misinterpreted a superimposed wire as a crack. So it was not blasted away and cracked, but in any case, it appears that the lower end of the mast is missing.
 
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  • #4,067
artax said:
Early on I heard a value of six inches, or 150mm, but I later heard 100mm thick, however the thermal conductivity of steel would mean temperature of insid and out would be the same unless there was a very rapid temp change and you took measurements within a few tens of seconds.

PietKuip said:
The thermal resistance of such a length of steel is quite high, you can keep one end of a steel rod in your hand while the other end is hot. Also, the content of the RPV has a large heat capacity. Flooding the outside with cooling water is not an effective way of removing the heat generated inside. I am too lazy right now the look up the numbers (what thermal power is supposed to be generated a month after scramming, the surface area of the RPV, the thermal conductivity), but my gut feeling is that the equilibrium temperature inside would come out too high if this were the only method of cooling.

Maybe the want to flood the drywell because there are holes in connections that are at or below the level of the fuel rods? Holes that prevent increasing the water level?

Sorry, I was mixing up what you originally had in mind - I was thinking they were flooding the exterior of the containment vessel (probably 1/2 to 3/4 inch steel); seems you are saying they are flooding the containment, in that case the thickness of the reactor vessel (probably 4 to 8 inch steel) is pertinent. External cooling of the vessel is not an unknown idea for severe accidents with core damage.

On the other hand, you may be correct about leak paths preventing vessel filling. Someone has mentioned the recirc pump seals as potential leak paths. Again, I apologize for confusing your post.
 
  • #4,068
DSamsom said:
Apparantly NISA announced that the reactor builing No 4 is now flooded in 5 meters of water. Anyone to explain this? Do they mean the SFP?

It is not the SFP, it is in the basement. Source unknown, possibly left over from the tsunami, according to the news tonight (Houdou Station).
 
  • #4,069
elektrownik said:
How this is possible ? Unit 4 core location is 5C more than SFP, how empty core can be so hot ?
This can't be water from SFP becouse it temperature is bigger than this in SFP.
This shouldn't be exploded fuel from SFP becouse tepco tell us that fuel is not much damaged.
[PLAIN]http://img191.imageshack.us/img191/6088/sssssssd.jpg[/QUOTE]

https://www.physicsforums.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=34539&d=1303130979

Well, the SFP and the empty reactor vessel are connected by the fuel transfer chute. It also seems logical that the gate to the equipment pool would be open, too.

The thermal signal from SFP4 is partially obscured by the FHM, the overhead crane and debris on the roof. The open reactor vessel is partially obscured by the roof girders. The equipment pool is partially obscured by a portion of the damaged roof.

The question might be "How hot is the SFP under the FHM?" I think perhaps we see only the southwest corner of the SFP. How likely is it that the small portion of the SFP seen in the southwest corner would be the hottest spot in the pool? Still, the temperature in the reactor vessel seems relatively warm.
 
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  • #4,070
Rive said:
Hi,

Just two points to consider:

- by the look of the third floor (from top) it's interesting that the panels were blown off right and left around the SFP - but not where the SFP is. Was it the SFP itself what protected those panels from the blastwave, or just there was not enough place between the SFP and the wall to generate enough blast power?

- there is a door (I don't know where it leads) on the FHM of U4 - the door is barely bent, but the wall and pillars opposite the door are completely gone. How is such a thing possible?

Rive: Can you please link to the images you reference? Thanks.
 
  • #4,071
Sorry, my english is verry bad. I use my german. maybe the translater works fine. ;=))

1. Hatten die Explosionen genug Kraft, um das Wasser aus den Abklingbecken zu ziehen?

2. Wie lange standen die Abklingbecken nach den Explosionen trocken?

Danke
 
  • #4,072
default.user said:
Sorry, my english is verry bad. I use my german. maybe the translater works fine. ;=))

1. Hatten die Explosionen genug Kraft, um das Wasser aus den Abklingbecken zu ziehen?

2. Wie lange standen die Abklingbecken nach den Explosionen trocken?

Danke

1. The explosions had enough force to pull the water from the cooling pond (spent fuel pool)?

At Building 3, yes. It is probable that the explosion was steam, and the steam was the vaporized water leaving the cooling pool.

At Building 4, it is not known with certainty, but it is possible and perhaps probable. The spent and un-spent fuel in the pool would have to be partially uncovered to become damaged and to then produce the hydrogen gas. It was hydrogen gas that most likely caused the explosion in Building 4.

2. As long as (For how long were) the cooling ponds were dry after the explosions?

I do not know, but perhaps someone can give a better answer. Attempts were made soon after the explosions at Building 3 and 4 to add water by helicopter drops and by spraying with fire hoses, but I do not know how long it actually took to again cover the fuel in the spent fuel pools.
 
  • #4,073
1. The explosions were over the SFP / Die Explosionen waren über (oben) den Abklingbecken

The explosions were of short duration / Die Explosionen dauern nicht so lang (sie hatten kurze Zeitdauern).

