Ta’Juan Dutrieuille November 4, 2009 Period 1

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Nonrenewable Energy Nuclear Energy. Nuclear energy- released by a nuclear fission or fusion reaction. –Nuclear force 1,000,000 times stronger than chemical.
Advertisements

Nuclear Accident in Japan: A Summary
Three Mile Island (TMI-2)
Nuclear Power Turkey Point Power Plant Process. Turkey Point Power Plant Built on 12, 700 acres in Homestead Opened in 1972 Cost to build both reactors.
Nuclear Power. Source: Uranium-235 Process: – An unstable uranium nucleus is bombarded with a neutron and splits into two smaller nuclei and some neutrons.
HPT Rev. 2 Page 1 of 17 TP-1 ACADs (08-006) Covered Keywords History, post-accident sample, containment air, three mile island, NUREG 0578, NUREG.
The Harnessed Atom Lesson Six Atoms to Electricity.
Accidents Happen But Nuclear Accidents Require Special Skill!
MIS 5241 Three Mile Island What Happened, What Worked, What Didn’t.
Nuclear Reactors. What is fission again? Nuclear reactors take advantage of the process of nuclear fission which splits an atom and releases a great deal.
Nuclear Power.
Nuclear Power in Perspective and Intro to Nuclear Reactors.
Nuclear Power Station Lecture No 5. A generating station in which nuclear energy is converted into electrical energy is known as a Nuclear power station.
 A nuclear reactor produces and controls the release of energy from splitting the atoms of certain elements. In a nuclear power reactor, the energy released.
Nuclear Fission & Fusion Nuclear Fusion - Energy released when two light nuclei combine or fuse However, a large amount of energy is required to start.
Nuclear Power.
Probability To determine the likelyhood that such an accident would occur something called an event tree is constructed. This determines the consequences.
23.4 Nuclear energy NUCLEARNUCLEAR POWERPOWER Millstone Station.
23.4 Nuclear energy NUCLEARNUCLEAR POWERPOWER Millstone Station.
Chapter 13 Energy from Nuclear Power Copyright © 2008 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.
Nuclear Power Dylan Waybright Kendall Caminiti Gina Raimondo Susan Ellington Paige Urbanovsky.
Fukushima Incident Preliminary Analysis, Consequences and Safety Status of Indian NPPs Part-1 Dr. S.K.Jain Chairman & Managing Director NPCIL & BHAVINI.
Nuclear disaster 3 mile. History In 1979 at three mile nuclear power plant which is in the united states. A cooling malfunction caused part of the core.
How they work and what happened at Fukushima Daiichi Plant.
THREE MILE ISLAND NUCLEAR MELTDOWN 1979 RACHAEL NAEGER MELISSA ELLIOTT JENNA CLACK ALYSSA BRYANT.
Nuclear Power as a High Risk System And the Accident at Three Mile Island Discussing Perrow Chapters 1 and 2 Presented by Gus Scheidt Friday the Thirteenth.
Nuclear Energy. How does it work? Some atoms, (like Uranium), are so big that we can break them apart by shooting tiny particles at them. This process.
S A C C O N E A P E S Chapter 11: Nuclear Energy
Fission and Fusion Nuclear Fission
Nuclear Energy Chapter 12. Nuclear Fuel Cycle Uranium mines and mills U-235 enrichment Fabrication of fuel assemblies Nuclear power plant Uranium tailings.
Nuclear Disasters A Historical Look.
Daniel Stewart.  Accidents in a nuclear plant can range from minor emissions of radioactivity to catastrophic releases such as: - widespread radiation.
1. - Condensate pump and feed pump trip! -Turbine trips! 2.
By Matt Douglass.  The Three Mile Island accident was a partial nuclear meltdown which occurred in one of the two Three Mile Island nuclear reactors.
Kevin Burgee Janiqua Melton Alexander Basterash
Worldwide Commercial Energy Production. Nuclear Power Countries.
Nuclear Energy How will it affect you?. Nuclear Energy: What is it? n Fission –the splitting of an atom by a neutron, resulting in two or more neutrons.
Nuclear Power Generation In The United States. 103 Nuclear Power Reactors.
Nuclear Power Plant Accidents Reporters: Uyangurin, Mareinne L. Suico, Monica Sharlyn L. Waresa, Daryl Mae B.
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Plant Event Summary and FPL/DAEC Actions.
5Ws Activity Features of Nuclear Reactors. The nuclear reactor Control rods Moderator and coolant (water) Steel vessel Fuel pins Pump Concrete shield.
Nuclear Power. Fission Uranium-235 Plutonium-239 Neutron 10n10n 10n10n 10n10n Strontium-90 Xenon-144.
III. Nuclear Power. A. Reactions and Sources 1. Uses energy released by nuclear fission- the splitting of the nucleus of an atom 2. Nucleus is hit with.
Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy.
 Nuclear fission is the splitting of a nucleus. The term is borrowed from the biological sciences.  Recall the table showing binding energy per nucleon.
Nuclear Fuel Rods By: Me. Fuel rods Fuel rods are zirconium alloy tubes that contain the radioactive uranium in reactor cores If they fail, radiation.
Natural Convection as a Passive Safety Design in Nuclear Reactors
What can go wrong? Nuclear power plants cannot explode like a nuclear bomb. A bomb needs a critical mass in a confiuration which is not present in the.
Nuclear energy Ashfield Direct Learning Anthony Spalding Ks4 Energy.
Nuclear fission Nuclear fission: heavy nuclei split into two smaller parts in order to become more stable proton neutron Kr-90 nucleus U-235 nucleus energy.
Nuclear Power: Our Misunderstood Friend. Overview Growing Demand for Energy Comparison of Nuclear with Other Forms of Energy Disposal of Waste Safety.
Nuclear Power Plant How A Nuclear Reactor Works. Pressurized Water Reactor - Nuclear Power Plant.
The world and how it reacts to nuclear energy LeAnna.
Coal-Fired Plant Coal is conveyed to boiler In primary water loop, water is boiled into steam Steam is sent through turbine Turbine spins the generator,
25.3 Fission and Fusion > 1 Copyright © Pearson Education, Inc., or its affiliates. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 25 Nuclear Chemistry 25.1 Nuclear Radiation.
Plant & Reactor Design Passive Reactor Core Cooling System
Nuclear Power Plants A Brief Overview.
 In the 1950s and 1960s, nuclear power plants were seen as the power source of the future because the fuel they use is clean and plentiful.  In the.
BASIC PROFESSIONAL TRAINING COURSE Module XV In-plant accident management Case Studies Version 1.0, May 2015 This material was prepared by.
The Three Mile Island The Biggest Nuclear Accident in the U.S.
- Condensate pump and feed pump trip!
Thermodynamics Thermal Hydraulics.
Pressurized Water Reactor
9.5 Nuclear Power Although nuclear power does not come from a fossil fuel, it is fueled by uranium, which is obtained from mining and is non-renewable.
Chapter 5 Energy Resources
Chapter 11 Resources & Energy.
Pressurized Water Reactors
Nuclear Energy.
Chapter 17-2 Warm Up 1. Where do fossil fuels come from?
- Condensate pump and feed pump trip!
Presentation transcript:

