Japan Earthquake: Nuclear Plants at Fukushima Daiichi

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The Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant is facing significant challenges following the earthquake, with reports indicating that reactor pressure has reached dangerous levels, potentially 2.1 times capacity. TEPCO has lost control of pressure at a second unit, raising concerns about safety and management accountability. The reactor is currently off but continues to produce decay heat, necessitating cooling to prevent a meltdown. There are conflicting reports about an explosion, with indications that it may have originated from a buildup of hydrogen around the containment vessel. The situation remains serious, and TEPCO plans to flood the containment vessel with seawater as a cooling measure.
  • #14,101
Any chance of some info about this japanese document regarding installation of permanent monitoring equipment for reactor 2? Again computer translation is not great which is why I ask, but it does sound like the survey revealed problems so they have to think again about this plan?

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130814_13-j.pdf
 
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  • #14,102
SteveElbows said:
Any chance of some info about this japanese document regarding installation of permanent monitoring equipment for reactor 2? Again computer translation is not great which is why I ask, but it does sound like the survey revealed problems so they have to think again about this plan?

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130814_13-j.pdf

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  • #14,103
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130819/index.html

1) The radiation alarm rang from 09:30 to a little after 10:00 AM on 19 August in front of the seismic-isolated building. Two workers who were waiting for the bus there were found to have been contaminated up to 13 Bq/cm², which is 3 times Tepco's internal standard. However they have no internal contamination. Tepco checked that the alarm rang as a consequence of rising cesium concentration in the air. The mist generator, which was suspected for the contamination of the 10 workers on 12 August, was not being used on 19 August.

2) Water was found leaking outside the dam surrounding tanks on the mountain side of unit 4. The leakage came from a rainwater exhaust pipe and was stopped by closing a valve. The radiation near the surface of water puddles (approximately 90 litre) was 100 mSV/hour. Tepco is investing the cause, suspecting that a contaminated water tank must somehow be leaking.

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130819_03-j.pdf Seismic Isolated Building Dust monitor alarm (Japanese)

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130819_05-j.pdf Leakage in H4 tank area (Japanese)
 
  • #14,104
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130820/0515_kanri.html

Although the dam surrounding the tank area is designed to prevent contaminated water leakage, the valve equipping the rainwater exhaust pipe was left open, and leakage outside the dam could be stopped by closing the valve.

Tepco said "If we don't evacuate rainwater, we can't distinguish whether the water inside the dam is water leaked from the tanks or not. For that reason, the valve is usually open."

However, as it would be impossible to respond if a similar contaminated water leakage happened again, Tepco said it would study leakage detection and management methods.

The NRA said it is provisionally classifying the event as an International Nuclear Event Scale level 1 event.

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130820/index.html One of the 26 tanks in the area, supposed to be filled with 1000 tons of water was found to contain only 700 tons. That means that 300 tons have leaked. This water is the output of the cesium removal process. Although it does not contain cesium, it contains strontium and the beta radiation is 80,000,000 Bq/l. Tepco will remove the Earth contaminated by the water leak and closely monitor the consequences.

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130820_01-j.pdf Leakage in H4 tank area (Japanese)
 
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  • #14,105
tsutsuji said:
NHK : "Although it does not contain cesium, it contains strontium and the beta radiation is 80,000,000 Bq/l."

If I read correctly, from your document - http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130820_01-j.pdf - Cs134 is still 46,000 Bq/l and Cs137 100,000 Bq/l, far higher than it should be after cesium removal systems.

I guess it's the usual TEPCO mistake, but japanese document shows 8x10E4 all beta, while english press release - http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/press/corp-com/release/2013/1229867_5130.html - is 8x10E-4 all beta. Same thing with cesium, 1x10E2 (japanese) versus 1x10E-2 (english).
 
  • #14,106
blab31 said:
If I read correctly, from your document - http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130820_01-j.pdf - Cs134 is still 46,000 Bq/l and Cs137 100,000 Bq/l, far higher than it should be after cesium removal systems.

