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.
  • #8,821
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Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #8,822
jlduh said:
I've seen this animal several times on the webcam, the first time i was quite surprised!

Well this means that the area is not dangerous, right? A real nature park :wink:

Im glad others have seen an animal on the camera, because I thought I saw one the other day but I wasnt sure if Id gone mad by staring at wobbly compression artefacts for too long.

By the way someone seems to be putting up timelapse footage from the camera to youtube, which is handy for watching what happens without wasting too much time as a whole hour goes by in just 3 minutes.

http://www.youtube.com/user/fuku1live#p/u/3/-ljGxLDpHlc
 
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  • #8,824
joewein said:
See this Italian article that Jorge Stolfi posted a link to a while ago:
http://giappopazzie.blogspot.com/2011/05/post-tecnico-4-approfondimento-sulla.html
...

Thanks! Your link is great, now I understand, there is no basement from my perspective, but they call the thorus level basement, as I suspected.

One question, why nobody considers that possibility that the water in the flooded basement has come in contact with the Corium?
 
  • #8,825
Some food for thought: If the basements that contain the torus is being flooded and the torus is not filled 100% with water, I could imagine the torus will want to rise, resulting in stresses on the torus-RPV connections that have nor been considered, which in turn could result in further RPV containment failure.
 
  • #8,826
are there any better links to the new video NHK obtained?

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/05_06.html
 
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  • #8,827
jlduh said:
Don't know exactly where this video has been taken by packbot (N°1 Unit, but where precisely is not clear), but it's a new one (June 3) and this is showing some boiling water inside the building...

http://ex-skf.blogspot.com/2011/06/fukushima-i-nuke-plant-reactor-1.html
(Steam coming from water 50°C? Doesn't make sense to me...)Direct link to Tepco site to download video, the title is just this:
"Confirmation of steam situation at a reactor building of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant Unit 1 (ZIP 5.55MB)"
http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/news/110311/images/110604_09.zip

For the first time, we see for real a Boiling Water Reactor...
...]

quoting http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20110605a3.html

The utility said it took the reading near the floor at the southeast corner of the building. The steam appears to be entering from a leaking rubber gasket that is supposed to seal the area where the pipe comes up through the first floor. No damage to the pipe was found, Tepco said.

So if the area is sealed with a gasket, then it is safe to say that some steam has condensed to water on top of the gasket and the escaping steam is now blowing bubbles through this puddle of condensed water giving the impression of boiling water.

Furthermore, the assumption can be made that the basement is slightly pressurised forcing the steamy atmosphere of the basement through this point.
 
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  • #8,828
Bioengineer01 said:
What do you mean by basement when you refer to Unit 1? There is no basement below the PCV, just a concrete basemat? correct?
https://www.physicsforums.com/attachment.php?attachmentid=36166&stc=1&d=1307221110

The basement is the free space below ground level. Most of it is occupied by the cylindrical concrete block that supports the primary containment vessel, and by the surge suppression torus. According to some floorplans I have seen, the whole basement has a square outline; it is divided by thick internal walls into an octagonal room that spans the four outer walls and houses the torus, plus four small triangular rooms at the corners. Presumably those five spaces are connected by doors, stairs, pipe passages, etc..

The leak of radioactive steam just found on the ground floor seems to be located over or near the southeast wall of the octagonal room in the basement.
 
  • #8,829
robinson said:
http://www.youtube.com/user/fuku1live#p/u/0/yB3IKblc-b0
Is that the latest explosion in building 4 we see on the video?

Those light flashes just after the 2 minute mark are being reflecetd only by objects that are very close to the camera. So I suppose that someone offcamera just happened to sweep the beam of a flashlight over the structure that housing the camera.

(Perhaps someday some computer genius will have the idea of adding a *single-frame* forward/back button to a video streaming widget. Until then we will have to live in a world of fleeting impressions...)
 
  • #8,830
jlduh said:
I've seen this animal several times on the webcam, the first time i was quite surprised!

