Soil
around Fukushima to be frozen to stop groundwater leaking in
The
Japanese government has ordered the operator of the Fukushima nuclear
plant to freeze the soil around its crippled reactor buildings to
stop groundwater seeping in and becoming contaminated.
Mark
Willacy
ABC,
31
May, 2013
Every
day another 400 tonnes of groundwater forces its way into the plant,
becomes contaminated with radioactivity and needs to be stored
onsite.
Plant
operator Tokyo Electric Power Company (TEPCO) already has a quarter
of a million tonnes of radioactive water stored in tanks at
Fukushima.
Fearing
the nuclear plant is running out of space to store contaminated
water, the Japanese government has ordered TEPCO to take the drastic
step.
The
government hopes these frozen walls of soil will stop huge amounts of
groundwater leaking into the buildings and it wants the system to be
in place within two years.
According
to a report compiled by a government panel on Thursday, there are no
previous examples of using walls created from frozen soil to isolate
groundwater being used for longer than a few years.
This
means the project at the Fukushima plant poses "an unprecedented
challenge in the world".
Cement-like
grout to be injected into Fukushima reactor?
31
May, 2013
Tepco
Handout,
May 30, 2013 (Summary translation of page 26 by Fukushima
Diary):
[...] the committee of experts suggested Tepco to fill the torus room
with grout. [...] Tepco plans to conduct the feasibility study with
United States Department of Energy this year. [...] They assume it
takes 1.5 years to make planning, and 2 years to inject the grout
material. [...] The committee points out the benefit of using grout
is it doesn’t directly touch the molten fuel. However, it hasn’t
been confirmed that the fractured molten fuel is not really in the
torus rooms.
Department of Energy: Grouting—Grout is a promising option to stop water leakage that’s occurring between reactor and turbine buildings at Fukushima Daiichi’s reactor units, and could be a key step toward facilitating decommissioning of units 1-4. SRNL has extensive experience in grout development and also has operating experience with grouting components reactors and other facilities.
Reuters:
The company may resort to pouring a cement-like material into the
rectors’ suppression chambers to plug leaks it has not been able to
locate, Suzuki said. “One approach we are considering is putting
grout, like cement,” he said. “In other words, filling it in.
That would block all the holes.”
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