The Nuclear Reactor
Use and Issues
Prepared
in recharge for Nuclear Reactor Circulam; phy
Tought by Prof. Dr. Fayza
Prepared by
Mohamed Hassan
Mohamed Salem
Table of
Contents
The Use of Nuclear power,......................................................................................................................................................................... 3
Issues facing Nuclear power and Nuclear reactors;.................................................................................................................................. 5
Nuclear power plant..................................................................................................................................................................................... 5
Life cycle...................................................................................................................................................................................................... 5
Conventional fuel
resources......................................................................................................................................................................... 6
Reprocessing................................................................................................................................................................................................. 6
Radioactive Waste
Disposal......................................................................................................................................................................... 6
Solid waste.................................................................................................................................................................................................... 7
Nuclear Weapons
Proliferation................................................................................................................................................................... 8
Environmental issue...................................................................................................................................................................................... 9
Climate change............................................................................................................................................................................................. 9
Power Plant Emission.................................................................................................................................................................................. 10
Radioactive gases and effluent.................................................................................................................................................................. 10
Tritium......................................................................................................................................................................................................... 10
Uranium mining.......................................................................................................................................................................................... 11
Meltdown.................................................................................................................................................................................................... 11
What Causes of Nuclear Meltdown?......................................................................................................................................................... 12
Introduction;
As we know the Nuclear
power is
a plant for manage and introduce nuclear energy where the use of
exothermic nuclear processes to generate useful heat and electricity. Such energy has a great power that must be
carefully dealing with. All Nuclear
Reactors are devices designed to maintain a chain reaction producing a
steady flow of neutron generated by the
nuclear fission of heavy nuclei. They are, differentiated either by their
purpose or by their design features. In terms of purpose, they are either
research reactors or power reactors. Research reactors are operated at
universities and research centers in many countries, including somewhere no
nuclear power reactors are operated. These reactors generate neutrons for
multiple purposes, including producing radiopharmaceuticals for medical
diagnosis and therapy, testing materials and conducting basic research. Power
reactors are usually found in nuclear power plants. Dedicated to generating
heat mainly for electricity production, they are operated in more than 30
countries. In the form of smaller units, they also power ships. Beyond
that there is a whole class of nuclear-based, electricity-producing devices
that are sometimes called atomic batteries, which are used on spacecraft and
are relatively unknown to the public at large. Such as the known radioactive decay battery (sometimes
called an atomic battery), which uses
the radiation released by the decay of certain radioactive. Substances as a
source of heat to generate electricity. Overall, there is the nuclear bomb and
it provide a huge nuclear weapon, and the use of depleted Uranium
In
the 2010 book Why vs. Why: Nuclear Power Barry Brook and Ian Lowe discuss and
articulate the debate about nuclear power. Brook argues that there are seven
reasons why people should say "yes" to nuclear power.
·
Because renewable energy and energy efficiency won’t solve the energy
and climate crises
·
Because nuclear fuel is virtually
unlimited and packs a huge energy punch
·
Because new technology solves the "nuclear waste"
problem
·
Because nuclear power is the safest
energy option
·
Because advanced nuclear power will
strengthen global security
·
Because nuclear power's true costs are
lower than either fossil fuels or renewables
·
Because nuclear power can lead the "clean energy"
revolution
Lowe argues that there are seven reasons why
people should say "no" to nuclear power
·
Because it is not a fast enough response
to climate
change
·
Because it is too expensive
·
Because the need for baseload electricity is exaggerated
·
Because the problem of waste remains
unresolved
·
Because it will increase the risk of nuclear war
·
Because there are safety concerns
·
Because there are better alternatives
Nuclear power plant
Unlike
fossil fuel power plants, the only substance leaving the cooling towers of
nuclear power plants is water vapor and thus does not pollute the air or cause
global warming. Just as many conventional thermal power stations generate
electricity by harnessing the thermal energy released from burning fossil
fuels, nuclear power plants convert the energy released from the nucleus of an
atom via nuclear fission that takes place in a nuclear reactor. The heat is
removed from the reactor core by a cooling system that uses the heat to
generate steam, which
drives a steam turbine connected to generator producing electricity.
