Japan Earthquake: Nuclear Plants at Fukushima Daiichi

In summary: RCIC consists of a series of pumps, valves, and manifolds that allow coolant to be circulated around the reactor pressure vessel in the event of a loss of the main feedwater supply.In summary, the earthquake and tsunami may have caused a loss of coolant at the Fukushima Daiichi NPP, which could lead to a meltdown. The system for cooling the reactor core is designed to kick in in the event of a loss of feedwater, and fortunately this appears not to have happened yet.
  • #12,601
zapperzero said:
This is going to make SteveElbows even sadder (sorry, Steve!), but I think I see puffs of steam in that video, near the end.

I don't mind steam etc from the early weeks of the disaster, it was the search for new horror months after the disaster that annoyed me, as if the disaster wasn't bad enough for some. Anyway this forum was mostly a good shelter from the worst of that stuff, my moans would be better directed elsewhere really, and Id be lying if I said I didn't enjoy debunking silly stuff.

Sadly the resolution & compression of that video make it very hard for me to glean much of interest, and there are plenty of non-nuclear things on site that could have steamed or smoked at that moment I guess.
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #12,602
duccio said:

Looking at the vid from unit 3 - at about 4:30 there is the door (pic1, pic2), definitely bent outwards like from an inner containment blast. Also following the attempts to open the door (kicking at it) there is this pipe that apparently has its cap blown off (pic3) - they even stick the geiger down the pipe. Also the big-*** stainless steel vertical pipe has the floor cap blown upwards (pic4), like from an underfloor blast.

Also towards the end of vid there is sign of shrapnel dents on a SS pipe.

May thanks for posting these vids - to me they prove the explosion was from inside containment not from upper floor. Probably the most revealing thing on unit3 in the last 3/4 year.

Edit: those workers must have balls of steel, kudos to them!
 

Attachments

  • basementdoor_3.jpg
    basementdoor_3.jpg
    21.6 KB · Views: 475
  • basementdoorkick_3.png
    basementdoorkick_3.png
    106.6 KB · Views: 418
  • blownpipe_3.png
    blownpipe_3.png
    88.5 KB · Views: 460
Last edited:
  • #12,603
And pic4 (sorry for doublepost)
 

Attachments

  • sspipe_3.png
    sspipe_3.png
    72.7 KB · Views: 444
  • #12,604
zapperzero said:
<..> I see puffs of steam in that video, near the end.

Indeed. The puffs appear from behind the corner of unit 2, while they do block the view to unit 1, i.e. the puffing would seem to be in the vicinity of the space between those two units.
We could be looking at visual evidence of the initial operations of the unit 1 Isolation Condenser.
 
  • #12,605
How thick is the door in question?

If it's an entry into the containment then it ought to be a massive, reinforced steel door. Is there anything else besides an explosion which could deform such a door?

A question to the physicists here: How would a steel door react if it's suffering massive heat on one side, but not on the other? Would it really bend outwards, away from the heat?
Perhaps I'm telling total bogus now, but if there'd be any thermal deformation, I'd expect the door to bend exactly the other way - inwards.
 
Last edited:
  • #12,606
clancy688 said:
How thick is the door in question?

If it's an entry into the containment then it ought to be a massive, reinforced steel door. Is there anything else besides an explosion which could deform such a door?

A question to the physicists here: How would a steel door react if it's suffering massive heat on one side, but not on the other? Would it really bend outwards, away from the heat?
Perhaps I'm telling total bogus now, but if there'd be any thermal deformation, I'd expect the door to bend exactly the other way - inwards.

It doesn't matter which way it would bend. You'd have scorch marks at the very least - in fact, you'd have no paint left on that door at all, if you put in enough heat to warp it permanently. Not much door either, I believe :)
 
  • #12,607
clancy688 said:
How thick is the door in question?

Judging from unit 2 video the door is not as thick as one might guess. Certainly it has a knob and can easily be opened (and more importantly closed) by hand. As I understand it this is not a door into containment, it's just a door to the torus room. While torus is part of containment the room in which it resides might not qualify as containment (ie if torus breaks then containment is breached). If that is the case then to get that pressure differential to bend the door (even if the door is not that thick) means a break either in torus or in one of the massive pipes that leads to drywell AND a pressure spike in the drywell.

