trottiey
Nuclear
- Jul 8, 2010
- 237
Since my other thread is getting a little unwieldy, I thought I would start this one to summarize frequently asked questions:
1) What type of reactors are these?
Fukushima Dai-ichi
Unit 1: BWR-3, 460 MW, activated 1970
Unit 2: BWR-4, 784 MW, activated 1974
Unit 3: BWR-4, 784 MW, activated 1976
BWR = Boiling Water Reactor
2) What happened to the backup power?
The plant survived the earthquake well, and the backup diesel generators came on-line as planned. But an hour later, the tsunami came through and damaged some of the generators. Replacement generators were flown in, but could not be hooked up in time. The cooling pumps need megawatts of power, and hooking up this amount of power is not trivial.
3) Why not use the battery power?
The pumps are too big and battery power would have been insufficient. Battery back-ups are only used to run the valves, lights, computers, etc.
4) Where did the hydrogen for that explosion come from?
Hydrogen is normally produced in a nuclear reactor by radiolysis of the cooling water. Reactors have recombiners, igniters, and other means to dispose of this hydrogen before it becomes an explosion hazard. But when the core gets too hot, the zirconium cladding around the fuel will react with the water to produce much more hydrogen. (This reaction is rapid and exothermic, so in laymen's terms this is sometimes described as "burning" the core.) The amount of hydrogen overwhelmed the capacity of the recombiners, accumulated in secondary containment, and exploded.
5) So what is the latest status?
Something will have changed by the time I finish writing this FAQ. I've generally found the most accurate information from World Nuclear News, and they're also quite fast in posting updates:
6) Am I at risk?
For those who are in the immediate area and subject to evacuation orders, you are at low risk of radioactive contamination. Those who do get contaminated may have a slightly increased lifetime risk of cancer, but the most likely outcome will be that you will never suffer health effects from this for as long as you live. For the rest of you, please trust that nuclear professionals have trained all their lives for this event, and they are managing the situation. Much greater damage is being caused by ongoing fires, flooding, water shortages, etc. If you have a comfortable life, please consider helping out with financial donations to disaster relief organizations.
1) What type of reactors are these?
Fukushima Dai-ichi
Unit 1: BWR-3, 460 MW, activated 1970
Unit 2: BWR-4, 784 MW, activated 1974
Unit 3: BWR-4, 784 MW, activated 1976
BWR = Boiling Water Reactor
2) What happened to the backup power?
The plant survived the earthquake well, and the backup diesel generators came on-line as planned. But an hour later, the tsunami came through and damaged some of the generators. Replacement generators were flown in, but could not be hooked up in time. The cooling pumps need megawatts of power, and hooking up this amount of power is not trivial.
3) Why not use the battery power?
The pumps are too big and battery power would have been insufficient. Battery back-ups are only used to run the valves, lights, computers, etc.
4) Where did the hydrogen for that explosion come from?
Hydrogen is normally produced in a nuclear reactor by radiolysis of the cooling water. Reactors have recombiners, igniters, and other means to dispose of this hydrogen before it becomes an explosion hazard. But when the core gets too hot, the zirconium cladding around the fuel will react with the water to produce much more hydrogen. (This reaction is rapid and exothermic, so in laymen's terms this is sometimes described as "burning" the core.) The amount of hydrogen overwhelmed the capacity of the recombiners, accumulated in secondary containment, and exploded.
5) So what is the latest status?
Something will have changed by the time I finish writing this FAQ. I've generally found the most accurate information from World Nuclear News, and they're also quite fast in posting updates:
6) Am I at risk?
For those who are in the immediate area and subject to evacuation orders, you are at low risk of radioactive contamination. Those who do get contaminated may have a slightly increased lifetime risk of cancer, but the most likely outcome will be that you will never suffer health effects from this for as long as you live. For the rest of you, please trust that nuclear professionals have trained all their lives for this event, and they are managing the situation. Much greater damage is being caused by ongoing fires, flooding, water shortages, etc. If you have a comfortable life, please consider helping out with financial donations to disaster relief organizations.