Life cycle
The nuclear
fuel cycle begins when uranium is mined, enriched, and manufactured into
nuclear fuel, which is delivered to a nuclear power plant. After usage in the
power plant, the spent fuel is delivered to a reprocessing plant or to a final
repository for geological disposition. In reprocessing 95% of spent fuel can potentially be
recycled to be returned to usage in a power plant.
A nuclear
reactor is only part of the life cycle for nuclear power. The process starts
with mining. Uranium
mines are underground, open-pit, or in-situ leach mines. In any case, the
uranium ore is extracted, usually converted into a stable and compact form such
as yellowcake, and then transported to a processing facility. Here, the
yellowcake is converted to uranium hexafluoride, which is then enriched using
various techniques. At this point, the enriched uranium, containing more than
the natural 0.7% U-235, is used to make rods of the proper composition and
geometry for the particular reactor that the fuel is destined for. The fuel
rods will spend about 3 operational cycles (typically 6 years total now) inside
the reactor, generally until about 3% of their uranium has been fissioned, then
they will be moved to a spent fuel pool where the short lived isotopes
generated by fission can decay away. After about 5 years in a spent fuel pool
the spent fuel is radioactively and thermally cool enough to handle, and it can be moved to dry storage casks or
reprocessed.
The Use of Nuclear power,
- Electricity
- Nuclear power plants including small modular reactors.
- Propulsion, see nuclear propulsion: Nuclear power for propulsion has several operating and logistic characteristics that appeal to the designers of ships for both civil and military purposes. A small amount of nuclear fuel can provide energy equivalent to millions of times its weight in coal or oil. It is quite practical to build a reactor, which will operate a vessel for several years without refueling. A sustained nuclear reaction in the reactor produces heat that is used to boil water. The resulting steam spins a turbine. The turbine shaft may be coupled through a gearbox speed reducer to the ship's propeller, or in a turbo-electric drive system may run a generator that supplies electric power to motors connected to the propellers.
o
Nuclear marine
propulsion; is propulsion of a ship with power provided by
a nuclear reactor. Naval nuclear
propulsion is propulsion that specifically refers to naval warships. Very
few experimental civil nuclear ships have been built. Operation of a civil or
naval ship power plant is similar to land-based nuclear power reactors.
o
Various proposed forms of rocket
propulsion; Spacecraft propulsion is any method used to accelerate spacecraft
and artificial satellites.
- Other uses of heat
o
Desalination: refers to any of
several processes that remove some amount of salt
and other minerals
from saline water.
More generally, desalination may also refer to the removal of salts and
minerals, as in soil desalination. Salt water is
desalinated to produce fresh water suitable for human
consumption or irrigation. One potential byproduct
of desalination is salt.
o
Heat for domestic and industrial heating
o
Hydrogen production for use in a hydrogen
economy
- Production reactors for transmutation of elements
o
Breeder reactors are capable of producing
more fissile material than they consume during the fission chain reaction (by
converting fertile U-238 to Pu-239, or Th-232 to U-233). Thus, a uranium
breeder reactor, once running, can be re-fueled with natural or even depleted
uranium, and a thorium breeder reactor can be re-fueled with thorium; however,
an initial stock of fissile material is required.
o
Creating various radioactive isotopes,
such as americium for use in smoke detectors, and cobalt-60, molybdenum-99 and
others, used for imaging and medical treatment.
o
Production of materials for nuclear
weapons such as weapons-grade plutonium
o
Providing a source of neutron
radiation (for example with the pulsed Godiva device)
and (e.g. neutron activation analysis and potassium-argon dating).
- Research reactor: Typically reactors used for research and training, materials testing, or the production of radioisotopes for medicine and industry. These are much smaller than power reactors or those propelling ships, and many are on university campuses. There are about 280 such reactors operating, in 56 countries. Some operate with high-enriched uranium fuel, and international efforts are underway to substitute low-enriched fuel.
Issues facing Nuclear power and Nuclear reactors;
Nuclear
power poses numerous threats to people and the environment and point to studies
in the literature that question if it will ever be a sustainable energy source.
