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Three Mile Island

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Title: Three Mile Island


1
Three Mile Island
  • Perhaps the most famous nuclear accident in the
    US
  • On March 16, 1979, the movie China Syndrome,
    based on the effect described in the last slide,
    was released.
  • 12 days later, March 28, 1979, the worst civilian
    nuclear accident in the US occurred at the Three
    Mile Island Nuclear Power Plant on the
    Susquehanna River, south of Harrisburg, PA
    occurred.

2
Location
3
The accident
  • Partial core meltdown as the result of a LOCA
  • Main feedwater pumps failed, triggered a
    controlled shutdown (scram).
  • But the decay heat (heat generated by the decay
    of radioactive material in the fuel) continued,
    with nothing to remove it
  • Auxiliary systems could not pump water, as their
    valves had been closed for maintenance (which was
    a violation of NRC regulations)
  • Pressure built up, which was released by a PORV
    valve (Pilot-operated relief valve) which opened
    automatically, but failed to close. This allowed
    coolant water to escape.

4
The accident
  • Plant operators had a control light that only
    indicated if power was applied to the valve, not
    if it were open or closed. The light went out
    when the power was cut, the operators did not
    know this did not mean the valve was closed. Bad
    design.
  • However, there were other instruments that told
    the operators something was wrong, in fact that
    suggested the valve was still open, but the light
    was out! Bad operators.
  • As pressure was lost, some of the coolant turned
    to steam and formed steam pockets (remember the
    high pressure is used to keep the coolant liquid
    at high T). This caused the coolant level in the
    pressurizer to look higher than it was, and the
    operators turned off the emergency core pumps
    which came on after the initial pressure loss.
  • The tank that collected the discharge from the
    PORV overfilled and the sump pump in the
    containment building filled and sounded an alarm.
    This, plus abnormally high PORV T and higher than
    normal containment building Temperature and
    Pressure readings were ignored by the operators.
  • A failure in the quench tank caused radioactive
    coolant to be pumped into a building outside the
    containment building.

5
Accident cont
  • Steam bubbles in the cooling pumps caused them to
    cavitate and need to be shut down, with the
    operators believing the coolant would circulate
    naturally. It did not (they did not know there
    were steam cavities that blocked the water flow).
  • The top of the reactor became exposed and the
    steam reacted with the zirconium cladding on the
    fuel rods and damaged the fuel pellets, releasing
    more radioactivity into the coolant water.
  • Plant had become seriously contaminated, but it
    wasnt until 165 minutes after it all began that
    contaminated water reached radioactivity
    detectors and the alarms went off.
  • At this point a new shift of operators came on,
    who noticed a problem and shut off the coolant
    venting via the faulty PORV valve.
  • Several hours later, new water was pumped into
    the primary cooling loop, and a backup valve was
    opened to relieve the pressure so the loop would
    fill up. Around 2pm an explosion rocked the
    containment building. This explosion was the
    result of H released when the zirconium cladding
    was burned off of the fuel rods. 16 hours after
    the start, the primary coolant loop was operating
    the core T began to fall.

6
Another illustration of the accident site
7
Effects of Three Mile Island
  • Amount of radiation released is debated, the
    containment building held.
  • Official figures indicate a small amount of
    radioactivity was released.
  • Independent measures claim radiation of 3-5
    times higher than normal were detected hundreds
    of miles downwind of the plant.
  • Long term health effects on residents are hotly
    debated, pick your favorite interpretation.
  • The valve had failed in the open position 9
    previous times, and 2 other times in the closed
    position.
  • It had also previously failed at another plant,
    but those operators diagnosed the problem in 2
    minutes in a plant only operating at 9 ( as
    opposed to the 97) output at Three Mile Island.
    The valve company never notified its customers of
    the previous failure.
  • Often blamed for the demise of nuclear power in
    the US
  • Probably an overstatement, but it certainly
    soured public opinion

