Astronuc
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I'd like to confirm that. Unit 1-3 should not affect unit 4. Unit 4's upper containment seems intact - but I haven't confirmed that.rogerl said:I just heard from CNN that the heat in nearby reactors could have evaporated the water that soaked the spent fuel in reactor #4 and the rods caught fire and release radioactive debris about 400 milliSiv inside the compound.
Spent fuel is pretty dangerous! That's why it is normally handled with 30 feet of water or several feet of steel and/or concrete between spent fuel assemblies or rods and people. The objective is to retain the fission products in the fuel rods (enclosed by the ceramic fuel and Zr-alloy cladding tube), but that clearly is not the case at Fukushima.So how dangerous are spent fuel? If they are "spent", there should be few live nuclei left that can fission, isn't it. Or the decayed project is acting up and still radioactive? What elements?
It seems they may be contemplated something like that - which is pretty much how Chernobyl ended up, with the possible exception that it is not yet clear the fuel actually 'melted', as opposed to simply breached or cracked (typical vertical or longitudinal cracks), and it is not clear that it will necessarily melt - assuming there is some form of coolant inventory.Also about Reactors 1-3. Isn't it if you leave cyanide powder in the trash can with no wind in the room, it would stay there. If you instead blow it with air, it will spread. What I'm saying is that the fuel rods in reactors 1 to 3 are no longer live and just left over decay heat. So why don't they just stop putting water and releasing steam outside the plants which can spread radiation all over the country and instead just let the fuel rods rot or melt and let the mixture stay safely in the bottom of the containment shell just like cyanide power left in the bottom of the trash can and basically quarantined there? Stupid questions but this nuclear incident is unprecendented. Sorry and thanks
The questions are not stupid. And yes - this event is unprecedented!
To give better or more definitive answers, I'd need better information. I'm working on that.
This is still not detailed enough, but . . .
http://www.world-nuclear-news.org/RS_Possible_damage_at_Fukushima_Daiichi_2_1503111.html
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