Now normally the drywell has no oxygen (N2 atmosphere). However the explosion happened 3 days (if I remember) after power was lost which means there is ample time for some percentage of oxygen to seep in and react with the H2 from Zr-steam after venting. Another alternative that I see is a superheated bundle of metal falling all at once into a pool of water - no idea if the core (or a big chunk of) can possibly drop all at once to the bottom of RPV into water causing a steam explosion.

Not to beat a dead horse but I'd personally go with H2 explosion in drywell.
 
  • #12,608
shadowncs said:
Not to beat a dead horse but I'd personally go with H2 explosion in drywell.

Um, it's not the first time I've posted the following document here (though jlduh provided it first), but it was mostly ignored. So, here again:

http://www.osti.gov/bridge/servlets/purl/5835351-nR29Hq/5835351.pdf

"The impact of BWR MK I primary containment failure dynamics on secondary containment integrity."

A second potential mechanism for MK I primary containment failure
in an unmitigated severe accident is drywell liner (shell) ablation due
to direct attack by molten corium. The ability of molten metals to
erode steel structures is well documented.4 While significant uncertainties
surround the behavior of core/concrete reactions and corium
spreading in a MK I containment configuration,2 preliminary analyses
indicate failure of the MK I drywell liner is quite likely if core
debris does contact the inner liner surface5.
Should the liner fail near the drywell floor elevation, the most
probable sites for blowdown entry into the secondary containment are the
reactor building basement torus room
and the second floor of the reactor
building (Exhibit 2).

We probably do have some corium outside the pressure vessel, at least that's what TEPCO thinks, and this paper proclaims that under certain circumstances (corium attacks the drywell liner) a blowdown in the torus room is very likely.On a second note:
If there actually is a hole connecting the primary containment with the torus room (either through drywell liner failure as explained above or torus damage), shouldn't the torus room be filled with water?
As far as I understand, TEPCO kept pouring water into the reactor vessels and containments until the drywell was filled to a certain height, so if there is a leak to the torus room, it should be filled with water as well.

Edit: Oh, tsutsuji already answered that question:

tsutsuji said:
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20120314/index.html On 14 March, a total of 6 Tepco workers went down to the basements and inspected the vicinity of the entrances of unit 2 and unit 3's suppression chambers. [...] It was confirmed that the 9 meter high suppression chambers in both units are partly submerged by 6 meter deep contaminated water.

Which spikes new questions for me:

First, where does the water come from? If shadowncs is correct and those chambers are secondary and not primary containment, then there have to be some containment breaches in either the torus itself or the drywell. Where else would the water come from otherwise?

And second, why are they only filled partially and not totally? If there are leaks and if there's water in the drywell (to cool escaped fuel) then I'd expect the lower lying chambers to be totally submerged and not only partially. Why aren't they?
 
Last edited:
  • #12,609
clancy688 said:
On a second note:
If there actually is a hole connecting the primary containment with the torus room (either through drywell liner failure as explained above or torus damage), shouldn't the torus room be filled with water?
As far as I understand, TEPCO kept pouring water into the reactor vessels and containments until the drywell was filled to a certain height, so if there is a leak to the torus room, it should be filled with water as well.

And perhaps it is? In the vids you can clearly see both unit 2 and unit 3 lower-level basements are flooded at the stairwell. For unit3 vid the worker spends a large amount of time measuring radioactivity of the stairwell water, outside the torus room, which appears to be a few meters lower than the basement level the torus room door is located. That water comes from somewhere perhaps the most likely being the torus room. Remember those rooms are quite high. As to water in drywell, TEPCO is yet to confirm there is any water at all - see unit 2 endoscope. We simply don't know yet but I tend to agree, if the torus were intact then we'd expect water in drywell.

I'm surprised by the fact the unit 2 door could be opened, that with the "explosive sounds" reported coming from unit 2 torus early on.
 
  • #12,610
clancy688 said:
Um, it's not the first time I've posted the following document here (though jlduh provided it first), but it was mostly ignored. So, here again:

http://www.osti.gov/bridge/servlets/purl/5835351-nR29Hq/5835351.pdf

"The impact of BWR MK I primary containment failure dynamics on secondary containment integrity."

