Schneibster
Unregistered
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
- Messages
- 3,966
Oops.
Last edited:
No matter what happens, if something goes wrong, the reaction stops. In the worst case, the entire bundle of fuel rods melts into a puddle of slag at the bottom of the containment, and the reaction stops. Nothing gets out of the containment.
Not that particular kind of airplane, no. Specifically, not something that big and with that much fuel.Luddite said:The twin towers were specifically designed to withstand a direct impact from an airplane.
Not that particular kind of airplane, no.
1. If the processes are so well understood and controlled, how do power workers routinely become exposed to radiation above the permitted levels?
2. Is this the sort of people we want monitoring our nuclear power plants?
And I'm still trying to reconcile the fact that governments are designing architecture to contain civilian nuclear waste for as much as a million years (in the case of Finland) while people on this forum are asserting that it's harmless after a hundred.
The DOE document cited in the National Geographic article I linked to is extensively quoted on the web. In references, the 400,000 number comes up repeatedly as the point of "peak radioactivity". I haven't been able to find the source document yet though.
I can give a parallel example: In deep ocean submersiples they are built to be lighter than water. They would float except for lead weights which are held on by electromagnets. There is no mechanical connection. If you need to surface, you can throw a switch to release them. There is no relay, no logic circuit. You directly cut the power. If the batteries fail, the weights drop. If the switch fails, it cuts power. If all else fails, the cord could be cut, because it runs through the pressure sphere.
This is really irrelevant to this forum. But I did see an interview with the chief architect who was simply devastated that the buildings fell. If I remember correctly, he did account for an airliner that size. He didn't calculate what the burning fuel would do, that's right. And that's the problem with engineering. You don't anticipate all the potential problems. But even if he had figured on the burning fuel, he wouldn't have come to the right conclusions. It took a long time for the structural engineers to figure out that the supports had bent with the heat and pulled the structure in on itself. Steel wasn't supposed to yield that way. In fact, months later they were still talking about what unexpected reaction had actually caused some of the steel to melt. Because jet fuel burns well below the point that steel melts, so it was hard to explain the molten steel.I think that the engineers also weren't counting on a full fuel tank. I think they were concentrating mostly on the possibility of an airplane out of fuel (and thus, not able to truly control itself), as opposed to an intentional contact.
I haven't either. I've seen the 400,000 number listed in connection to the DOE and Yucca, but usually just in terms of them having to do a projection for that far into the future. The National Geographic article is the only one I've seen which connects that number to a future peak in radioactivity. And that claim doesn't make any sense, so I think the reporter screwed up on something.
It is useful to know which radionuclides are the greatest contributors to the calculated dose. At early times (the first 60,000 to 90,000 years) the dose is dominated by the highly soluble, very mobile radionuclides, I4C, 99Tc,a nd Iz9I. After that, the dose is dominated by 237Np with increasing contributions by several other actinides at late times (231Pa2, 26Ra2, 27A2~42, 220 230Th, ‘“Pb).
And that's the problem with engineering. You don't anticipate all the potential problems.
In fact, months later they were still talking about what unexpected reaction had actually caused some of the steel to melt.
Because jet fuel burns well below the point that steel melts, so it was hard to explain the molten steel.
I've seen quite a few references to the 400,000 year peak dose.
US Department of Energy figures show that over the 40 years to 1993 US expenditure on nuclear R&D totalled $60 billion, resulting in it supplying 20% of the electricity, whereas solar & geothermal received $22 billion and supplied only 3% of the power. More recent figures show the renewables total in the DOE R&D budget as $356 million in FY2000 and $375 million in FY2001, of which wind got $33 and $40 million respectively.
Finally found something on the subsidy issue..
http://www.uic.com.au/nip71.htm
The subsidies are substantial for nuclear power...but it seems it has given more back for the investment.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_Policy_Act_of_2005
The energy policy has now been revised and this wiki site seems to have a reasonable set of highlites.
glenn
I agree, examining the paper it specifies how much radioactive material will move how far in how much time if containment fails, and differentiates between early radionuclides that are highly mobile (carbon-14, technetium-99, and iodine-129), and late, long half-life radionuclides that are much less mobile (neptunium-237, with lesser contributions from a number of actinides, protactinium-231, radium-226, thorium-229 and -230, actinium-227, plutonium-242, and lead-210). The later radionuclides' lesser mobility is due to them not being water-soluble; they are heavy metals, as opposed to carbon, technetium, and iodine in the early stages, all of which can be carried away by water. The earlier radionuclides also have shorter half-lives, whereas the later ones are longer-lived, and therefore less active. The chart on the right side on page 10 of 13 indicates an approximate maximum worst-case dosage of about 300 mrem/yr, and average background in the US is 360 mrem/yr, more than half of it caused by radon-226 released from decaying uranium naturally present in the soil.This, then, is part of the missing puzzle. Peak dose is not the same as peak radioactivity. The radioactivity will continually decline. The dose rate rises because they're assuming that containment fails, and that various radioactive elements will then seep out. But what's relevant isn't really how far off that peak dose occurs, but what that peak dose is. And it's really not that large. It's on the order of our existing background radiation (~300 mrem/year).