Well this means that the area is not dangerous, right? A real nature park :wink:

I have seen it a few times.kinda neat

looks like a red panda?
 
  • #8,831
Bioengineer01 said:
One question, why nobody considers that possibility that the water in the flooded basement has come in contact with the Corium?

With the levels of radioactivity of the water in the basement it is quite obvious that the water must have been in contact with melted fuel rods. What makes you say that nobody is considering this?
 
  • #8,832
Here is a different thought on dealing with the problem of scattered fuel in the RPV's. (Big assumption coming). (Firstly, I don't believe there is any corium in the RPV's.) I do believe there probably are piles of fuel pellets on the bottom.

First they have to get the cooling loop closed. Water in and water out need to be the same. Once a true cold shutdown is met you can do something fairly radical.

You dissolve out the UO2 from the RPV's using nitric acid. You then precipitate out the uranium. Apparently cerium nitrate + nitric acid with a little ozone dissolves fuel pellets at fairly low concentrations of nitric acid.

In this way you slowly transport out the fuel from the reactors.

Of course this isn't very useful is your cooling loop starts in the RPV and ends in the basement.
 
  • #8,833
AntonL said:
the assumption can be made that the basement is slightly pressurised forcing the steamy atmosphere of the basement through this point.

It seems to me that the strategy should be to begin a civil engineering project which will deny the area of the reactors any source of water. Let the blobs of corum reside where they wilt (probably laying atop some very hot concrete sub flooring and at the center of a large and expanding area of very hot material.

Would someone more adept than I find time to do the math and guesstimate how far from the centers of the corium puddles will the temperature of the surrounding rock and dirt be likely to achieve and remain at at least 100c?

If that distance were ten meters or more, wouldn't the natural dried out environment of the pile provide all the buffering with the outside world needed?

Remove or divert any landside drainage or stream flows (below or above ground) and provide good runoff paths for storm water. We're only talking about ten acres or so of land. That doesn't seem like any major civil engineering project.

It would create it's own buffer on the sea side.

The Japanese don't have any history of desert horticulture - this could be their big chance.

Once this very manageably sized piece of land reaches equilibration temperature it will be self regulating and self drying and I can't see why it would ever have any threat of significent emissions.

Stop feeding it water.

Build access tunnels and bury it.
Break out the putzmeisters.

Think of it as an opportunity!
When all you got is lemons, you make lemonade.
New thread?
 
  • #8,834
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  • #8,835
Quim said:
It seems to me that the strategy should be to... deny the area of the reactors any source of water. Let the blobs of corum reside... atop some very hot concrete sub flooring and at the center of a large and expanding area of very hot material...

Once this very manageably sized piece of land reaches equilibration temperature it will be self regulating and self drying and I can't see why it would ever have any threat of significent emissions...

If there were dangerous materials released from the boiling and burning fuel and concrete, including explosive Hydrogen, said materials could be problematic.
 
  • #8,836
swl said:
If there were dangerous materials released from the boiling and burning fuel and concrete, including explosive Hydrogen, said materials could be problematic.

In what manner would a tad of hydrogen gas seeping out of a warm pile of sand be dangerous?
 
  • #8,837
Quim said:
In what manner would a tad of hydrogen gas seeping out of a warm pile of sand be dangerous?

Another explosion would be bad.

Just a video of the unit one explosion, if you've seen it, no need to click.

But we should be equally concerned about the release of radioactive material from the burning and boiling corium.
 
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  • #8,838
swl said:
we should be equally concerned about the release of radioactive material from the burning and boiling corium.

Now that's exactly the point.

I propose encasing it (them) in a ten meter thick* cocoon of dry sand.
You propose pouring water on it .
Right?

Shall we continue from there?


*(ten meter radius around each corium at minimum)
 
  • #8,839
andybwell said:
Gundersen:


A bit too much hyperbole for me.

He has discredited himself so that I don't listen to him.

But the other side is just as bad.
 
  • #8,840
andybwell said:
nuclear pool #4


SFP4?

That is not releasing any radiation into the environment .