Don't worry you are not alone, I go on about blowdown to the torus room from time to time, especially now that we've had a glimpse into the torus rooms so it is fresh in peoples minds. Cant take it much further though until we have more useful evidence or data, which could be a long wait.
On a second note:
If there actually is a hole connecting the primary containment with the torus room (either through drywell liner failure as explained above or torus damage), shouldn't the torus room be filled with water?
As far as I understand, TEPCO kept pouring water into the reactor vessels and containments until the drywell was filled to a certain height, so if there is a leak to the torus room, it should be filled with water as well.

TEPCOs original stabilisation plan involved filling the drywells up with water to a certain height, but they realized it wasn't working, and all that contaminated water was then found in the basements. Also when they did the endoscope camera thing at reactor 2 the water level in the drywell was lower than their more recent assumptions, so they are still playing catchup with reality. The next endoscope will be longer and they hope to get a visual on the water, though frankly I wouldn't be shocked if it turns out there is hardly any water staying in the drywell at all. We don't have too long to wait till this next mission, I am sure its supposed to happen in March.

First, where does the water come from? If shadowncs is correct and those chambers are secondary and not primary containment, then there have to be some containment breaches in either the torus itself or the drywell. Where else would the water come from otherwise?

And second, why are they only filled partially and not totally? If there are leaks and if there's water in the drywell (to cool escaped fuel) then I'd expect the lower lying chambers to be totally submerged and not only partially. Why aren't they?

Im sure the torus rooms don't count as primary containment. And they have not been able to deny some kind of containment breach ever since they found so much water at the lower levels.

The lower levels are not completely submerged for several reasons. Firstly there is also lots of water in the basement of the turbine buildings, which may be flowing from the reactor building, so there is lots of room for the water to take up. And secondly they have been pumping water out of the turbine buildings to be processed by the water treatment systems. This ties into the leaks into the sea via trenches etc, and their desperate race against time to keep the water level to a certain limit. The water level fluctuates but ue to the pumping it doesn't get high enough to fill the entire torus room.

But I also think its quite likely that they may be relying on the water in the basements to provide shielding against anything nasty that may have fallen down there, and cooling of such corium, so even if they have the capacity to pump almost all of the water out of the torus rooms, turbine basements etc, I don't know as they would want to at this stage.
 
  • #12,611
shadowncs said:
And perhaps it is? In the vids you can clearly see both unit 2 and unit 3 lower-level basements are flooded at the stairwell. For unit3 vid the worker spends a large amount of time measuring radioactivity of the stairwell water, outside the torus room, which appears to be a few meters lower than the basement level the torus room door is located. That water comes from somewhere perhaps the most likely being the torus room. Remember those rooms are quite high. As to water in drywell, TEPCO is yet to confirm there is any water at all - see unit 2 endoscope. We simply don't know yet but I tend to agree, if the torus were intact then we'd expect water in drywell.

I'm surprised by the fact the unit 2 door could be opened, that with the "explosive sounds" reported coming from unit 2 torus early on.

Yes I am pretty sure that the water in the stairwell is the same as torus room water, because those stairs lead down to the floor level of the torus room (as opposed to the door they opened to look into the torus room, which is at least half-way up the torus room wall).

If neither the torus or the lower part of the drywell had damage then yes, we would expect to see much more water in the drywell, TEPCOs original drywell flooding plan would not have been abandoned. We can't use this to establish with certainty that the torus is damaged though because if the torus was intact but the bottom or lower walls of the drywell were damaged, we could still expect to see little water in the drywell and lots of water in the torus room.

As for the explosion at reactor 2, this has not been a safe assumption for a long time either. Firstly because the explosion at reactor 4 building happened around the same time, causing confusion, and later when they looked at local plant seismograph readings it looked like reactor 4 was the epicentre, not reactor 2. And the other reason they made a hasty assumption that the reactor 2 suppression chamber went boom, was because for many hours before the explosion they were afraid that the reactor 2 suppression chamber was in trouble. They knew its pressure & temperature was too high, but they failed in their mission to vent it, so they had to release more steam from the reactor into the suppression chamber anyway, because they were desperate to lower reactor vessel pressure so they could get some water pumped in. The site manager had already made plans for an evacuation, hours before the partial site evacuation actually took place. So with this in mind, its no surprise that when an explosive sound was heard and radiation levels on site climbed dramatically, they assumed the suppression chamber had failed.