You are right. I misinterpreted the NHK article which was merely saying that it is water "after cesium reduction process".

The Japanese press release at http://www.tepco.co.jp/cc/press/2013/1229852_5117.html is consistent with http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130820_01-j.pdf

I have no idea why Cs concentrations are so high (for example compared with http://www.tepco.co.jp/en/nu/fukushima-np/f1/smp/2013/images/water_130809-e.pdf )

http://mainichi.jp/graph/2013/08/21/20130821k0000m040100000c/001.html Helicopter picture showing workers on the top of the tanks at 05:14 PM on 20 August.
 
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  • #14,107
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130821/index.html Tank surveillance consisted of patrols twice a day. The tanks are not equipped with water level gauges. This is the fourth leakage event so far, among the 350 tanks.

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130821/2135_kiseii.html After a study group meeting held in the evening of 21 August, the NRA instructs Tepco to equip the tanks with water level gauges and to study alternative storage facilities. The study group will inspect the tanks at Fukushima Daiichi on 23 August.

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130821/2120_jouchu.html Tepco nuclear division top person, vice-president Aizawa will be permanently based in Fukushima. The existence of different people in charge at Fukushima Daiichi, at the Fukushima Daini-based Fukushima Daiichi stabilization center, at the main office and other places had been pointed out as a source of problems as regards information sharing and supervision.

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130821/index.html 6 mSv/hour was measured on the side of the drain 50 m away from the leaking tank, so that one cannot rule out that contaminated water could have flowed into the sea. On 20 August, based on a measurement of the water in the drain finding low radioactive concentrations, Tepco had said there was little probablility that the sea had been contaminated.
 
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  • #14,108
tsutsuji said:
The tanks are not equipped with water level gauges.

Oh my.

By the way, we're not even one full year into the tanks' five-year warranty period and there's already problems. I wonder how it will all look another year on. Can we expect more leaks at least this big?
 
  • #14,109
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  • #14,110
zapperzero said:
Oh my.

By the way, we're not even one full year into the tanks' five-year warranty period and there's already problems. I wonder how it will all look another year on. Can we expect more leaks at least this big?

I wonder how radiation affects the rubber packing.?
 
  • #14,112
zapperzero said:
Oh my.

By the way, we're not even one full year into the tanks' five-year warranty period and there's already problems. I wonder how it will all look another year on. Can we expect more leaks at least this big?

Do you have a source for this five-year warranty period ?
 
  • #14,113
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130822/2000_genin.html The emptying operation of the leaking tank, by transferring the remaining 700 tons of contaminated water, was completed on 21 August after 09:00 PM. As the radiation is high, Tepco needs to carefully study the inspection method that will be used in order to determine the cause of the leakage. For that reason the inspection is not expected to start before next week.

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130822/index.html Two other tanks were found with respectively 100 mSv/h and 70 mSv/h on their surfaces, but their water levels are normal. It could mean that they incurred leakage in the past.
 
  • #14,114
a.ua. said:
I wonder how radiation affects the rubber packing.?

At these levels - probably insignificant.
 
  • #14,115
tsutsuji said:
Do you have a source for this five-year warranty period ?

I remember reading it somewhere. Perhaps at ex-skf. In short, no.
 
  • #14,116
tsutsuji said:
Do you have a source for this five-year warranty period ?

I can't find a tepco release with this information, but it has probably been given during a press conference, because it's all over the news sites, on NHK, or NYTimes here ( http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/21/w...er-leak-from-japanese-nuclear-plant.html?_r=0 ) "(...)Mr. Ono said that Tepco had assumed the tanks would last at least five years.(...) "

"assuming it will last 5 years" is not exactly a "five-year warranty period", oh well...
 
  • #14,117
Thanks, Blab31, for the source.