These threats include health risks and environmental damage from uranium
mining, processing and transport, the risk of nuclear weapons proliferation or
sabotage, and the unsolved problem of radioactive nuclear waste. They also
contend that reactors themselves are enormously complex machines where many
things can and do go wrong, and there have been many serious nuclear accident Problems
of Nuclear Reactors; concerns about the safety of nuclear fission
reactors include the possibility of radiation-releasing nuclear accidents, the
problems of radioactive waste disposal and the possibility of contributing to
nuclear weapon proliferation. From the knowing construction of the Nuclear
power plant and the fuel life cycle there is many issue we face to generate the
power and to use the nuclear power plant, let’s scope it here;
Nuclear power plant
Unlike
fossil fuel power plants, the only substance leaving the cooling towers of
nuclear power plants is water vapor and thus does not pollute the air or cause
global warming. Just as many conventional thermal power stations generate
electricity by harnessing the thermal energy released from burning fossil
fuels, nuclear power plants convert the energy released from the nucleus of an
atom via nuclear fission that takes place in a nuclear reactor. The heat is
removed from the reactor core by a cooling system that uses the heat to
generate steam, which
drives a steam turbine connected to generator producing electricity.
Life cycle
The nuclear
fuel cycle begins when uranium is mined, enriched, and manufactured into
nuclear fuel, which is delivered to a nuclear power plant. After usage in the
power plant, the spent fuel is delivered to a reprocessing plant or to a final
repository for geological disposition. In reprocessing 95% of spent fuel can potentially be
recycled to be returned to usage in a power plant.
A nuclear
reactor is only part of the life cycle for nuclear power. The process starts
with mining. Uranium
mines are underground, open-pit, or in-situ leach mines. In any case, the
uranium ore is extracted, usually converted into a stable and compact form such
as yellowcake, and then transported to a processing facility. Here, the
yellowcake is converted to uranium hexafluoride, which is then enriched using
various techniques. At this point, the enriched uranium, containing more than
the natural 0.7% U-235, is used to make rods of the proper composition and
geometry for the particular reactor that the fuel is destined for. The fuel
rods will spend about 3 operational cycles (typically 6 years total now) inside
the reactor, generally until about 3% of their uranium has been fissioned, then
they will be moved to a spent fuel pool where the short lived isotopes
generated by fission can decay away. After about 5 years in a spent fuel pool
the spent fuel is radioactively and thermally cool enough to handle, and it can be moved to dry storage casks or
reprocessed.
Conventional fuel resources
Proportions of the isotopes, uranium-238 (blue) and
uranium-235 (red) found naturally, versus grades that are enriched. light water
reactors require fuel enriched to (3-4%), while others such as the CANDU
reactor uses natural uranium.
Uranium is a fairly common element in the Earth's crust. Uranium is
approximately as common as tin or germanium in the Earth's crust, and is about
40 times more common than silver. Uranium is a constituent of
most rocks, dirt, and of the oceans. The fact that uranium is so spread out is a
problem because mining uranium is only economically feasible where there is a
large concentration. Still, the world's present measured resources of uranium,
economically recoverable at a price of 130 USD/kg, are enough to last for
between 70 and 100 years. Uranium represents a higher level of assured
resources than is normal for most minerals. On the basis of analogies with
other metallic minerals, a doubling of price from present levels could be
expected to create about a tenfold increase in measured resources, over time.
Reprocessing
Reprocessing can potentially recover up to 95% of the remaining uranium and
plutonium in spent nuclear fuel, putting it into new mixed oxide fuel. This
produces a reduction in long term radioactivity within the remaining waste,
since this is largely short-lived fission products, and reduces its volume by
over 90%. Reprocessing of civilian fuel from power reactors is currently done
in Britain, France and (formerly) Russia, soon will be done in China and
perhaps India, and is being done on an expanding scale in Japan. The full
potential of reprocessing has not been achieved because it requires breeder
reactors, which are not commercially available. France is generally cited as
the most successful preprocessor, but it presently only recycles 28% (by mass)
of the yearly fuel use, 7% within France and another 21% in Russia.
Radioactive Waste Disposal
The
nuclear fission of uranium-235 produces large quantities of intermediate mass
radioisotopes. The mass distribution of these radioisotopes peaks at about mass
numbers 95 and 137, and most of them are radioactive. The most dangerous for
environmental release are probably cesium and strontium because of their
intermediate half-lives and propensity for re-concentration in the food chain.