And it may well have failed, all we can now rule out is that it failed in a manner where the torus was completely mangled, doors deformed etc.

The intriguing mysteries of reactor 2 only grow for me, because as we have seen from past surveys by humans & robots, there aren't the same sorts of highly contaminated areas at various locations within reactor 2 building that we see with reactor 1 (where various bits of equipment are well contaminated) or reactor 3 (where there were some very high levels of contamination to north-east and south-west of the drywell containment near to pipe penetrations and access doors). At reactor 2 we just have the highly contaminated water in the basement, and several hotspots on the refuelling level near to the concrete cap over containment, not much on any of the other reactor building floors with which we may gain clues about emission pathways.
 
  • #12,612
Looks like a kind of unintended groundwater-corium-cooling-system to me. At least if any corium had reached the torus, it must have been cooled well by the groundwater inflow. Perhaps this is also one reason, why they keep the water level around OP 3000.

And if even the door to the torus room is damaged by the explosion in unit 3, I would expect severe damage inside the PCV too.

It will be an incredible effort to clean up this huge mess...
 
  • #12,613
I will take this opportunity (the release of videos and announcement that survey work will begin in earnest there) to publicly plead with the moderators to unlock (or at least un-hide) the Unit 3 explosion thread. It's been quite a while, there is new stuff to discuss and I would like to at least have the old stuff available for reference.
 
  • #12,614
SteveElbows said:
<..>The intriguing mysteries of reactor 2 only grow for me, because as we have seen from past surveys by humans & robots, there aren't the same sorts of highly contaminated areas at various locations within reactor 2 building that we see with reactor 1 (where various bits of equipment are well contaminated) or reactor 3 (where there were some very high levels of contamination to north-east and south-west of the drywell containment near to pipe penetrations and access doors).

I do know you have been intrigued by unit 2, if I remember correctly, centered about the question why such a large proportion of total emissions is assumed to have originated from unit 2. To me otoh unit 3 has remained the most vexing (while nothing really earthbreaking, I do feel quite a lot of new information on unit 3 has been surfacing since the thread specifically dealing with the unit 3 event was suspended by the moderators, -- and which I would like to turn about with like minded souls, but alas.) Unit 2 is also an interesting subject :-)

SteveElbows said:
At reactor 2 we just have the highly contaminated water in the basement, and several hotspots on the refuelling level near to the concrete cap over containment, not much on any of the other reactor building floors with which we may gain clues about emission pathways.

I note that there's a rather straightforward radiation gradient down through the building along the staircase positioned in the NE corner of the service floor: that would seem to me to indicate strongly that airborne emissions from unit 2 escaped predominantly via the service floor. The exact route(s) it has taken from the RPV to the service floor is unclear, but it stands to reason that emission did pass through cracks and openings in and around the top concrete plugs.
 
  • #12,615
zapperzero said:
I will take this opportunity (the release of videos and announcement that survey work will begin in earnest there) to publicly plead with the moderators to unlock (or at least un-hide) the Unit 3 explosion thread. It's been quite a while, there is new stuff to discuss and I would like to at least have the old stuff available for reference.

Sadly, the thread got damaged and its content is no longer available. I have no idea what have happened. As far as I can tell it was not physically removed, as it is still on the list of soft deleted threads - but it is empty.
 
  • #12,616
Borek said:
Sadly, the thread got damaged and its content is no longer available. I have no idea what have happened. As far as I can tell it was not physically removed, as it is still on the list of soft deleted threads - but it is empty.

This is way beyond annoying. There was some good stuff in there, good sources that were cited. Perhaps some of it could be retrieved from Google cache, or from backups? There are backups, right?
 
  • #12,618
zapperzero said:
This is way beyond annoying. There was some good stuff in there, good sources that were cited. Perhaps some of it could be retrieved from Google cache, or from backups? There are backups, right?

Question is - how long ago it happened. I don't know how long Greg keeps old backups, they are done to allow restoring the latest state in case of crash, not to keep track of everything that ever happened at forum. Besides, I doubt it is possible to restore just a single thread. But we will investigate, as it can be a sign of some serious problem.
 
