- #386
kfmfe04
- 38
- 0
kfmfe04 said:
NBC nightly news, too. Now, let's hope pumps, valves, etc work.Borek said:Polish media reports electric line is ready.
mattm2 said:Why not ask for some prison volunteers to sacrifice their lives for the sake of society.
AtomicWombat said:I was thinking about using TEPCO executives.
MadRocketSci2 said:The Japanese did apparently plan for earthquakes and tsunamis at this plant. They had something like a 6 m sea-wall around it - they got a 7 m wave this time due to the unexpected magnitude of the event.
kloptok said:Situations like these does indeed raise questions of an utilitaristic nature: is it right or wrong for a number of individuals to risk their lives for the survival of many others? Looking at Chernobyl it is clear that a number of persons died while rescuing the situation, probably for the survival of many others.
Under normal operation, there would be a heat exchanger to cool the water. Water introduced into the primary system and spent fuel pools is extremely clean - cleaner than the water from your home faucets.Angry Citizen said:What I'm most curious about are the spent fuel ponds. Would the reinstatement of power in the facility allow the ponds to be cooled without having to pump in a continuous stream of fresh water? I'm just fuzzy on whether or not there's an actual cooling system for the spent fuel ponds, or if they just replace the water as it boils off.
Steven Chu put it on hold, ostensibly as a favor to Harry Reid for his support to Obama. The Yucca Mountain project, while technically sound, has been dogged by politics and the shifting winds (policy).TCups said:Can someone give me a quick update on what has happened with the effort to establish a USA facility at Yucca Flats for the long term storage of high level radioactive wastes? Is the need for a safe facility to accept high level radioactive waste still as great as it was 25 years ago? Once upon a time, far, far away, I was the RSO of a hospital that had to "dispose" of some old cobalt sources. It was amazingly difficult then. I can only imagine what it must be like now. If there are lessons to be learned here, one is that storing high level radioactive wastes underground in salt formations that have been stable for millions of years is probably a better idea than storing them in pools along a coast line prone to quakes and tsunamis. Do I somehow remember that Harry Reid killed the Yucca Flats facility "NIMBY" style?
Unit 1 uses about 21 MWe for station services, and Units 2-5 use about 24 MWe. Assuming they need about 1% for cooling after shutdown, then they would need 210 kWe for Unit 1 and 240 kWe for Units 2, 3 and 4. However at this point the decay heat should be down to about 0.2%, they'd need about 50 kWe per unit for cooling. This is ball-park, back of the envelope since there are other station needs - so these represent the order of magnitude. The demands could be a few 100s of kWe.Texan99 said:My impression -- and I'm hoping someone here can confirm if it's correct -- is that we tend to underestimate the sheer volume of water that needs to be pumped to keep all these reactors and pools cool enough. Someone on the WSJ comments section said they needed a megawatt of power and 4,000 volts, I think, to run the whole cooling system at full capacity. Firetrucks and water cannons may look like they're moving a lot of water, but it's just not enough. If that's so, then it may make a huge difference now that they've got adequate power supplies again.
Political expediency has made this into a zombie. There are SFPs all over the country (with various costs and labor needed to maintain them). What is wrong with going to a dry cask system and cleaning up all these pools? And making the US a harder target against terrorism, by the way. NIMBY can't be allowed to trump the common good, if we expect to advance. There are all kinds of people here in Maine that oppose the building of wind-power sites in the best places (mountain-ridges, peaks in high-wind areas) because "it wouldn't look nice".Astronuc said:Steven Chu put it on hold, ostensibly as a favor to Harry Reid for his support to Obama. The Yucca Mountain project, while technically sound, has been dogged by politics and the shifting winds (policy).
Actually many utilities are going with dry storage and suing the US government to reclaim a portion of the $billions collected to pay for a storage facility - that may never operate. The government is reluctant to return the money, so the DOJ challenges the utilities on the expenses for the alternatives. It's kind of mind-boggling. If this program was done in the public sector, it would probably be illegal (as in RICO).turbo-1 said:Political expediency has made this into a zombie. There are SFPs all over the country (with various costs and labor needed to maintain them). What is wrong with going to a dry cask system and cleaning up all these pools? And making the US a harder target against terrorism, by the way. NIMBY can't be allowed to trump the common good, if we expect to advance. There are all kinds of people here in Maine that oppose the building of wind-power sites in the best places (mountain-ridges, peaks in high-wind areas) because "it wouldn't look nice".
I want to see humanity not only survive but advance and surpass us. Three or four generations from now, if wind power has turned out to be a dud, well the windmills could be torn down and scrapped without contaminating our water or air.
uart said:Yes I know it's 20/20 hindsight, but this issue of site placement just seems like the biggest weakness in the whole design. Zero safety margin when compared to tsunamis from just the era of modern history. This surprises me since more elevation doesn't seem as if it would have been difficult problem.
Texan99 said:My impression -- and I'm hoping someone here can confirm if it's correct -- is that we tend to underestimate the sheer volume of water that needs to be pumped to keep all these reactors and pools cool enough. Someone on the WSJ comments section said they needed a megawatt of power and 4,000 volts, I think, to run the whole cooling system at full capacity. Firetrucks and water cannons may look like they're moving a lot of water, but it's just not enough. If that's so, then it may make a huge difference now that they've got adequate power supplies again.
I hear you. When I started investigating the costs of dry casks, I was flabbergasted. How can a utility safely contain, transport, and safely store the nuclear wastes that they produced with costs like that? There has to be a way to clean out these depots full of spent fuel, and consolidate that storage in a secure facility.Astronuc said:Actually many utilities are going with dry storage and suing the US government to reclaim a portion of the $billions collected to pay for a storage facility - that may never operate. The government is reluctant to return the money, so the DOJ challenges the utilities on the expenses for the alternatives. It's kind of mind-boggling. If this program was done in the public sector, it would probably be illegal (as in RICO).
AntonL said:According to NY times diagram the volume is 39200 cubic feet or 1110Tonnes of water and each storing about 550 tonnes of fuel; - this is per reactor and there is a seventh storage pool containing 6000 tonnes of spent fuel the seventh pool is 29x12 metres and 11 metres deep
AtomicWombat said:Here is an English language version of the video taken during the helicopter fly-over:
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/18_02.html"
32 MOX assemblies is not significant. Some newer assemblies might by 9x9 with 72 or 74 fuel rods.Reno Deano said:Now we know why TEPCO is so focused on keeping the fuel pool at Unit 3 filled with water, MOX fuel in the pool. I also see that the news agencies have picked up on the MOX fuel at unit 3.
They are infor some interesting questioning from the public about keeping that quiet...but I don't blame them.
AtomicWombat said:Can someone get a screen grab (still picture) from this video please. I don't know how. At about 0:16 it shows the north wall of building 4 where I earlier suggested there was evidence of coria (molten fuel rod assemblies). Others suggested it was insulation. Well the insulation appears to have 1) crept further down the wall and onto a the emergency vent pipe; and 2) changed colour to a much darker shade (although colour reproduction is poor).
Another link:
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/daily/english/fixed/asx/18_02_512k.asx
jinxdone said:Here;
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Here's the same as seen from another angle for comparison.
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Does anybody have a better source for this footage? The stream quality on both of these videos is pretty bad.
jinxdone said:Here;
Here's the same as seen from another angle for comparison.
AntonL said:This is a bit off topic but relevant - anybody recognize this Nuke Plant?