It is not a current problem and there is nothing preventing the safe unloading of it's contents.

What are your concerns?
 
  • #8,841
unit 1 SPF 650mm but at 6/5 05:00am, fuel should be exposed now or not long from now
 
  • #8,842
Bioengineer01 said:
Thanks! Your link is great, now I understand, there is no basement from my perspective, but they call the thorus level basement, as I suspected.

One question, why nobody considers that possibility that the water in the flooded basement has come in contact with the Corium?

That's a distinct possibility. I don't think anyone has ruled it out. It's not much of a stretch to think that the cooling water flowed into the RPV, some of it circulated in contact with the corium at the bottom, and then ended up in the drywell. When the level of water in the drywell rose to the height of the connecting pipes that lead to the wetwell, it flowed into the torus. That path is normally used to convey steam, but those ducts could just as easily pass water once everything at the bottom became flooded.

AntonL mentioned how the torus might want to float if its surrounding trench/basement became flooded. That could be true also, but it's possible the gaseous vent system - electrically operated - failed or shorted out once submerged, and eventually structural failure ensued thus releasing any trapped air/nitrogen/hydrogen/etc.. There was a reported sound of an explosion at Unit 2 early on that TEPCO attributed to structural failure of the torus. Would anyone be surprised if the toruses (tori?) in units 1 and 3 also failed and people just weren't around at the time to hear the noise?
 
  • #8,843
elektrownik said:
unit 1 SPF 650mm but at 6/5 05:00am, fuel should be exposed now or not long from now

Mar22-11, 09:57 AM #833
AntonL

Below SFP data FU = fuel units followed by pool volume and heat load of the FU
Unit 1 - 292 FU 1200m3 60kW
Unit 2 - 587 FU 1425m3 400kW
Unit 3 - 514 FU 1425m3 200kW
Unit 4 - 1331 FU 1425m3 2000kW + 200 brand new FU


Is 60kw a danger?
It doesn't sound like it to me.
 
  • #8,844
andybwell said:
You guys and gals, of course, knew this all along. Right?

"The dangers of fukushima are greater than we think."

http://us1.campaign-archive1.com/?u=...&id=68c85cc08a

Part 2

...

That link is dead, andy, and I respectfully suggest that what you posted may violate the copyright of whatever source you got it from. That is way more than a 'fair use' amount of quoting there. Maybe you could find a better link and trim the quoted part?

Edit: It looks like you got if from chrismartenson.com and you basically quoted the entire "Part 2 of Arnie Gundersen Interview: Protecting Yourself If The Situation Worsens". I'm not going to hit the 'report' button on you, but you should really consider editing that post. We can all click on a link to what Gundersen has to say if we choose.
 
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  • #8,845
Quim said:
SFP4?

That is not releasing any radiation into the environment .

It is not a current problem and there is nothing preventing the safe unloading of it's contents.

What are your concerns?

I can't answer for him, but I think Gundersen buys into the whole "building 4 is leaning and about to fall over" nonsense. One may draw one's own conclusions there.
 
  • #8,846
elektrownik said:
unit 1 SPF 650mm but at 6/5 05:00am, fuel should be exposed now or not long from now

Those numbers should be of concern to even casual observers, but all we hear from TEPCO is silence. If it's an instrumentation problem then they should come out and say so. Immediately if not sooner. And if it's not an instrumentation problem then they should have given some sort of public information about it hours ago.

And some people wonder what TEPCO should be doing differently. Pshaw!

@Quim ... Those fuel rods should not be allowed to become uncovered regardless of the current heat load.
 
  • #8,847
Quim said:
Mar22-11, 09:57 AM #833
AntonL

Is 60kw a danger?
It doesn't sound like it to me.

Yes but they are still hight radioactive, you don't want radioactive fuel rods to be exposed to air... water is not only coolant but also radiation shield
 
  • #8,848
joewein said:
I forgot a fourth possibility: The bubbling could be from a hydrogen/oxygen mix produce by radiolysis of water from that 720,000 TBq, but I have no idea what the expected volume per minute would be.