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130824/index.html Checking past records, Tepco found that when it underwent the water filling test in another part of the plant premises, in July 2011, before being installed at its present location, the tank sunk by about 20 cm into the ground. This event might have caused deformations or damage. However after receiving a report from the contractor company that no problem had been found by an inspection, the tank was dismantled and mounted again at its present location. Two other tanks have a "sunk into ground" record, and although they were checked and found not to be leaking, Tepco has decided to empty them, starting on 25 August. Tepco doesn't know the reason why those 3 tanks sank into the ground during the water filling test.
 
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  • #14,119
SteveElbows said:
Any chance of some info about this japanese document regarding installation of permanent monitoring equipment for reactor 2? Again computer translation is not great which is why I ask, but it does sound like the survey revealed problems so they have to think again about this plan?
[/url]
http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/roadmap/images/d130829_06-j.pdf
In this document at pages 205-212

* 2 PCV re-survey results.

http://ru.fotoalbum.eu/images1/200905/95064/273731/00000049.JPG
 
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  • #14,120
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130906/0620_crane.html After 08:30 on 5 September, the arm of a remote-controlled crane that is used to carry out debris removal work at unit 3, bent, and the arm tip fell down.

http://www.tepco.co.jp/nu/fukushima-np/handouts/2013/images/handouts_130905_06-j.pdf Unit 3 large crane jib mast bending and falling

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130905/0422_toudo.html In the middle of October, a frozen soil wall experiment will be started on unit 4 mountain side on a 10 m x 10 m area, freezing the soil over a 30 m depth. The freezing is done by circulating -40 °C calcium chloride in the pipes. The ¥ 1,300,000,000 experiment is planned to be completed within the present fiscal year. The full fledged frozen soil wall is planned to be completed within the next fiscal year.

http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20130905/index.html Samples taken on 4 September from a well dug 10 m away from the leaked tank were found with 650 Bq/l of all beta. No contamination has been found until now in the groundwater bypass system pumping wells, which are located 100 m downstream.
 
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  • #14,122
Back on page 632 or some such I asked a layman's question regarding melted fuel and received a thoughtful reply regarding the latent heat energy of the fuel - an answer which was over my head. So I'd like to take another stab and ask again in another way; given the two and a half years since the meltdowns of units 1-3 in Fukushima, would the molten (or partially) molten cores still contain enough energy to melt into a liquid mass? Is it an unanswerable question due to the possibility of iron and concrete being subsumed into some of the mass(es)? Is the possibility of re-melt the reason water needs to continually be poured on/into the cores? I recall some discussion about Chernobyl, and I believe the molten core was already solidified within months of the accident - would this be due to it acquiring impurities (concrete, etc..) thus lowering the heat energy?

Just curious because I see a lot of chatter on the fringe sites about corium, most of which seems generated by equal parts fear, paranoia, and ignorance. Any insight would be appreciated. Feel free to move this question to a different thread if it doesn't belong here.
 
  • #14,123
Gary7 said:
... Is it an unanswerable question ...

As far as I know: yes. This question cannot be answered. The temperature of any fragment of the core(s) depends on the heat generated and the heat dissipated. Even (relative) low amount of heat can (re-)melt the stuff, if it's still in one large piece, cornered somewhere with low surface and high mass.

And by the simulations, most (if not all) of the core of U2 and U3 might be 'cornered' in the bottom of the RPVs.

Also, for U1, most of the core might be sunk into the concrete below the RPV (but still inside the PCV). So it's also in one piece.

In Chernobyl, the core mass flown relative large distances and during that absorbed concrete, metals and so, as you wrote: also, it left behind some pieces of the most reactive stuff. So it had high surface (high dissipation).
The basement of that unit worked as an unexpected core catcher.

Ps.: it would be interesting to know if the idea of the 'core catcher' was inspired by those basements in Chernobyl...
 
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  • #14,124
Rive said:
As far as I know: yes. This question cannot be answered. The temperature of any fragment of the core(s) depends on the heat generated and the heat dissipated. Even (relative) low amount of heat can (re-)melt the stuff, if it's still in one large piece, cornered somewhere with low surface and high mass.