  • #12,619
Borek said:
Question is - how long ago it happened. I don't know how long Greg keeps old backups, they are done to allow restoring the latest state in case of crash, not to keep track of everything that ever happened at forum. Besides, I doubt it is possible to restore just a single thread. But we will investigate, as it can be a sign of some serious problem.

There should be incremental backup. It's a serious problem if there isn't :D
 
  • #12,620
zapperzero said:
This is way beyond annoying. There was some good stuff in there, good sources that were cited. Perhaps some of it could be retrieved from Google cache, or from backups? There are backups, right?
Yes - it is beyond annoying. We don't understand what happened to the text. The thread is still in the dabase with stats. The content just vanished.

We do have a few posts from various reports, but that's insufficient to reconstruct the thread.

We've been looking into ways to restore/recover that thread.

Meanwhile - Evo discovered that Boardreader has a copy of some (much?) of that thread.
I suggest folks download as much as desired, and meanwhile we'll explore that avenue to recover what we can.

http://boardreader.com/thread/What_caused_the_big_explosion_at_fuku_re_14veXau5a.html

We have a backup of this thread as of Feb 04.
 
  • #12,621
http://boardreader.com/thread/What_caused_the_big_explosion_at_fuku_re_14veXau5a.html?o=0 here's the complete thread

The google cache version seems to be gone by now.Edit: Astronuc beat me... ^^
 
  • #12,622
5 videos from unit 4 sfp: http://photo.tepco.co.jp/date/2012/201203-j/120316_02j.html
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #12,623
zapperzero said:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=zfohHEQ7IP0#t=388s

An impromptu blow out ring!

EDIT: make that two
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfohHEQ7IP0&feature=player_detailpage#t=404s

LATER EDIT: Whatever it was, it was not inside those pipes. They look pristine. The overpressure came from below, from the 2nd basement level. Curiouser and curiouser.

That's my impression also. SteveElbows said the floor below is common to the floor of the torus room - probably with some separation doors (which might be blown open, we won't know for a long time). To get that kind of lifting and door bulging a pressure spike (cause I can't imagine being sustained for long even by a nuclear reactor) must have come from the torus room of unit 3.
Even a 5psi spike (generating say 6-7 tons of force on the door) might be enough to bend that door and lift the rigs.

Which brings me back to unit 2, personally I can't see any way that a torus explosion could happen without damage to the doors. Unit 2 torus is probably leaky but not blown apart.
 
  • #12,624
clancy688 said:
http://boardreader.com/thread/What_caused_the_big_explosion_at_fuku_re_14veXau5a.html?o=0 here's the complete thread

The google cache version seems to be gone by now.


Edit: Astronuc beat me... ^^

It only goes to post 170... is that all there were?
 
  • #12,625
Astronuc said:
We have a backup of this thread as of Feb 04.

That should suffice, as I recall that topic were closed before that point.
 
  • #12,626
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20120316/index.html On 15 March, Tepco performed the first inspection into unit 4's reactor. It was confirmed that debris have sunk to the bottom and that large quantities of suspended particles are in the water. The camera was lowered by about 20 m from the top of the reactor. It was confirmed that two board-shaped debris have sunk to the bottom. Suspended particles, looking like white dust, are reflecting in the water. During the inspection into the fuel pool that was performed until 16 March, the visibility was reduced to 1 m instead of 5 m as before, and large quantities of suspended particles were observed. The start of the fuel removal is scheduled to take place by December 2013. Tepco said "It is possible that the water became muddy because of the suspended particles. Next year we shall need a 7 m transparency to remove the fuel, so we must study the causes of the suspended particles".

http://www.jiji.com/jc/c?g=soc_30&k=2012031601019 On 16 March, Tepco released pictures of the underwater inspection of unit 4's spent fuel pool. As was reported after the February underwater inspection, there is no major damage to the fuel, but thin debris are spread near the fuel assemblies' handles. Starting on 19 March, Tepco will perform a 3 day long full inspection of the pool to make a map of the debris. Tepco is planning to remove the debris with an underwater vacuum cleaner.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #12,627
jim hardy said:
It only goes to post 170... is that all there were?
There were 709 posts (and 66 deleted posts) on 44+1 pages.
Rive said:
That should suffice, as I recall that topic were closed before that point.
We have a back of this (Japan Earthquake: nuclear plants) thread through Feb 04. It's a text back up without the attachments.
 