Unlikely - as it was discussed earlier, for the radiolysis to be effective it has to occur in vigorously boiling water, otherwise hydrogen and oxygen have way too much time to combine back.
 
  • #8,849
Quim said:
Mar22-11, 09:57 AM #833
AntonL

Below SFP data FU = fuel units followed by pool volume and heat load of the FU
Unit 1 - 292 FU 1200m3 60kW
Unit 2 - 587 FU 1425m3 400kW
Unit 3 - 514 FU 1425m3 200kW
Unit 4 - 1331 FU 1425m3 2000kW + 200 brand new FU Is 60kw a danger?
It doesn't sound like it to me.

Well, sorry to say this but your conclusions seem odd to me...

If exposing burnt fuel rods was no danger, then it would be very easy to handle the nuclear waste after several months of decay. Obviously we all know (or should know) it is not! You can compare the numbers of decay heat and say that the one in N°1 SFP is lower than the others, especially N°4 which is really more dangerous due to the high number of spent rods, but you just cannot say seriously "hummm 60 KW, that's no danger if exposed"...

As already said, water is a coolant AND a shield. Also even 60KW of heat concentrated for a long time in localized areas if no more water to dissipate it and your temps are going to increase, little by little but as surely as an apple is falling from Newton tree. Could the real specialists calculate the temps at the surface of the rods if totally exposed to air in current radiological conditions of decay? Could they also estimate the radiation we could get let's say at 1m, 10m and 100m, assuming absolutely no shielding?

If Gunderson was discredited for you, then make sure you are not going to discredit yourself ALSO... I think this guy has much more experience in this field than most of us and has proved to be true in most of it's statements (I said most, not all, as I'm also kind of suspect of this N°4 building leaning theory).
 
  • #8,850
Hi to all.
I run a rapid back of the envelope calculation on the CS137 quantity TEPCO estimated.

If I got it right from Wolfram Alpha the activity of CS137 is 3.214 TeraBq/gram.

Having TEPCO estimated overall CS137 at 720,000 TeraBq, that would lead to 720,000/3.214=224,020 grams of CS137.

I then tried to understand in what relation that value is in respect to the total CS137 inventory that can be expeced from 1,2,3 cores.

I know this has been much more accurately estimated somewhere before in this 3d but I unfortunately do not have the possibility of searching the whole discussion right now.

However from wiki I got a fission yield of 6.0899% for CS137. That yield together with the mass ratio of U235 vs CS137 leads me to estimate in about 6.26 tonns the amount of U235 that has to undergo fission to pruduce this amount of CS137 (224,020/0.060899*235/137 grams).

Now if I remeber correctly at 32% of thermal efficiency 1 tonn of U235 has to undergo fission to produce 1 Gigawatt for one year.

Being almost exactly 2 gigawatts the overall power output of the concerned units, it would seem that the estimated CS137 already in the water is in the order of magnitude of 3 yrs worth of fission process.

In other words that would lead me to think that this estimates means that much of the molten fuel is already soluted in water.
On the other hand this conclusion, in a way reassuring, seems unreaalistic to me.

what I am I doing wrong ?
what do you think ?
thanks in advance
 
  • #8,851
Strange picture on Tepco site, showing "High dose rubble in the west side of Unit 3 reactor building of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station"

http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/news/110311/images/110605_02.jpg

The high dose is (only) 12 mSv/h, this is concrete apparently covered with green spray of dust inhibitor but the grass around doesn't have any of this spray, which leads me to conclude that this rubble has been laid on the grass after being sprayed elsewhere and removed from it's original place. So, they consider it high enough to remove it but just lay it in the grass like that, not even on a pile but just neatly spaced like we see it? Or is it from the explosion that took place recently (but it was close to waste water treatment plant it seems, not west of N°3) that moved this already sprayed rubble?

Something is screwed in this picture...
 
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  • #8,852
clancy688 said:
In my opinion, EX-SKF misunderstands the data he found. Those are only mathmatical simulations as for how a cloud of Krypton-85 would've behaved if there would've been one.