When
spent fuel assemblies are removed from nuclear reactors, they are transported
to "swimming pool" storage facilities to dissipate the heat of decay
of short-lived isotopes as well as for isolation from the environment. The long
term disposal of these wastes remains a major problem. It was assumed that
these wastes would be encased in glass and placed in geologic disposal sites in
underground salt domes. The site at Yucca Mountain was chosen as a first site,
but both technical and political problems have thus far blocked its
implementation.
Solid waste
The most important waste stream from nuclear power plants is spent nuclear fuel. It is primarily composed of
unconverted uranium as well as significant quantities of transuranic actinides
(plutonium and curium,
mostly). In addition, about 3% of it is fission products from nuclear
reactions. The actinides (uranium, plutonium, and curium) are responsible for
the bulk of the long-term radioactivity, whereas the fission products are
responsible for the bulk of the short-term radioactivity.[112]
High-level radioactive waste
Main article: High-level radioactive waste
management
A nuclear
fuel rod assembly bundle being inspected before entering a reactor.
Following
interim storage in a spent fuel pool, the bundles of used fuel
assemblies of a typical nuclear power station are often stored on site in the
likes of the eight dry cask storage vessels pictured above.[113]
At Yankee Rowe Nuclear Power Station,
which generated 44 billion kilowatt hours of electricity over its lifetime, its
complete spent fuel inventory is contained within sixteen casks.[114]
High-level radioactive waste management concerns management and disposal of
highly radioactive materials created during production
of nuclear power. The technical issues in accomplishing this are daunting, due
to the extremely long periods radioactive
wastes remain deadly to living organisms. Of particular concern are two long-lived fission products, Technetium-99
(half-life 220,000 years) and Iodine-129 (half-life 15.7 million years),[115]
which dominate spent nuclear fuel radioactivity after a few thousand years. The
most troublesome transuranic elements in spent fuel are Neptunium-237 (half-life two million years)
and Plutonium-239
(half-life 24,000 years)
Waste disposal
Disposal of nuclear waste is often said to be the Achilles' heel of the
industry.[134]
Presently, waste is mainly stored at individual reactor sites and there are
over 430 locations around the world where radioactive material continues to
accumulate. Some experts suggest that centralized underground repositories
which are well-managed, guarded, and monitored, would be a vast improvement.[134]
There is an "international consensus on the advisability of storing
nuclear waste in deep geological repositories",[135]
with the lack of movement of nuclear waste in the 2 billion year old natural nuclear fission reactors in
Oklo, Gabon being cited as
"a source of essential information today."[136][137]
As of 2009 there were no commercial scale purpose built underground
repositories in operation.[135][138][139][140]
The Waste Isolation Pilot Plant in New Mexico
has been taking nuclear waste since 1999 from production reactors, but as the
name suggests is a research and development facility.
Reprocessing is not allowed in the U.S.[142]
The Obama administration has disallowed reprocessing of nuclear waste, citing nuclear proliferation concerns.[143]
In the U.S., spent nuclear fuel is currently all treated as waste
Depleted uranium
Main article: Depleted
uranium
Uranium enrichment produces many tons of depleted
uranium (DU) which consists of U-238 with most of the easily fissile U-235
isotope removed. U-238 is a tough metal with several commercial uses—for
example, aircraft production, radiation shielding, and armor—as it has a higher
density than lead.
Depleted uranium is also controversially used in munitions; DU penetrators
(bullets or APFSDS
tips) "self sharpen", due to uranium's tendency to fracture along
shear bands.[145][146]
Nuclear Weapons Proliferation
One concern about nuclear
reactors is that the fuel could be diverted for the production of nuclear
weapons. While the the uranium fuel is enriched to only 3-5% and could not
easily be further separated to the >90% U-235 needed to produce a bomb, the
spent fuel elements contain plutonium-239. The plutonium could be separated
chemically and diverted to nuclear weapons production. Security concerns about
the plutonium has thus far blocked any reprocessing of fuel from nuclear power
plants.
A similar concern exists for
fast breeder reactors, where the breeding process produces plutonium-239 for
future generations of reactors.
