Unit
1 Meltdown More Severe Than Admitted – New Report
21
November, 2013
“Computer
simulations show the melted fuel in Unit 1, whose core damage was the
most extensive, has breached the bottom of the primary containment
vessel and even partially
eaten into its concrete foundation, coming within about 30
centimeters (one foot) of leaking into the ground.”
This
is a
recent statement out of Hajimu Yamana,
the president
of IRID.
IRID is the new authority created to come up with ways to
decommission Fukushima Daiichi.
In
a 2011 report
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory explains the
total failures of the BWR Mark 1 reactor design when it is deprived
of power sources. Without a source of power all of the cooling
systems but one fail to operate. The remaining system (the RCIC) can
only run for a short period of time before the torus system used to
cool the water also overheats leaving the reactor with no way to cool
itself. They estimate less than 10 hours from the time the RCIC
cooling system fails to when fuel begins to melt down.
The
report goes on to describe how difficult it is to locate melted fuel
in a BWR Mark 1 reactor after a meltdown. They explain a process of
following the CRD rail to the pedestal below the reactor, something
TEPCO has tried at units 1 and 2 with no success. In both instances
they were unable to run a scope into the pedestal due to severe
damage inside containment.
Sandia
National Lab also
looked at the melt scenarios via
computer modeling for Fukushima. The computer modeling used includes
the ability to estimate the time needed for the melted core to burn
through the drywell liner. This becomes critical as the edge of the
drywell floor near the torus downcomers has no concrete containment
structure backing it up. This is exactly at the point where the
containment floor meets the containment wall.
“The
model assumes an opening in the drywell liner occurs 15 minutes
after debris first contacts the drywell wall”
The
Sandia reports stop short of the computer modeling mentioned by Mr.
Yamana, and does not look into the depth or spread of the melted fuel
to this extent. These three reports while looking at different
aspects of the meltdowns seem to agree on the severity.
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