8
Chernobyl
  • Accident at the Chernobyl Nuclear Power plant in
    the Ukraine in 1986
  • At the time it was part of the Soviet Union
  • Worst Nuclear power plant accident in history
  • 2 died in initial steam explosion
  • Deaths from radiation exposure cannot be counted,
    Soviet Union covered up the numbers
  • Best estimates are 56 direct deaths and 4000
    additional cancer related deaths (2005 report of
    the Chernobyl Forum)

9
Chernobyl
  • Plant experienced power excursion (chain
    reaction went out of control)
  • Resulted in a steam explosion and a secondary
    hydrogen explosion which tore the top off of the
    reactor and its building and exposed the core.
  • NO containment building!
  • Released large amount of radioactive particles
    into the air

10
Chernobyl
  • Began with a test of a backup cooling system
  • In the event of an external power failure, the
    reactor would shut down, but there would be no
    power to run the plant cooling pumps.
  • Backup diesel generators took 1 minute to reach
    full capacity,
  • This one minute cooling gap was not acceptable
  • It was proposed to use the rotational energy of
    the turbine as it was spinning down to generate
    electricity in this gap. Since the turbine was
    spinning down, a voltage regulator was needed to
    provide stable power to the to the cooling pumps
  • The test was to take place as the fuel rods were
    to be replacedthe worst possible time as the
    decay heat and radioactive nuclei present would
    be at its maximum at the end of a fuel cycle.
  • Test had already failed once
  • Plan was to run the reactor at low power, but the
    turbine at full speed. The steam supply would be
    cut off and the turbines would be allowed to spin
    down, and see if the voltage were regulated.

11
Chernobyl
  • Test was delayed many hours by an unexpected shut
    down of another power station.
  • This resulted in an untrained night shift taking
    over the experiment
  • When power was reduced, the control rods were
    inserted too far, resulting in the an almost
    complete rector shutdown
  • Resulted in xenon poisoning, where high levels of
    Xenon 135 absorb neutrons an inhibit the fission
    process.
  • Operators saw the power drop too low, but were
    not aware of the Xenon poisoning, assuming
    instead a power regulator failed
  • To compensate, they pulled the control rods out
    of the reactor core, beyond the limits of safe
    operation. This would have had to be done via
    manual overrides.
  • Extra water was pumped into the core to cool it
    and reduce steam voids, but it exceeded safe
    water level limits. Water acts as a moderator,
    so it further reduced the power output. So the
    control rods were pulled all the way out.
  • Reactor was set up for a runaway reaction, but
    the extra water and xenon were acting as a
    moderator. Excess steam and other changes in
    nominal operation were occurring and the
    automatic control system should have shut the
    reactor down, but the operators had disabled this
    system.

12
Chernobyl
  • Operators were not aware of the unstable
    condition, and proceeded to shut off the steam to
    the turbines
  • As they spun down, the water flow decreased and
    steam voids formed
  • Control rods were not completely removed, they
    blocked the heat from reaching the cooling water.
  • A massive steam build up occurred, an the reactor
    power and neutron generation increased overcoming
    the xenon poisoning. A runaway situation was in
    progress

13
Chernobyl
  • A SCRAM was ordered.
  • But, the insertion of the control rods displaced
    coolant (design flaw), increasing the reaction
    rate.
  • Core overheated, fracturing fuel rods and
    blocking further control rod insertion
  • Cooling pipes ruptured, and fuel rods melted
  • Steam explosion occurs, which rips the 2000 ton
    lid off of the reactor
  • 2-3 seconds later a second hydrogen explosion
    occurred, either from the reaction of the steam
    with the zirconium fuel rods or by the reaction
    of hot graphite and steam