  • #12,628
tsutsuji said:
The start of the fuel removal is scheduled to take place by December 2013.

What is the reason for waiting so long? Is it not possible to pick the stuff out right now?
 
  • #12,629
Yamanote said:
What is the reason for waiting so long? Is it not possible to pick the stuff out right now?

There is much to be done before that time. Just for starters, the pool and surrounding areas must be cleaned, transfer casks and other equipment must be made or otherwise acquired, personnel trained to do this unprecedented maneuver...
 
  • #12,630
zapperzero said:
There is much to be done before that time. Just for starters, the pool and surrounding areas must be cleaned, transfer casks and other equipment must be made or otherwise acquired, personnel trained to do this unprecedented maneuver...

Well, Unit 4 is not that bad. It is not as contaminated as the other units.
They already cut off a significant part of upper, damaged levels of the building. It seems to be progressing nicely. Replacing the crane and other equipment, vacuuming the pool and starting to pull assemblies out would take 2 years from today?
 
  • #12,631
nikkkom said:
Well, Unit 4 is not that bad. It is not as contaminated as the other units.
They already cut off a significant part of upper, damaged levels of the building. It seems to be progressing nicely. Replacing the crane and other equipment, vacuuming the pool and starting to pull assemblies out would take 2 years from today?

I don't think they will replace the crane.
 
  • #12,632
zapperzero said:
I don't think they will replace the crane.

Perhaps only the FHM.
 
  • #12,633
I would guess it is in Tepco's interest to close the chapter of unit 4 as soon as possible to be able to focus on other important and difficult tasks (I see plenty of them...). And the more time passes, the higher is the risk that new problems from the pools might arise.

If they tell me end of 2012, ok. But end of 2013?
They know already for one year that they will have to get the stuff out of the pools, so it's not new to them. Maybe it is the debris in the pool or the water quality? But if so, what will be then at units 1 and 3, with half of the reactor buildings lying in the pools? Or perhaps the fuel bundles are simply still too hot to be handled in that way?

Would be interesting to know.
 
  • #12,634
Yamanote said:
What is the reason for waiting so long? Is it not possible to pick the stuff out right now?

They have to (had to?) repair the common pool crane, then improve the reliability of the power source for the common pool.
It's also possible that some room must be made or arranged in the common pool, 1500 bundles of fuel is some decent amount.

On unit 4 top level they have to repair and secure the FHM machinery: rails, crane and so.

Arrange and transfer some transfer casks.

Make up plans, revise and and get permissions for the process. Train staff.

Run the work on the other units.

My personal feeling that if they can then they will jump as soon as possible and don't wait for the schedule, but actually the schedule looks OK for me - no hurry, and yet not lazy...

Ps.: as I know fuel bundles must wait 3-5 years after usage before they are ready for transfer in transfer casks. Some fuel in U4 pool might be ready for transfer right now, but for some even the end of 2013 might be too early. I don't know if this limit can be tricked by putting less fuel in a cask than it's capacity...
 
Last edited:
  • #12,635
Rive said:
My personal feeling that if they can then they will jump as soon as possible and don't wail for the schedule, but actually the schedule looks OK for me - no hurry, and jet not lazy...

At first Tepco wanted to take one more year, but this was refused by the government :

tsutsuji said:
http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20111109/1400_kouteihyo-shiji.html and http://www3.nhk.or.jp/news/genpatsu-fukushima/20111109/1650_30nen.html The ministers of Industry (Edano) and Nuclear accident (Hosono) have asked Tepco to prepare a schedule where spent fuel pool fuel removal is started within 2 years after completion of step 2. This is one year earlier than recommended in the report from the middle and long term commission that was completed on 9 November.
 
Last edited:

Similar threads

Replies
12
Views
47K
Replies
41
Views
4K
Replies
2K
Views
433K
Replies
5
Views
5K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
763
Views
266K
Replies
38
Views
15K
Replies
4
Views
11K
Back
Top