Alferd_Packer
Philosopher
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2007
- Messages
- 8,746
So, the antipodal point is in the south atlantic off the coast of Uraguay.
"The Uraguay Syndrome?"
"The Uraguay Syndrome?"
Containment 1 is the Zircalloy cladding and you cannot flood inside that.
Containment 2 is the pressure vessel which you can flood.
Containment 3 is the concrete containment structure which can be directly flooded.
Look at the cutaway drawing in the pdf file page 16.
As far as I understand, fire trucks are pumping the sea water into containment and not recirculating this water.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110314/ts_nm/us_japan_quake
so, if one or more of the cores does melt down due to lack of cooling..what is the probable result?
are there any dangers to folks in the rest of Asia and the west coast of North & South America?
every morning I wake up, and the news gets worse.![]()
Obviously everyone is happy no more life was lost to radiation. But those reactors will have to be replaced. In the meantime there is a power shortage. Had that money been spent on upgrading them ten years ago with newer technology then those cores could be powered up again. Providing the needed energy. The money now needed to repair things would not need to be subdivided into cleaning and repairing melted cores.
My "crisis" isn't a nuclear blowout. Which would be the most dire, extreme and undesired event. Nevertheless the current situation is quite a nightmare that could have been prevented if the cores were replaced with newer models. The Japanese are looking at quite an expense down the road and that's without a blowout.
Well it would be good to decommission designs that can cause a meltdown in case of a cooling failure. Given we already have designs that work that way.
And by safe I don't only mean a huge radioactive cloud. But safe in the knowledge that it's working ok, that it shutdown ok, that you can now reactivate it to power the grid in this crisis, etc etc etc. It retrospect it begins to look a lot cheaper and better to have gone through the expense of upgrading it.
We can sure talk about that in another thread if you want to.
Fixed that
In my understanding the containments are in order the fuel pellets, the zircaloy cladding, the reactor coolant, the pressure vessel, the drywell, the containment dome and the vapor shield.
Not sure if anyone has put this up here yet:
http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/03/14/fukushiima_analysis/
Discuss...
That's weird logic.
The pellets will not dissolve in water, salt or clean.
The reaction would probably be just cooling although the net effect of salt water will be accelerated corrosion of metal components.
These plants will never be used again.
It is entirely illogical - just as pointing out that western plants have not malefunctioned so far -since my point was rather that thus far things went wrong because they were unforeseen rather than just unlikely.
I don't think anyone is saying that "it never broke, therefore won't." so it sounds pretty strawmanlike to me.
Nobody sane included Russian reactors in any discussion of nuclear safety.
I just don't remember them being *excluded* ever, either. That only happened after one blew up.
A mess, contained inside the primary containment vessel at Fukushima. That and a really expensive cleanup effort. That's all.
i hope you are right.![]()