You are technically correct: it can't be positively, 100% ruled out that there isn't a single liter of melt in Fukushima's reactors today.
However, it *is* highly unlikely.
 
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  • #14,125
nikkkom said:
You are technically correct: it can't be positively, 100% ruled out that there isn't a single liter of melt in Fukushima's reactors today.
However, it *is* highly unlikely.

I agree that it's highly unlikely that any molten corium is present there at this moment.

But as I take it the question was: can it re-melt if the water stopped?
 
  • #14,126
Thank you both for your responses. Very helpful. Yes I was wondering what the likely state of any fuel mass were at this time, considering the degradation of the fuel, the constant immersion in water, and the passage of two years. Part 2 of my question is as Rive mentioned; is the purpose of the continuous flow of water to stop the fuel mass from re-heating into a molten state?

Given the problems created by the daily input of a hundred or so tons of water, at what time will it be prudent to begin reducing the volume of water? My only reference is Chernobyl, and from what I gather, the fuel ceased to be a moving mass fairly early on, and without the addition of so much water as in the case with Fukushima.

So my guess (validated by Rive above) is that the fuel at Fukushima has traveled a shorter distance, indeed may to a significant degree remain inside the RPVs, and therefore has far fewer impurities (concrete, steel, etc...) than what was at Chernobyl, and therefore the decay heat is still high enough to reach the point where it would re-melt were the heat not being continually removed.

This is just a mental exercise; something to think about while reading all the alarmist stuff about china syndromes, which is something I think Arnie Gundersen claimed recently. And there is a lot of nonsense about "where are the cores", which seems to me to be a ridiculous question, and yet one sees it from time to time on certain sites.
 
  • #14,127
Gary7 said:
... and therefore the decay heat is still high enough to reach the point where it would re-melt were the heat not being continually removed.

... and therefore it cannot be ruled out that the decay heat is still high enough that some parts might re-melt...

I think it's also unlikely that it would re-melt at large scale. But I cannot tell... Maybe somebody else can. I don't know.

Anyway, they will keep the cooling and will keep the temperature as it's required to keep the 'cold shutdown'. About Gundersen... I cannot recall: was there any of his claims ever be proven right later on?
 
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  • #14,128
I read, I can not remember where, but it's Japanese sources,
for physical calculations of residual heat
that water can be turned off in 2018.

In addition, in the Chernobyl sarcophagus fuel mass to be at high embrittlement.
Have the fuel dust (30-50 tone as the Chernobyl) is worse than having a fuel slush.
 
  • #14,129
Gary7 said:
Given the problems created by the daily input of a hundred or so tons of water, at what time will it be prudent to begin reducing the volume of water? My only reference is Chernobyl, and from what I gather, the fuel ceased to be a moving mass fairly early on, and without the addition of so much water as in the case with Fukushima.

My guess is: TEPCO continues to pour water based largely on paranoia and fear of bad PR. If they stop, fear-mongering idiots from all sides would scream bloody murder.

So my guess (validated by Rive above) is that the fuel at Fukushima has traveled a shorter distance, indeed may to a significant degree remain inside the RPVs, and therefore has far fewer impurities (concrete, steel, etc...) than what was at Chernobyl, and therefore the decay heat is still high enough to reach the point where it would re-melt were the heat not being continually removed.

Total decay heat does not decrease from impurities.

By now, most of decay heat comes from Sr-90, Cs-137, Cs-134. Cs is water soluble, a lot of it had been leached out.
 
  • #14,130
nikkkom said:
My guess is: TEPCO continues to pour water based largely on paranoia and fear of bad PR. If they stop, fear-mongering idiots from all sides would scream bloody murder.

I'm getting really really tired of this attitude of yours. A back-of-napkin calculation would show that the corium still needs cooling, especially if it is (as TEPCO assumes) mostly in one piece.

Think you can do better? Fine. Do the work, show the work and THEN call me and a.ua. and others here "fear-mongering idiots". Not before.
 

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