- #7,736
Bandit127
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Jorge Stolfi said:Inuition gained from experience with ordinary molten metal and lava does not apply to corium.
If you dilute very hot molten metal with cooler molten stuff, such as concrete, it will immediatly cool down and remain cool. If you confine a ton of liquid metal in a closed container, it will stay there and slowly cool down. If you cool the surface of a lump of lava, it will form a solid, relatively cool crust and then slowly cool down throughout.
None of these "common sense facts" seem to apply to corium, because its radioactive contents will continue to generate heat from "nowhere" at the same total rate, no matter how much it is diluted or how it is confined. (Mixing with boron can prevent it becoming critical but has absolutely no effect on the decay heat generation.) If that heat has nowhere else to go, the corium will keep getting hotter and hotter until it boild away. (And even then the vaporized material will continue generating heat at the same rate.) If you dlute the corium 100 fold with molten concrete, and then keep that mass isolated, the rate at which its temperature increases with time will be reduced a 100 fold perhaps, but it will remain positive. So the entire mass --- original corium plus mixed concrete --- will continue to get hotter and hotter without limit; it will only take 3 months to reach the boiling point, instead of a day.
If the mass is not isolated but buried in soil or concrete (as in the "China syndrome" scenario), the temperature will tend to a limit when the heat produced inside the mass is equal to the heat lost to the medium. However, since concrete is a rather poor heat conductor, the equilibrium temperature inside may still be quite high --- as the lava example illustrates,
In this case dilution will help because it will increase the area available for heat to flow through into the cooler medium. An 8-fold dilution of the radioactive material will increase its surface area 4-fold; meaning that the temperature gradient at the surface (for the same total heat generation and dissipation) will be reduced to 1/4. However, since the radius of the mass is twice as large, the equilibrium temperature at the center should be reduced only by about one half. Now, if I read the posts correctly, the equilibrium temperature for an undiluted molten Fukushima fuel load is greater than 3000C. So it is not surprising that in Chernobyl the corium kept melting through several concrete floors, even though it was being diluted along the way.
I wonder if anyone has modeled the "China syndrome" scenario in more detail, namely how exactly the molten core would flow and get diluted once it gets surrounded by soil or concrete.
Is it possible that the hydrogen that needed to be purged out by the nitrogen in Unit 1 came from a corium/concrete reaction?
Sorry, I only have a cartoon reference for this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corium_(nuclear_reactor)#Corium-concrete_interactions"
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