2. That is not clear / Das ist nicht klar (oder daß ist unbekannt).
 
  • #4,074
Danke sehr.

Thank you for the answers.
 
  • #4,075
TCups said:
Rive: Can you please link to the images you reference? Thanks.

Sorry.
The first attachment below about the U4: the two wall sections closest to the SFP (distance could be about one meter or so between the wall and the SFP) are OK, the next to them to left gone. On the other wall every sections are gone, but the first three, which has the pool and the containment just a few meters back are with less damage than the rest as I see. I don't know the source of the picture.

The second attachment about the knocked door is from the sample-taking process video.
 

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  • #4,077
Rive said:
Sorry.
The first attachment below about the U4: the two wall sections closest to the SFP (distance could be about one meter or so between the wall and the SFP) are OK, the next to them to left gone. On the other wall every sections are gone, but the first three, which has the pool and the containment just a few meters back are with less damage than the rest as I see. I don't know the source of the picture.

The second attachment about the knocked door is from the sample-taking process video.

See MiceAndMen's post #4045, with this diagram linked:
http://i.min.us/ikukv6.jpg

Looks more like about 3 meters separation on the south side if the diagram is representative of the construction at Fukushima.
 
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  • #4,078
TCups said:
See MiceAndMen's post #4045, with this diagram linked:
http://i.min.us/ikukv6.jpg

Looks more like about 3 meters separation on the south side if the diagram is representative of the construction at Fukushima.

I think the other link of that post is more useful in this case: that space to the south wall mostly full (or, at least, closed from both side) with the SFP-machinery (skimmer tanks and so). But I can be wrong with the distances.
 
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  • #4,080
April 18 update from TEPCO

http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/nu/fukushima-np/f1/images/f12np-gaiyou_e.pdf

Event summary
Estimated activity release
Seismic data
Plans to move forward

TEPCO summary of roadmap
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/betu11_e/images/110417e12.pdf
from - http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/11041707-e.html

Roadmap for Fukushima Daiichi restoration
18 April 2011
http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/RS-Roadmap_for_Fukushima_Daiichi_restoration-1804114.html
 
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  • #4,081
TCups said:
Hmmm . . .

The northeast corner of Bldg 4 is odd, for sure. I don't believe it was the whole roof that lifted -- maybe the northeast corner might have had that effect. But if so, why?! What happened in the northeast corner of that building.

@liamdavis:

Maybe you could lend your expertise here, sir. Also, can you comment on your assessment of the possibility that the concussion and shock wave from the Bldg 3 explosion might have done structural damage to the northeast corner of Bldg 4 that wasn't readily visible from the outside. Perhaps after the blast at Bldg 3, the northeast corner of Bldg 4 was simply the weakest link.

From the picture you attached I think nothing from inside the building has damaged the roof. Something has landed on top of the roof. It hit not directly from overhead, more a bit from the side, so it bend over the wall.
If you take a closer look to the object it is partly above the roof skeleton and the main part stamped into the building construction.

Where did you find this picture? I could not find any other images of this part of the building.
 

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  • #4,082
Nullpunkt said:
From the picture you attached I think nothing from inside the building has damaged the roof. Something has landed on top of the roof. It hit not directly from overhead, more a bit from the side, so it bend over the wall.
If you take a closer look to the object it is partly above the roof skeleton and the main part stamped into the building construction.

Where did you find this picture? I could not find any other images of this part of the building.

Here:

http://cryptome.org/eyeball/daiichi-npp/daiichi-photos.htm
 
  • #4,083
elektrownik said:
How this is possible ? Unit 4 core location is 5C more than SFP, how empty core can be so hot ?[/PLAIN]

Unit #4's SFP is almost completely covered by the fuel handling machine that crashed into it. Then there are roof beams etc. above it. So it is possible that the infrared image is seeing the water in the reactor, but not that in the SFP.
 
  • #4,084
And my new image of #4:
[PLAIN]http://img535.imageshack.us/img535/3165/gggss.png
 
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  • #4,085
IN the last three NISA releases (98, 99, 100) they started giving two CAMS readings for the drywell (A,B) and two for the suppression torus (A,B), instead of one.

For units #2 and #3, the previous single readings match closely the new (A) readings. Fine.

For unit #1, however, neither (A) nor (B) match the previous single readings. However, the previous readings would match the new (A) readings multiplied by 10. Specifically, the readings given as 1.07×100, 1.00×100 and 9.92×10-1 Sv/h should be multiplied by 10.

The CAMS readings are given in exponential notation. My guess is that TEPCO made a mistake in the exponent of the S/C readings for unit #1, either in the last three releases or in all the previosu ones. I caught a couple of such mistakes before, so that is not out of the question. Moreover, it is almost certain that they produce each fax sheet by editing the previous one. (There is a spurious hyphen in front of a temperature reading that looks like a minus sign; it has been there forever.)

I will keep TEPCO's values in my next plot, until the issue is clarified.
 
