Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 2011-05-13 09:56.
Well this sounds probable too does tepco use Wikipedia
[edit]Corium-concrete interactions
Thermal decomposition of concrete yields water vapor and carbon dioxide, which may further react with the metals in the melt, oxidizing them and being reduced to hydrogen and carbon monoxide. Decomposition of the concrete and volatilization of its alkali components are endothermic processes. Aerosols released during this phase are primarily based on concrete-originating silicon compounds. Otherwise volatile elements, e.g. caesium, can be bound in nonvolatile insoluble silicates.[2]
Several reactions occur between the concrete and the corium melt. Free and chemically bound water is released from the concrete as steam. Calcium carbonate is decomposed, producing carbon dioxide and calcium oxide. Water and carbon dioxide penetrate the corium mass, exothermically oxidizing the nonoxidized metals present in it and yielding gaseous hydrogen and carbon monoxide; large amounts of hydrogen can be produced. The calcium oxide, silica, and silicates melt and are mixed into the corium. The oxide phase, in which the nonvolatile fission products are concentrated, can stabilize at temperatures of 1300–1500°C for a considerable time. An eventually present layer of more dense molten metal, containing fewer radioisotopes (Ru, Tc, Pd..., initially composed of molten zircaloy, iron, chromium, nickel, manganese, silver, and other construction materials and metallic fission products, and tellurium bound as zirconium telluride) than the oxide layer (which concentrates Sr, Ba, La, Sb, Sn, Nb, Mo, etc. and is initially composed primarily of zirconium dioxide and uranium dioxide, possibly with iron oxide and boron oxides), can form an interface between the oxides and the concrete below, slowing down the corium penetration and solidifying within a couple of hours. The oxide layer produces heat primarily by decay heat, while the principal heat source in the metal layer is exothermic reaction with water released from the concrete. Decomposition of concrete and volatilization of the alkali metal compounds consumes substantial amount of heat.[2] The fast erosion phase of the concrete basemat lasts for about an hour and progresses into about one meter depth, then slows to several centimeters per hour, and stops completely when the melt cools below the decomposition temperature of concrete (about 1100°C). Complete melt-through can occur in several days even through several meters of concrete; the corium then penetrates several meters into the underlying soil, spreads around, cools and solidifies.[3] During the interaction between corium and concrete, very high temperatures can be achieved. Less volatile aerosols of Ba, Ce, La, Sr, and other fission products are formed during this phase and introduced into the containment building at time when most of early aerosols is already deposited. Tellurium is released with progress of zirconium telluride decomposition. Bubbles of gas flowing through the melt promote aerosol formation.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corium_(nuclear_reactor)
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 2011-05-13 01:37.
i have no idea but the plants reactors have completly or will all melt down so smoke steam and corium burn are probable whats scary is how usa media thinks there preventing panic when i am reading it on this site tonite.not one mention of reactor 1 complete meldown and that the situation in reactor two and three is worse seems like the biggest news story o wait the news is entertainment i forgot.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 2011-05-13 07:58.
The Japanese government admitted it kept in secret at least 5000 radiation radiation measurements and assessments after the nuclear event which struck the Fukushima Daiichi NPP in March.
Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 2011-05-13 05:15.
At night it gets colder, wouldn't that make the condensation from the spent fuel pools more visible? The pools are between 60-80 degrees Celsius so I would consider that a possibility.
I don't know to which extent they can vent the reactors at this point.
Well this sounds probable
Well this sounds probable too does tepco use Wikipedia
[edit]Corium-concrete interactions
Thermal decomposition of concrete yields water vapor and carbon dioxide, which may further react with the metals in the melt, oxidizing them and being reduced to hydrogen and carbon monoxide. Decomposition of the concrete and volatilization of its alkali components are endothermic processes. Aerosols released during this phase are primarily based on concrete-originating silicon compounds. Otherwise volatile elements, e.g. caesium, can be bound in nonvolatile insoluble silicates.[2]
Several reactions occur between the concrete and the corium melt. Free and chemically bound water is released from the concrete as steam. Calcium carbonate is decomposed, producing carbon dioxide and calcium oxide. Water and carbon dioxide penetrate the corium mass, exothermically oxidizing the nonoxidized metals present in it and yielding gaseous hydrogen and carbon monoxide; large amounts of hydrogen can be produced. The calcium oxide, silica, and silicates melt and are mixed into the corium. The oxide phase, in which the nonvolatile fission products are concentrated, can stabilize at temperatures of 1300–1500°C for a considerable time. An eventually present layer of more dense molten metal, containing fewer radioisotopes (Ru, Tc, Pd..., initially composed of molten zircaloy, iron, chromium, nickel, manganese, silver, and other construction materials and metallic fission products, and tellurium bound as zirconium telluride) than the oxide layer (which concentrates Sr, Ba, La, Sb, Sn, Nb, Mo, etc. and is initially composed primarily of zirconium dioxide and uranium dioxide, possibly with iron oxide and boron oxides), can form an interface between the oxides and the concrete below, slowing down the corium penetration and solidifying within a couple of hours. The oxide layer produces heat primarily by decay heat, while the principal heat source in the metal layer is exothermic reaction with water released from the concrete. Decomposition of concrete and volatilization of the alkali metal compounds consumes substantial amount of heat.[2] The fast erosion phase of the concrete basemat lasts for about an hour and progresses into about one meter depth, then slows to several centimeters per hour, and stops completely when the melt cools below the decomposition temperature of concrete (about 1100°C). Complete melt-through can occur in several days even through several meters of concrete; the corium then penetrates several meters into the underlying soil, spreads around, cools and solidifies.[3] During the interaction between corium and concrete, very high temperatures can be achieved. Less volatile aerosols of Ba, Ce, La, Sr, and other fission products are formed during this phase and introduced into the containment building at time when most of early aerosols is already deposited. Tellurium is released with progress of zirconium telluride decomposition. Bubbles of gas flowing through the melt promote aerosol formation.[2]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corium_(nuclear_reactor)
well
i have no idea but the plants reactors have completly or will all melt down so smoke steam and corium burn are probable whats scary is how usa media thinks there preventing panic when i am reading it on this site tonite.not one mention of reactor 1 complete meldown and that the situation in reactor two and three is worse seems like the biggest news story o wait the news is entertainment i forgot.
the problem is.....
This reactor and fukushima thing, it's not a grand explosion that the media can jump on and hype.
This is a process of slow death, not one that the media is good at covering....
The Japanese government
The Japanese government admitted it kept in secret at least 5000 radiation radiation measurements and assessments after the nuclear event which struck the Fukushima Daiichi NPP in March.
http://www.novinite.com/view_news.php?id=127874
probably
and it may show up more on cam at night.steam smoke fog
At night it gets colder,
At night it gets colder, wouldn't that make the condensation from the spent fuel pools more visible? The pools are between 60-80 degrees Celsius so I would consider that a possibility.
I don't know to which extent they can vent the reactors at this point.