14
Chernobyl
  • Hot debris started fires on the roofs of other
    reactors
  • Steam and smoke were highly radioactive
  • No public notice was made until radiation alarms
    at a nuclear plant in Sweden went off!
  • The cloud spread over Russia, Belarus, Ukraine
    and Moldova, but also Turkish Thrace, the
    Southern coast of the Black Sea, Macedonia,
    Serbia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Bulgaria,
    Greece, Romania, Lithuania, Estonia, Latvia,
    Finland, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Austria,
    Hungary, the Czech Republic and the Slovak
    Republic, The Netherlands, Belgium, Slovenia,
    Poland, Switzerland, Germany, Luxembourg, Italy,
    Ireland, France (including Corsica) the United
    Kingdom and the Isle of Man.
  • Reactor was contained in a concrete sarcophagus
    which has 200 tons of highly radioactive material
    inside
  • Entire plant shut down in 2000

15
Effect
  • Short term effects on rivers and groundwater
  • 4 square KM of pine forest in the vicinity of the
    reactor died
  • Some animals died or stopped reproducing
  • Since the abandonment by humans, many wildlife
    species have returned to the area, with reports
    of higher incidences of deformities etc compared
    to non contaminated areas
  • A black melanin rich fungi is growing on the
    reactors walls
  • It is difficult to assess the human impact

16
Extent of the radioactive cloud
17
Other accidents-1980s
  • March 13, 1980 - Orléans, France - Nuclear
    materials leak
  • A brief power excursion in Reactor A2 led to a
    rupture of fuel bundles and a minor release (8 x
    1010 Bq) of nuclear materials at the
    Saint-Laurent Nuclear Power Plant. The reactor
    was repaired and continued operation until its
    decommissioning in 1992.
  • March, 1981 - Tsuruga, Japan Overexposure of
    workers
  • Overexposure of workers More than 100 workers
    were exposed to doses of up to 155 millirem per
    day radiation during repairs of a nuclear power
    plant, violating the company's limit of 100
    millirems (1 mSv) per day.
  • September 23, 1983 Buenos Aires, Argentina -
    Accidental criticality
  • An operator error during a fuel plate
    reconfiguration in an experimental test reactor
    led to an excursion of 31017 fissions at the
    RA-2 facility. The operator absorbed 2000 rad (20
    Gy) of gamma and 1700 rad (17 Gy) of neutron
    radiation which killed him two days later.
    Another 17 people outside of the reactor room
    absorbed doses ranging from 35 rad (0.35 Gy) to
    less than 1 rad (0.01 Gy).
  • April 26, 1986 Prypiat, Ukraine (then USSR) -
    Power excursion, explosion, complete meltdown
  • A mishandled reactor safety test led to an
    uncontrolled power excursion, causing a severe
    steam explosion, meltdown and release of
    radioactive material at the Chernobyl nuclear
    power plant located approximately 100 kilometers
    north-northwest of Kiev.
  • May 4, 1986 Hamm-Uentrop, Germany (then West
    Germany) - Fuel damage
  • A spherical fuel pebble became lodged in the pipe
    used to deliver fuel elements to the reactor at
    an experimental 300-megawatt THTR-300 HTGR.
    Attempts by an operator to dislodge the fuel
    pebble damaged its cladding, releasing radiation
    detectable up to two kilometers from the reactor.
  • November 24, 1989 Greifswald, Germany (then
    East Germany) - Fuel damaged
  • Operators disabled three of six cooling pumps to
    test emergency shutoffs. Instead of the expected
    automatic shutdown a fourth pump failed causing
    excessive heating which damaged ten fuel rods.
    The accident was attributed to sticky relay
    contacts.

