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Nuclear Crack Down?
Did you know that embrittled nuclear reactors could shatter like glass? Watch
Fairewinds Energy Education’s Nuclear Science Guy Arnie Gundersen
demonstrate reactor embrittlement and imagine the shattering glass as a
shattering nuclear reactor vessel. What makes embrittlement so
dangerous and frightening is that during an emergency when the reactor
must be cooled down quickly, the rush of cold water necessary to cool it
could create a scenario that looks like the one in our video. You will
only see steam escaping in our video, but in an embrittled shattering
reactor vessel, that steam would be highly radioactive.
Aging nuclear reactors around the globe are subject to this steel
embrittlement that is a measure of how prone the steel reactor vessel is
to cracking. The metamorphous of the strong steel vessel into
something as brittle and fragile as glass is due to the constant neutron
bombardment from the chain reaction inside the nuclear core.
While several U.S. nuclear reactor vessels are showing early signs of
embrittlement, Entergy’s Palisades nuclear plant is the most embrittled
plant in the country. Located in Covert, Michigan, it is one of the
oldest reactors in the world and now one of the most dangerous to
continue operating due to its embrittled reactor vessel. Palisades
owner, Entergy Nuclear Operations Inc. is attempting to take advantage
of a 2010 regulatory change that allows embrittled nuclear plants to
operate longer by analyzing the problem mathematically, rather than
actually testing the material to accurately determine its strength. In
the interest of nuclear safety, the Palisades reactor and all the aging
reactors throughout the world should continue to be subjected to actual
material testing just as they were originally designed to be. |
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