There are only two things we can derive from those images: Direction of a possible Krypton-85 plume that day and densitiy over distance based on initial release.
It doesn't show us what really happened.

Krypton-85 is a noble gas. It has a very, very, very short biological half life (the body throws it out as soon as it gets in) and is a beta decayer (it's only a problem if it's inside), so there is probably little to none significance for any health damage.
The nuclear waste facilities Sellafield and La Hague are releasing Krypton gas in the magnitude of hundreds of PBq every year. The converted release of C137 and I131 at Fukushima was 630 PBq. The conversion factor for noble gases (Krypton-85) is zero. (according to the INES manual)
So IAEA is apparently thinking of Krypton-85 as "not dangerous at all".

More on Krypton 85 (not a pure beta emitter, also gamma?)
http://www.ead.anl.gov/pub/doc/krypton.pdf

External dose coeff:

http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/ewh-semt/pubs/radiation/dose/appendix-c-annexe-eng.php

it's 2,55 x 10-16 Svs-1Bq-1m3 for krypton 85. Not zero?
 
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  • #8,853
jlduh said:
the grass around doesn't have any of this spray

Grass grows, I guess it was sprayed a month or so ago, but it went through the layer of the spray since.
 
  • #8,854
jlduh said:
Strange picture on Tepco site, showing "High dose rubble in the west side of Unit 3 reactor building of Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station"

http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/news/110311/images/110605_02.jpg

The high dose is (only) 12 mSv/h, this is concrete apparently covered with green spray of dust inhibitor but the grass around doesn't have any of this spray, which leads me to conclude that this rubble has been laid on the grass after being sprayed elsewhere and removed from it's original place. So, they consider it high enough to remove it but just lay it in the grass like that, not even on a pile but just neatly spaced like we see it? Or is it from the explosion that took place recently (but it was close to waste water treatment plant it seems, not west of N°3) that moved this already sprayed rubble?

Something is screwed in this picture...

What I noticed was the red piece of rubble at the base of the cone. I think that is another example of how they mark the radioactive sources with red paint. The pieces in the picture look like chunks of concrete. Maybe one of the remote-control rubble clearing vehicles just happened to dump its contents on that patch of grass. On the other hand, it does look rather neat, so maybe it was arranged there somehow.
 
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  • #8,855
Luca Bevil said:
Hi to all.
I run a rapid back of the envelope calculation on the CS137 quantity TEPCO estimated.

If I got it right from Wolfram Alpha the activity of CS137 is 3.214 TeraBq/gram.

Having TEPCO estimated overall CS137 at 720,000 TeraBq, that would lead to 720,000/3.214=224,020 grams of CS137.

I then tried to understand in what relation that value is in respect to the total CS137 inventory that can be expeced from 1,2,3 cores.

I know this has been much more accurately estimated somewhere before in this 3d but I unfortunately do not have the possibility of searching the whole discussion right now.

However from wiki I got a fission yield of 6.0899% for CS137. That yield together with the mass ratio of U235 vs CS137 leads me to estimate in about 6.26 tonns the amount of U235 that has to undergo fission to pruduce this amount of CS137 (224,020/0.060899*235/137 grams).

Now if I remeber correctly at 32% of thermal efficiency 1 tonn of U235 has to undergo fission to produce 1 Gigawatt for one year.

Being almost exactly 2 gigawatts the overall power output of the concerned units, it would seem that the estimated CS137 already in the water is in the order of magnitude of 3 yrs worth of fission process.

In other words that would lead me to think that this estimates means that much of the molten fuel is already soluted in water.
On the other hand this conclusion, in a way reassuring, seems unreaalistic to me.

what I am I doing wrong ?
what do you think ?
thanks in advance
The 720,000 TeraBq estimate is for the total amount of ALL radioactive substances , not JUST Cs-137 :

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/03_31.html

TEPCO says that by May 31st, 105,100 tons of waste water had accumulated. It contains an estimated 720,000 terabecquerels of radioactive substances. Tera stands for one trillion.
 
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