18
Other Accidents 1990s
  • April 6, 1993 Tomsk, Russia Explosion
  • A pressure buildup led to an explosive mechanical
    failure in a 34 cubic meter stainless steel
    reaction vessel buried in a concrete bunker under
    building 201 of the radiochemical works at the
    Tomsk-7 Siberian Chemical Enterprise plutonium
    reprocessing facility. The vessel contained a
    mixture of concentrated nitric acid, uranium
    (8757 kg), plutonium (449 g) along with a mixture
    of radioactive and organic waste from a prior
    extraction cycle. The explosion dislodged the
    concrete lid of the bunker and blew a large hole
    in the roof of the building, releasing
    approximately 6 GBq of Pu 239 and 30 TBq of
    various other radionuclides into the environment.
    The contamination plume extended 28 km NE of
    building 201, 20 km beyond the facility property.
    The small village of Georgievka (pop. 200) was at
    the end of the fallout plume, but no fatalities,
    illnesses or injuries were reported. The accident
    exposed 160 on-site workers and almost two
    thousand cleanup workers to total doses of up to
    50 mSv (the threshold limit for radiation workers
    is 100 mSv per 5 years)
  • June, 1999 - Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan -
    Control rod malfunction
  • Operators attempting to insert one control rod
    during an inspection neglected procedure and
    instead withdrew three causing a 15 minute
    uncontrolled sustained reaction at the number 1
    reactor of Shika Nuclear Power Plant. The
    Hokuriku Electric Company who owned the reactor
    did not report this incident and falsified
    records, covering it up until March, 2007.
  • September 30, 1999 INES Level 4 - Ibaraki
    Prefecture, Japan - Accidental criticality
  • Workers put uranyl nitrate solution containing
    about 16.6 kg of uranium, which exceeded the
    critical mass, into a precipitation tank at a
    uranium reprocessing facility in Tokai-mura
    northeast of Tokyo, Japan. The tank was not
    designed to dissolve this type of solution and
    was not configured to prevent eventual
    criticality. Three workers were exposed to
    (neutron) radiation doses in excess of allowable
    limits. Two of these workers died. 116 other
    workers received lesser doses of 1 mSv or greater
    though not in excess of the allowable limit..

19
Other accidents -2000s
  • April 10, 2003 - Paks, Hungary - Fuel damaged
  • Partially spent fuel rods undergoing cleaning in
    a tank of heavy water ruptured and spilled fuel
    pellets at Paks Nuclear Power Plant. It is
    suspected that inadequate cooling of the rods
    during the cleaning process combined with a
    sudden influx of cold water thermally shocked
    fuel rods causing them to split. Boric acid was
    added to the tank to prevent the loose fuel
    pellets from achieving criticality. Ammonia and
    hydrazine were also added to absorb iodine-131.
  • April 19, 2005 Sellafield, England, United
    Kingdom - Nuclear material leak
  • Twenty metric tons of uranium and 160 kilograms
    of plutonium dissolved in 83,000 literes of
    nitric acid leaked over several months from a
    cracked pipe into a stainless steel sump chamber
    at the Thorp nuclear fuel reprocessing plant. The
    partially processed spent fuel was drained into
    holding tanks outside the plant.
  • November 2005 Braidwood, Illinois, United
    States - Nuclear material leak
  • Tritium contamination of groundwater was
    discovered at Exelon's Braidwood station.
    Groundwater off site remains within safe drinking
    standards though the NRC is requiring the plant
    to correct any problems related to the release.
  • March 6, 2006 Erwin, Tennessee, United States -
    Nuclear material leak
  • Thirty-five liters of a highly enriched uranium
    solution leaked during transfer into a lab at
    Nuclear Fuel Services Erwin Plant. The incident
    caused a seven-month shutdown and a required
    public hearing on the licensing of the plant.

20
Fusion
  • Powers the sun
  • In fusion, we combine two atoms and release
    energy
  • Easiest to do this with H or its isotopes
  • We already talked about the proton-proton chain
    in the sun
  • D-T reaction-takes deuterium and tritium and
    creates He

21
Fusion
  • In order for these reactions to occur, one needs
    the deuterium and tritium at high temperatures
  • For the DT reaction, T 40 x 106 K
  • For DD reaction, T 100 x 106 K
  • DT is good for bombs, not so good for long term
    power, and tritium has a half life of 12 years

22
Thermonuclear devices
  • Also called H bombs, these are fusion bombs
  • Require fission to compress and heat the fusion
    fuel.
  • The fusion releases enormous amounts of high
    speed neutrons which are then often used to
    induce fission in matter that it is normally
    difficult to induce fission in (such as depleted
    Uranium, Uranium composed mostly of 238U).
  • This adds to the radioactive fallout of the bomb
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