  • #4,086
Jorge Stolfi said:
Unit #4's SFP is almost completely covered by the fuel handling machine that crashed into it. Then there are roof beams etc. above it. So it is possible that the infrared image is seeing the water in the reactor, but not that in the SFP.

The verbiage "crashed into" may be a bit strong, given the current video of SFP 4 and the almost intact FHM
 

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  • #4,087
TCups said:
1. The explosions had enough force to pull the water from the cooling pond (spent fuel pool)?

At Building 3, yes. It is probable that the explosion was steam, and the steam was the vaporized water leaving the cooling pool.

Building 3 seems to have soot on it.

Also, wasn't there a fireball in the building 3 explosion video?

When you talk of vaporized water leaving the cooling pool, that sounds like my theory of low pressure high volume steam explosion. But I thought that fit building 4 a lot better than building 3.

At Building 4, it is not known with certainty, but it is possible and perhaps probable. The spent and un-spent fuel in the pool would have to be partially uncovered to become damaged and to then produce the hydrogen gas. It was hydrogen gas that most likely caused the explosion in Building 4.

Why do you say there was hydrogen gas in building 4? There was damage below-decks in building 4, where hydrogen would not have gone. Also, a hydrogen explosion would probably have done a lot more symmetrical damage to the building, knocking off all the top row of panels.

Chris
 
  • #4,088
TCups said:
The verbiage "crashed into" may be a bit strong, given the current video of SFP 4 and the almost intact FHM

But my impression is that the FHM is much lower than it should be, and part of it is below the main (top) floor, i.e. inside the pool. Is that right?
 
  • #4,089
Nullpunkt said:
From the picture you attached I think nothing from inside the building has damaged the roof. Something has landed on top of the roof. It hit not directly from overhead, more a bit from the side, so it bend over the wall.
If you take a closer look to the object it is partly above the roof skeleton and the main part stamped into the building construction.

Where did you find this picture? I could not find any other images of this part of the building.

Well whaddya know . . .
Nullpunkt may be right. The damage to the northeast corner of Bldg 4 does look like an impact from something that fell on it. That would explain the north wall collapsing inward, except . . . what fell on it? If it is something from the explosion at Bldg 3, it must have had one long "hang time", or there was another explosion we missed. I guess you don't look for something if you don't think it could have happened.

@|Fred

Your the skeptic, Fred. What do you think? Does a falling object pass the "|Fred Test"?
 
  • #4,090
Jorge Stolfi said:
But my impression is that the FHM is much lower than it should be, and part of it is below the main (top) floor, i.e. inside the pool. Is that right?

I am not sure that is right, but I don't know. Heck, I am not sure now that I "know"anything about any of these events.
 
  • #4,091
cphoenix said:
Building 3 seems to have soot on it.

Also, wasn't there a fireball in the building 3 explosion video?

When you talk of vaporized water leaving the cooling pool, that sounds like my theory of low pressure high volume steam explosion. But I thought that fit building 4 a lot better than building 3.



Why do you say there was hydrogen gas in building 4? There was damage below-decks in building 4, where hydrogen would not have gone. Also, a hydrogen explosion would probably have done a lot more symmetrical damage to the building, knocking off all the top row of panels.

Chris

I retract my earlier statement, sir. I cannot say with any reasonable degree of certainty that I know what specifically caused any of the explosions except perhaps for Building 1, and only that because it occurred in immediate temporal proximity to venting of hydrogen gas from the containment.
 
  • #4,092
Jorge Stolfi said:
But my impression is that the FHM is much lower than it should be, and part of it is below the main (top) floor, i.e. inside the pool. Is that right?
Personal estimate is about 2m bellow where it should be, It derailed into really
 
  • #4,093
|Fred said:
Personal estimate is about 2m bellow where it should be, It derailed into really

OK, but I meant what do you think about something having fallen into the northeast corner of the roof of Building 4?
 
  • #4,094
Is there any logical explanation for TEPCOs concern about the structural stability of the reactor 4 SFP?
A hydrogen explosion in the SPF would have left the support structure unscathed and there was no fuel lower down to do damage.
So that leaves only the reactor 3 explosion as a suspect. One part of that explosion did seem very horizontal and looked to impinge on the reactor 4 building.
There has not been any good explanation of this, which preceded the roof blowing off.
Can anyone provide insight?
 
  • #4,095
I have updated my plots of the #1--#3 reactor variables to TEPCO-NISA release 100 (dated 2011-04-18 15:00).

http://www.ic.unicamp.br/~stolfi/EXPORT/projects/fukushima/plots/cur/Main.html"

I had to change the format of my files to accommodate the new readings that have been provided in the recent releases (and the 3-digit NISA release numbers! Perhaps I should plan already for 4 digits...) The new data include the drywell and torus temperatures, and the alternative "B" readings for drywell and torus CAMS. I have also provided space for the alternative ("A" or "B") readings of water level and core pressure; these have been available for some time, but I had entered only one of them until now. Over the next few days I hope to add the past readings of these alternate measurements.

Beware that the CAMS readings for unit #1 suppression chamber may be wrong by a factr of 10, as noted in my previous post.
 
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