Environmental issue
A 2008 synthesis
of 103 studies, published by Benjamin K. Sovacool, estimated that the value of
CO2 emissions for nuclear power over the lifecycle of a plant was
66.08 g/kW·h. Comparative results for various renewable
power sources were 9–32 g/kW·h.[175]
A 2012 study by Yale University arrived at a different value, with
the mean value, depending on which Reactor design was analyzed, ranging from 11
to 25 g/kW·h of total life cycle
nuclear power CO2 emissions.[176]
Main articles: Environmental effects of nuclear
power and Comparisons of
life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions
Life cycle analysis (LCA) of carbon dioxide
emissions show nuclear power as comparable to renewable
energy sources. Emissions from burning fossil fuels are many times higher.[175][177][178]
According to the United Nations (UNSCEAR), regular
nuclear power plant operation including the nuclear fuel cycle causes
radioisotope releases into the environment amounting to 0.0002 mSv (milli-Sievert) per year
of public exposure as a global average.[179]
(Such is small compared to variation in natural background radiation, which averages
2.4 mSv/a globally but frequently varies between 1 mSv/a and
13 mSv/a depending on a person's location as determined by UNSCEAR).[179]
As of a 2008 report, the remaining legacy of the worst nuclear power plant
accident (Chernobyl) is 0.002 mSv/a in global average exposure (a figure
which was 0.04 mSv per person averaged over the entire populace of the
Northern Hemisphere in the year of the accident in 1986, although far higher
among the most affected local populations and recovery workers).[179]
Climate change
Climate
change causing weather extremes such as heat waves,
reduced precipitation levels and droughts can have a significant impact on nuclear energy
infrastructure.[180]
Seawater is corrosive and so nuclear energy supply is likely to be negatively
affected by the fresh water shortage.[180]
This generic problem may become increasingly significant over time.[180]
This can force nuclear reactors to be shut down, as happened in France during
the 2003 and 2006 heat waves. Nuclear power supply was severely diminished by
low river flow rates and droughts, which meant rivers had reached the maximum
temperatures for cooling reactors.[180]
During the heat waves, 17 reactors had to limit output or shut down. 77% of
French electricity is produced by nuclear power and in 2009 a similar situation
created a 8GW shortage and forced the French government to import electricity.[180]
Other cases have been reported from Germany, where extreme temperatures have
reduced nuclear power production 9 times due to high temperatures between 1979
and 2007.[180]
In particular:
- the Unterweser nuclear power plant reduced output by 90% between June and September 2003[180]
- the Isar nuclear power plant cut production by 60% for 14 days due to excess river temperatures and low stream flow in the river Isar in 2006[180]
Similar events have happened elsewhere in Europe during those same hot
summers.[180]
If global
warming continues, this disruption is likely to increase.
Power Plant Emission
Radioactive gases and effluent
The
Grafenrheinfeld Nuclear Power Plant. The tallest structure is the chimney that
releases effluent gases.
Most commercial nuclear power plants release gaseous and liquid radiological
effluents into the environment as a byproduct of the Chemical Volume Control
System, which are monitored in the US by the EPA and the NRC. Civilians living
within 50 miles (80 km) of a nuclear power plant typically receive about
0.1 μSv
per year.[12]
For comparison, the average person living at or above sea level receives at
least 260 μSv from cosmic radiation.[12]
The total amount of radioactivity released through this method depends on
the power plant, the regulatory requirements, and the plant's performance.
Atmospheric dispersion models combined with pathway models are employed to
accurately approximate the dose to a member of the public from the effluents
emitted. Effluent monitoring
is conducted continuously at the plant.
Tritium Effluent Limits[citation needed]
|
|
Country
|
Limit (Bq/L)
|
Australia
|
76,103
|
Finland
|
30,000
|
WHO
|
10,000
|
Switzerland
|
10,000
|
Russia
|
7,700
|
Ontario,
Canada
|
7,000
|
European Union
|
1001
|
United States
|
740
|
California
Public Health Goal
|
14.8
|
Tritium
A leak of radioactive water at Vermont
Yankee in 2010, along with similar incidents at more than 20 other US
nuclear plants in recent years, has kindled doubts about the reliability,
durability, and maintenance of aging nuclear installations in the United
States.[13]
Tritium is
a radioactive isotope of hydrogen that emits a low-energy beta particle and is
usually measured in becquerels (i.e. atoms decaying per second) per liter
(Bq/L). Tritium can be contained in water released from a nuclear plant. The
primary concern for tritium release is the presence in drinking water, in
addition to biological magnification leading to tritium in crops and animals
consumed for food.
