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Chernobyl possibly going active again
Posted on 5/5/21 at 5:59 pm
Posted on 5/5/21 at 5:59 pm
LINK
quote:
‘It’s like the embers in a barbecue pit.’ Nuclear reactions are smoldering again at Chernobyl
quote:
Thirty-five years after the Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant in Ukraine exploded in the world’s worst nuclear accident, fission reactions are smoldering again in uranium fuel masses buried deep inside a mangled reactor hall. “It’s like the embers in a barbecue pit,” says Neil Hyatt, a nuclear materials chemist at the University of Sheffield. Now, Ukrainian scientists are scrambling to determine whether the reactions will wink out on their own—or require extraordinary interventions to avert another accident.
Any remedy he and his colleagues come up with will be of keen interest to Japan, which is coping with the aftermath of its own nuclear disaster 10 years ago at Fukushima, Hyatt notes. “It’s a similar magnitude of hazard.”
The specter of self-sustaining fission, or criticality, in the nuclear ruins has long haunted Chernobyl. When part of the Unit Four reactor’s core melted down on 26 April 1986, uranium fuel rods, their zirconium cladding, graphite control rods, and sand dumped on the core to try to extinguish the fire melted together into a lava. It flowed into the reactor hall’s basement rooms and hardened into formations called fuel-containing materials (FCMs), which are laden with about 170 tons of irradiated uranium—95% of the original fuel.
The concrete-and-steel sarcophagus called the Shelter, erected 1 year after the accident to house Unit Four’s remains, allowed rainwater to seep in. Because water slows, or moderates, neutrons and thus enhances their odds of striking and splitting uranium nuclei, heavy rains would sometimes send neutron counts soaring. After a downpour in June 1990, a “stalker”—a scientist at Chernobyl who risks radiation exposure to venture into the damaged reactor hall—dashed in and sprayed gadolinium nitrate solution, which absorbs neutrons, on an FCM that he and his colleagues feared might go critical. Several years later, the plant installed gadolinium nitrate sprinklers in the Shelter’s roof. But the spray can’t effectively penetrate some basement rooms.
The threat can’t be ignored. As water continues to recede, the fear is that “the fission reaction accelerates exponentially,” Hyatt says, leading to “an uncontrolled release of nuclear energy.” There’s no chance of a repeat of 1986, when the explosion and fire sent a radioactive cloud over Europe. A runaway fission reaction in an FCM could sputter out after heat from fission boils off the remaining water. Still, Saveliev notes, although any explosive reaction would be contained, it could threaten to bring down unstable parts of the rickety Shelter, filling the NSC with radioactive dust.
Addressing the newly unmasked threat is a daunting challenge. Radiation levels in 305/2 preclude getting close enough to install sensors. And spraying gadolinium nitrate on the nuclear debris there is not an option, as it’s entombed under concrete. One idea is to develop a robot that can withstand the intense radiation for long enough to drill holes in the FCMs and insert boron cylinders, which would function like control rods and sop up neutrons. In the meantime, ISPNPP intends to step up monitoring of two other areas where FCMs have the potential to go critical.
The resurgent fission reactions are not the only challenge facing Chernobyl’s keepers. Besieged by intense radiation and high humidity, the FCMs are disintegrating—spawning even more radioactive dust that complicates plans to dismantle the Shelter. Early on, an FCM formation called the Elephant’s Foot was so hard scientists had to use a Kalashnikov rifle to shear off a chunk for analysis. “Now it more or less has the consistency of sand,” Saveliev says.
Ukraine has long intended to remove the FCMs and store them in a geological repository. By September, with help from European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, it aims to have a comprehensive plan for doing so. But with life still flickering within the Shelter, it may be harder than ever to bury the reactor’s restless remains.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 5:59 pm to LSUDVM1999
Two weeks to flatten the curve.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:00 pm to LSUDVM1999
YES! I had this on my 2021 Bingo card.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:01 pm to LSUDVM1999
what happened to radiation lasts 500 years BS?
do we no longer believe in science?
do we no longer believe in science?
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:01 pm to LSUDVM1999
People should wear masks to protect themselves worldwide from this radiation.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:02 pm to LSUDVM1999
I feel like this is only an article because they know they'll get clicks from hipster nerds thanks to the Chernobyl TV show.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:03 pm to LSUDVM1999
So long Covid hello nuclear apocalypse
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:03 pm to LSUDVM1999
That HBO show was a true life horror story.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:07 pm to LSUDVM1999
quote:
Chernobyl possibly going active again
1. That explains why Russia decided against invading Ukraine.
2. Are we sure that the Ukrainians are not just using this as an excuse to keep IAEA and other inspectors away from the site? That way they could develop nuclear weapons in secret.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:07 pm to red sox fan 13
the documentary was damn good. I knew very little about the story.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:11 pm to LSUDVM1999
The covid vaccine will protect you from this
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:16 pm to LSUDVM1999
Nevermind, I thought your title was implying they were trying to get the reactor up and running again
This post was edited on 5/5/21 at 6:19 pm
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:16 pm to Fat and Happy
quote:But it will take 4 shots total, all 90 days apart. So 360 days to be fully vaccinated.
The covid vaccine will protect you from this
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:21 pm to LSUDVM1999
Sorry, they missed it by a year. This shite is so 2020.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:26 pm to LSUDVM1999
Somebody needs to go demo and dig all that shite up then dump it off the coast of Japan near Fukushima.
Posted on 5/5/21 at 6:27 pm to LSUDVM1999
Dang thats a whole lot of Science in one article! So what do we got like a month before its all over?
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