DrPizza
Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
Originally posted by: paulney
Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: RedSquirrel
And people want to replace hydro electric dams with nuclear. 😛
Absolutely.
Chernobyl was done wrong from the beginning and could never happen at a US plant. Nuclear is the best option for power we have, and we should be building plants now.
Google Three Mile Island accident. It was extremely close to what happened in Chernobyl, but the hydrogen and oxygen did not go into reaction. Hence no Chernobyl in the US. Think before you post.
from the President's Commission report
Part 1
The great concern about a potential hydrogen explosion inside the TMI-2 reactor came with the weekend. That it was a groundless fear, an unfortunate error, never penetrated the public consciousness afterward, partly because the NRC made no effort to inform the public it had erred.
Quit spreading nonsense.
While the reactor core was melting, the hot zirconium (that held the fuel) was reacting with the water. This chemical reaction produced hydrogen gas, which is combustible. Some of the hydrogen gas escaped from the reactor and into the containment building. The operators were unaware of the presence of hydrogen until something ignited the hydrogen about 2:00 p.m. The burn lasted for six to eight seconds, but did no damage to any systems in the building. However, the reactor vessel still contained hydrogen, but nobody seemed to address this problem in light of other, more serious, problems. When somebody gave it some thought two days later, the great fear was that the hydrogen might explode causing a breach of the reactor vessel and maybe of the containment building. Once the presence of hydrogen was verified, the hydrogen was sent though neutralizers and by the fourth day most of the hydrogen was gone. Actually the fear of an explosion was unfounded. To burn, hydrogen must combine with oxygen, but no oxygen was present in the reactor vessel. However, the fear of an explosion caused many of the public to evacuate the area around TMI.
What happened at TMI was bad, but not as bad as the exaggerated claims, and no where near, or even remotely close to what happened at Chernobyl.