Uranium mining
Uranium mining is the process of extraction of uranium ore from
the ground. The worldwide production of uranium in 2009 amounted to 50,572 tonnes. Kazakhstan,
Canada, and Australia are
the top three producers and together account for 63% of world uranium
production.[16]
A prominent use of uranium from mining is as fuel for nuclear power plants. As of 2008, known uranium
ore resources that can be mined at about current costs are estimated to be
sufficient to produce fuel for about a century, based on current consumption
rates.[17]
After mining uranium ores, they are normally processed by grinding the ore
materials to a uniform particle size and then treating the ore to extract the
uranium by chemical leaching. The milling process commonly yields dry
powder-form material consisting of natural uranium, "yellowcake,"
which is sold on the uranium market as U3O8. Uranium
mining can use large amounts of water — for example, the Roxby Downs
mine in South Australia uses 35,000 m³ of water each day and plans to
increase this to 150,000 m³ per day.[18]
The Church Rock uranium mill spill
occurred in New
Mexico on July 16, 1979 when United Nuclear Corporation's Church Rock uranium mill tailings
disposal pond breached its dam.[19][20]
Over 1,000 tons of solid radioactive
mill waste and 93 millions of gallons of acidic, radioactive tailings
solution flowed into the Puerco River, and contaminants traveled 80 miles
(130 km) downstream to Navajo County, Arizona and onto the Navajo
Nation.[20]
The accident released more radiation than the Three Mile Island accident that occurred
four months earlier and was the largest release of radioactive material in U.S.
history.[20][21][22][23]
Groundwater
near the spill was contaminated and the Puerco rendered unusable by local
residents, who were not immediately aware of the toxic danger.[24]
Despite efforts made in cleaning up uranium sites, significant problems
stemming from the legacy of uranium development still exist today on the Navajo
Nation and in the states of Utah, Colorado, New Mexico, and Arizona. Hundreds
of abandoned mines have not been cleaned up and present environmental and health
risks in many communities.[25]
The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that there are 4000 mines with
documented uranium production, and another 15,000 locations with uranium
occurrences in 14 western states,[26]
most found in the Four Corners area and Wyoming.[27]
The Uranium Mill Tailings
Radiation Control Act is a United States environmental law
that amended the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 and gave the Environmental Protection
Agency the authority to establish health and environmental standards for
the stabilization, restoration, and disposal of uranium
mill waste.[28]
Meltdown
Nuclear meltdown is primary
associated with the complete or partial melting of the nuclear reactor due to
over heating. It result to the release of radioactive materials through leak in
a nuclear plant facility or through emission of radioactive particles in the
environment particularly the deadly particles of plutonium, radium and iodine
in excessive dosage could be dangerous to human lives and to the environment.
The past events known to history happen in Chernobyl nuclear meltdown, Long
Mile Island in the USA in Russia and the recent Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power
plant meltdown in Japan caused by massive tsunami and intensity magnitude of
9.0 earthquakes. When it comes to comparison of the Chernobyl explosion that
happen in Russia the nuclear plant did not have containment structure thereby
caused massive radiation and endanger the environment while the current
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant have containment structure which control
radiation emission. Although the end result still awaiting wider scope of study
and test measuring the amount of radiation emitted to its effect on the people
expose and to the environment.
What Causes of Nuclear Meltdown?
The nuclear meltdown happen
when the heat generated by nuclear reactor exceed the heat remove by the
cooling system thereby reaching the point of melting where cooling mechanism
system result in Alternate current stoppage. It may be due to system error and
environmental causes which out of human control. Nuclear meltdown happens due
to the following causes;
1. Loss of Coolant
Accident –
It happen when there are
reduce supply of allowable amount of deionized water and other substances of
inert gas such as NaK known as liquid sodium which used to balance the excessive
pressure of heat inside the core loss its control. It results to steam bubble
that a sign of excessive heating due to loss of pressure control.
2. Loss of forced
circulation Accident -
It happens when the motor
system or turbines that used to distribute the cooling gas stop to operate
causing failure to circulate inside the nuclear reactor core. When it stop to
reach it destination as consequences over heating may occur though natural
circulation by convection would keep the fuel cool so long as the depressurization
subsides the heating to reach excessively.