Ta’Juan Dutrieuille November 4, 2009 Period 1 The Three Mile Island Ta’Juan Dutrieuille November 4, 2009 Period 1

Reactors The Three Mile Island had an incident that started with both of the reactors; the TMI-2 reactor was running while the TMI-1 reactor was shut down for refueling. As a result of the mechanical or electrical failure, the pumps in the condensate polishing system and the main feedwater system stopped running. But the reactor continued to generate decay heat which wasn’t a good thing since the steam generators no longer removed that heat from the reactor.

TMI-2 Plant

Feedwater Pump System Once that had happened the primary feedwater pump system failed. That caused the valves to be shut down for routine maintenance but that was breaking a key NRC rule.

Pilot-Operated Relief Valve(PORV) Due to the loss of heat removal and the failure of auxiliary system to activate, it triggered the pilot-operated relief valve to automatically open when it should have of been closed. The open valve permitted coolant water to escape from the primary system, and this was the mechanical cause of the crisis that followed.

Result of a Stuck Valve Because of the stuck valve the pressure in the primary system continued to decrease, steam pockets began to form in the reactant cooler, causing the pressurizer water level to rise even though coolant was still being lost through the PORV.

False Readings Because the operators judged the level of water in the core solely by the level in the pressurizer, since the pressurizer was high they assumed that the core was properly covered with coolant, unaware that because of the voids forming in the reactor vessel. The indicator provided false readings.

Cause of Temperature Rise After slow temperature rise the primary loop pumps begin to cavitate as steam, rather than water. Steam in the system locked the primary loop. In so much time the top of the reactor core was exposed and the intense heat caused a reaction to occur between the steam forming in the reactor core and the zirconium nuclear fuel rod cladding.

TMI-2 Core End-State Configuration

Heat The fiery reaction burned off the nuclear fuel rod cladding, the hot plume of reacting steam and zirconium damaged the fuel pellets. So the damaged fuel pellets released more radioactivity to the reactor coolant and produced hydrogen gas, which caused a small explosion in the containment building.

The Plant Contaminated They tried to use a block valve to shut off the coolant venting via the PORV but by that time they were too late. So the plant was contaminated by radiation.

Harmless Radiation A maximum of 480 petabecquerels (13 million curies) of radioactive noble gases were released by the event, but they were relatively harmless.

Harmful Radiation About 481 to 629 GBq (13 to 17 million curies) of thyroid cancer-causing iodine-131 were released.

Total Radiation An estimated 37 EBq (10 billion curies) in the reactor.

Three Mile Island Is Still Here Today

Work Cited http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Three_Mile_Island_accident http://www.nukeworker.com/pictures/thumbnails-92.html