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tsunami wave receding from plant:
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Joe Neubarth said:They failed about thirty minutes after the Earthquake (and reactor Scram) because they no longer were there.
Reno Deano said:The fact that they can get into the plants and grounds around them indicate that there are no spent fuel rods from the SFPs laying about.
That is likely the case, Borek. Power turbines are large, but delicate and they trip on anomalous vibration, and likely the plant was set to scram its reactors on input from seismic sensors. Earthquake takes out the turbines and reactors, and the tsunami arrives later and takes out the emergency backup generators. Battery back-ups are limited and can't take the place of backup generators - maybe they have the capability of providing critical instrumentation and closing or opening critical valves to fail-safe conditions.Borek said:My impression was that the tsunami wave was first and they stopped some time later, but now I see it can be read differently - they started immediately and stopped when the wave came.
Joe Neubarth said:Most of us are still trying to find out what is happening and what actually happened.
I am convinced that we had some fuel meltdown. I also know that the steam release to decrease pressure on the reactor carried considerable radiation release with it. That cesium and strontium and iodine came from at least one of the reactors.
Some on here seem to think that Reactor Number Three had a full melt down and loss of fuel material through the reactor vessel.
I keep on looking and can not find a reference to the pressure of Reactor Number three at the present time. Those of you in the know, can you post the present values if they have been released by Tokyo Electric?
turbo-1 said:Battery back-ups are limited and can't take the place of backup generators - maybe they have the capability of providing critical instrumentation and closing or opening critical valves to fail-safe conditions.
tadjik said:Could it be ... that :
http://www.nisa.meti.go.jp/english/files/en20110325-1-4.pdf
Supression chamber : 2 atm
Dry water : atmospheric
Temperature : relatively low
Radioactivity similar to other reactors
The researchers estimate that 3x10^15 becquerels of Cs-137 (which has a half-life of 30 years) were released during the first two days following the disaster on 11 March. A further 3x10^16 was released over the next two days, totalling 50% of the Cs-137 emitted in the Chernobyl accident. 4x10^17 becquerels of I-131, with a half-life of 8 days, were likely released over the same period, roughly 20% of I-131 released from Chernobyl. Wotawa says he was "surprised at the cesium levels, but less so with respect to iodine, as its highly volatile."
It would be nice if someone would give a better discussion of this result. By my understanding of the definition of a Bequerel, 3x10^16 Bq would amount to about 10 kilograms (!) of Cesium. That size of release seems completely impossible without a major containment failure, which pretty clearly has not occurred.
Posted by: Dean Townsley | March 24, 2011 03:32 AM
jlduh said:About the generators, i think this info will have to be clarified by further inquiry but what i heard about was that they started (probably just after the quake) then stopped after. Looking at the vidéo above of the flooding of the plant we can understand that they have been flooded and probably destroyed as they were on the ground floor of the building, just close to the white fuel tanks as shown earlier on FRED's drawing.
We can be surprised that no mobile power generator could be available soon (I'm talking about these kind of things, like gas turbine generators: http://www.netimago.com/image_181981.html )
I heard an info at the beginning of the crisis that Tepco asked for ten of them... but found on the GE site that only three of them where available... in Florida! Ok i understand that total loss of power (including safety groups) was not a scenario conceived by Tepco and this perfectly demonstrates it...
An other subjet: can somebody give me a good explanation of why Tepco had to vent the H2 inside the buildings (in the top floor) instead of outside? This looks an odd way of doing it, considering that there was a risk of explosion. Why inside instead of outside? This looks strange to me and i find no analysis or answer on this point.
jlduh said:An other subjet: can somebody give me a good explanation of why Tepco had to vent the H2 inside the buildings (in the top floor) instead of outside?
Borek said:If I recall correctly venting inside of the building means lower chances of radioactive contaminants getting outside, hence the design.
Edit: beaten by Joe.
jlduh said:Thanks Reno, so your explanation is that it's because there was no power available...
So the only vent they could open was inside the building, there was none actionnable toward the outside (what a pity...). Then that was a constraint, not a choice (like to avoid radioactive venting outside), right?
Are we talking about a valve that a man had to actionnate physically being close to it?
Bodge said:Hard facts are hard to come by I'm afraid.
Joe Neubarth said:Yep, I'm not certain I understand what I think I used to know, but I do know that I don't understand what is happening now.
Bodge said:KYODO: as of 10 minutes ago.
"NEWS ADVISORY: Reactor vessel of Fukushima plant No. 3 unit may have been damaged: Gov't panel"
"NEWS ADVISORY: U.S. forces to provide water to cool Fukushima plant: Defense chief Kitazawa"
Where are all the resident experts?
I need answers to my last 3 posts, the situation is very concerning and still as clear as mud.
Jakeh said:No expert but as I understand it (from here or elsewhere) the battery power controls valves, the back-up system pumps themselves being powered by steam from the reactors. Which is pretty clever for as long as the valves can be controlled.
The amount of battery power available must be a possible lesson-learned thing. 8 hours wouldn't be acceptable for a mobile phone. That's probably very unfair. But also true.
First post here as well, I've been watching this unfold through here. Thanks to everybody, by far the best resource I've found on the web.
Yomiuri: TEPCO detected zirconium 95 at 0.23 Bq 330m south of Fukushima-1 drainage outlet on Wednesday.
That is as far as it could get before it died.Bodge said:NHK WORLD:
"Caesium 141 found in plant."
Half life 24 seconds ? Please explain
A colleague indicated it was apparently unintended for the hydrogen and steam from containment to be vented into the secondary or upper containment (metal structure). He indicated that duct work to carry to the appropriate stack had ruptured, and the hydrogen leaked into the upper containment area. As far as I know, one would not design a system to vent H2 into the upper containment, precisely in order to prevent what did happen.jlduh said:An other subjet: can somebody give me a good explanation of why Tepco had to vent the H2 inside the buildings (in the top floor) instead of outside? This looks an odd way of doing it, considering that there was a risk of explosion. Why inside instead of outside? This looks strange to me and i find no analysis or answer on this point.
That doesn't make much sense to me. The half-life is very short, and that of Ba-141 and La-141 is much longer.Bodge said:NHK WORLD:
"Caesium 141 found in plant."
Half life 24 seconds ? Please explain
Astronuc said:That doesn't make much sense to me. The half-life is very short, and that of Ba-141 and La-141 is much longer.
The precursor Xe-141 has an even shorter half-life, so there shouldn't be any significant accumulation of Cs-141 outside of containment.