3. Loss of pressure
control Accident
It happens when the
pressures of the nuclear reactor reduce below the allowable specification
pressure without any method to restore it. Thereby resulting in heat transfer
efficiency slowdown even when an inert gas is applied still a bubble is formed
due to decay heat as the pressure which is used to cool down the nuclear
reactor core exceed the requirements in the reactor design of the amount of
pressure it could hold reach its limit. Whereas in the case of the boiling
water reactor it posed no problem as it is design to depressurized that the
emergency cooling system automatically function to take control in case of
emergency so long as the gas circulator which use to control are fully
functioning keeping the fuel cool including the surrounding parts of the
nuclear core.
4. Uncontrolled power
excursion accident –
It happen when the there is
uncontrolled nuclear reactor reactivity reaches its limit and exceeded the
specification as allow by the reactor unit design system. It become
uncontrolled due to the alteration of the parameter duly affects the
multiplication rate of chain reactor. During a prompt critical a reactor with a
positive coefficient of reactivity are moderated and under circumstances caused
by operator negligence. While a negative void coefficient of reactivity
happens when there is a limit to heighten reactivity at any setting out of
control will cause rapid shutdown from transient activity within the nuclear
reactor.
5. Core Based Fire
–
It happens when an air enters a graphite-moderated
reactor or liquid sodium cooled reactor, which caused fire inside the core
resulting in over heating. Reactor are of many types such as the water light
and the gas cooled type reactor are not subject to inflammation due to the use
of non reactive carbon dioxide and helium components containing fuel that could
withstand high temperature without melting the reactor core.
6. Byzantine fault and Cascading
Failure –
It happen due to
instrumentation and control operation system failure when not dealt rapidly
would result to core damage. Often it occur when the pilot operated
relief valve get stuck with the failure of the operator to manually activate
the cooling system of the nuclear reactors
Criticality”
Criticality and
“re-criticality” have been used extensively in the media coverage.
Criticality is a nuclear term that refers to the balance of neutrons in the
system. “Subcritical” refers to a system where the loss rate of neutrons is
greater than the production rate of neutrons and therefore the neutron
population (or number of neutrons) decreases as time goes on. “Supercritical”
refers to a system where the production rate of neutrons is greater than the
loss rate of neutrons and therefore the neutron population increases. When the
neutron population remains constant, this means there is a perfect balance
between production rate and loss rate, and the nuclear system is said to be
“critical.” The criticality of a system can be calculated by comparing the rate
at which neutrons are produced, from fission and other sources, to the rate at
which they are lost through absorption and leakage out of the reactor core. A
nuclear reactor is a system that controls this criticality or balance of
neutrons.
The power of a reactor is
directly proportional to the neutron population. If there are more
neutrons in the system, more fission will take place producing more energy.
When a reactor is starting up, the neutron population is increased slowly in a
controlled manner, so that more neutrons are produced than are lost, and the
nuclear reactor becomes supercritical. This allows the neutron population to
increase and more power to be produced. When the desired power level is
achieved, the nuclear reactor is placed into a critical configuration to keep
the neutron population and power constant. Finally, during shutdown, the
reactor is placed in a subcritical configuration so that the neutron population
and power decreases. Therefore, when a reactor is said to have “gone
critical,” it actually means it is in a stable configuration producing a
constant power.
A reactor is maintained
critical during normal power operations. In other systems, such as a spent fuel
pool, mechanisms are in place to prevent criticality. If such a system still
achieves criticality, it is called “re-criticality”. Boron and other materials,
which absorb neutrons, are in place to make sure that this re-criticality does
not occur. The added neutron absorbers substantially increase the rate of loss
of neutrons, to ensure a subcritical system.
References
·
Nuclear Power Reactor Safety, E.E. Lewis,
Wiley-Interscience (1977), Section 9-4, page 480 et seq
·
Nuclear Reactor Engineering, Samuel Glasstone and
Alexander Sesonske, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, 3rd Edition (1981), Section
11, page 724 et
seq
·
Introduction to Nuclear Power, John G. Collier and
Geoffrey F. Hewitt, Hemisphere Publishing Corporation, (1987), Chapter 5, page
119-147
·
Environmental Radioactivity from Natural, Industrial, and Military
Sources, Merril Eisenbud, Academic Press, 3rd Edition
(1987), Chapter 14, page 343-389
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