Posted on 02/07/2012 5:36:50 AM PST by TigerLikesRooster
Temperature remains high at damaged reactor
An unknown rise in temperature at one of the reactors at the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant is troubling its operator. Tokyo Electric says the temperature hasn't gone down even after it increased the volume of cooling water on Tuesday.
One of the thermometers at the bottom of reactor No. 2 at the Fukushima Daiichi plant gradually rose to about 70 degrees Celsius since January 27th. It had stayed around 45 degrees before.
In an effort to lower the temperature, the operator increased the amount of water sprayed on the nuclear fuel by 3 tons to 13.5 tons per hour Tuesday morning.
But Tokyo Electric said readings were down only about 3 degrees after some 5 hours of operation, hardly showing signs of improvement.
The utility said the flow of water in the reactor may have changed after plumbing work in late January, causing difficulties in cooling part of the melted nuclear fuel.
It added that no temperature rise has been observed at 2 other thermometers in the same reactor and that it will continue to carefully monitor the reactor.
TEPCO has been unable to visually confirm conditions inside the reactors since the nuclear disaster last March because of high radiation.
Tuesday, February 07, 2012 13:05 +0900 (JST)
Yet, they existed.
The probability of such a wave occurring is a higher order problem than is readily dealt with through mere reference to calculus. First, you have to believe they exist
The reason they injected boric acid as a precaution was due to very low traces of fission products.
Well, you’re getting into areas of philosophy (beliefs), and that is moving outside of the realm of the questions that physics addresses. If you want to go in that direction, it is something I am reluctant to comment on in a thread that really began as a technical discussion.
"Tepco was able to discount recriticality as a potential cause of the temperature rise after conducting an analysis of charcoal filters in the containment gas control system. These showed very low traces of fission products that were below the threshold that would indicate criticality. Nevertheless Tepco this morning injected boric acid into the reactor vessel as a precaution and increased the core spray injection rate by three cubic metres per hour."
The overall core temperature remains within the limits specified for cold shutdown (less than 100 deg. C.).
Here is how the nuclear industry is reporting the situation.
Tepco was able to discount recriticality as a potential cause of the temperature rise after conducting an analysis of charcoal filters in the containment gas control system. These showed very low traces of fission products that were below the threshold that would indicate criticality. Nevertheless Tepco this morning injected boric acid into the reactor vessel as a precaution and increased the core spray injection rate by three cubic metres per hour.
Stabilisation after Fukushima cooling change
So it was not no detectable fission products. Again, you always need to know the limits of detection for every Tepco reported value. It was measured fission products that were determined to be below the thresholds that would indicate fission. Now how they determine the thresholds for an unknown situation is beyond me. And that is probably why they added the boric acid.
It was stated that it was done as a precaution. What is the reason for the precaution? Probably two reasons, one technical, the other political. The technical reason is that if there is material shifting around, it can change the geometry in ways that are not fully characterized. One of the principles of criticality safety is to go the extra mile to assure that you have inserted negative reactivity to offset any possible increase in reactivity as a result of the geometry change. The political reason is that if they didn't do it, the anti-nuke kooks would accuse them of not taking proper precautions.
Once the new geometry has stabilized, they will likely reduce the boric acid concentration gradually and check to be sure criticality is not being approached. That is a very straightforward reactor physics measurement involving subcritical multiplication. One of the classes I teach does the very same measurement, not by boron concentration but by control rod positions. It is called incremental approach to critical. You get extremely precise measurements of critical rod position. Same deal with born concentration.
Can understand that, but it has been reported that they ended up adding 1,094 Kg of boric acid. More then they originally estimated would be required. That does not seem to be a well calculated preventative maintenance procedure done partially for show.
Would huge ice cubes work at cooling better than water? Just wondering....
Now, as Obamalamadingdong would say, here we have a teachable moment. We are better if we first consider the science and run the numbers before we jump to emotional conclusions (1094 kilograms is a lot of mass, more than they expected, therefore they must be lying, putting on a show). While doing so may be emotionally satisfying because it validates a personal prejudice, it can lead you away from the truth.
Very good. You are correct. Ice, as it melts, absorbs more heat because you are taking advantage of the phase change. This is called latent heat of fusion, and involves the concepts of enthalpy of fusion and latent heat. For ice, the heat of fusion is about 334 kJ/kg. Whatever the heat source is that melts the ice "gives up" 334 kJ of thermal energy to melt 1 kg of ice. That makes whatever is supplying the energy cooler.
In this case, they wanted to transport coolant through a structure with complex geometry, so liquid was the best choice. Large chunks of ice would have a hard time being transported through small channels and openings.
You can get added heat removal through the phase change from liquid to vapor. This is called the latent heat of evaporation. It is the principle upon which cooling towers work. The steam you see coming out of a cooling tower is removing heat from the power plant through this process. BTW, in a nuclear plant, the steam coming from a cooling tower isn't from the reactor. The coolant running through the cooling tower is from the condenser recirculating loop. What is being evaporated is from the heat sink, typically a lake (natural or man-made).
;O0 After your first 2 words *very good*, I had to pause and then read the rest of your post....I love to be called *very good* :O) just a little pride you know....LOL thank you for your reply....you also are very good even I can understand it....:O)
We currently have a runaway situation in math ~ we have found it can describe conditions in some detail in universes/realities beyond our own. What that does instantly is substantially discount the future utility of math in predicting anything at all!
My point was math hadn't predicted Rogue Waves. However, once we had some mathematicians who believed Rogue Waves were possible, they came up with predictive mathematics ~ with a distinct quantum mechanical point of view.
Rogue Waves are still "Rogue Waves" that just pop up out of an assortment of other smaller waves ~ because they can. Which raises the question ~ what do you really think the Japanese are trying to hide at that reactor?
Fukushima got a little shaker today. 4.2 on the Japanese scale. Caused some shaking at the plant. JNN camera has been done with an error since about then.
Aftershocks in a region that experienced a major seismic event are not uncommon. What was the result of that 4.2 other than the camera failure? I have seen nothing on the NEI or IAEA news feeds. If its limited to a camera failure, I won't worry too much about it.
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