How Nuclear Power Plants Control the Fission Chain Reaction

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  • Опубліковано 27 сер 2024
  • Full Video Here: • It’s time to rethink N...
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 455

  • @ArvinAsh
    @ArvinAsh  Рік тому +56

    See full video here: ua-cam.com/video/T_jcbhE0u-8/v-deo.html *Note - Modern nuclear reactors can never really explode like a nuclear bomb because the nuclear fuel is not compact enough to cause an uncontrollable chain reaction. The reactor at Chernobyl exploded but this was not a nuclear explosion.

    • @glenn4412
      @glenn4412 Рік тому +2

      Thank you!

    • @hanslepoeter5167
      @hanslepoeter5167 Рік тому +3

      It was a hydrogen explosion. controlling hydrogen is important in a nuclear accident.

    • @theunbiasedvids
      @theunbiasedvids Рік тому

      It was the rods. They inserted them too late and they couldn't stop the overheating of the reactor or something. Sounds nuclear to me.

    • @stephenbrickwood1602
      @stephenbrickwood1602 6 місяців тому +1

      The grid is not big enough
      We need 5TIMES MORE ELECTRICITY.

    • @loftsatsympaticodotc
      @loftsatsympaticodotc 6 місяців тому

      Says who?
      Just you?
      Citations, please.

  • @JuwunFlaVR
    @JuwunFlaVR Рік тому +718

    I used to think nuclear energy was its own thing, like Godzilla's atomic breath. Imagine my disappointment when I found out that nuclear energy is just boiled water making turbine go brrrrr.

    • @DrSparr0w
      @DrSparr0w Рік тому +55

      Same as it ever was

    • @justinbieltz5903
      @justinbieltz5903 Рік тому +41

      That’s just how we get energy from it. Otherwise it’s still its own thing.

    • @StuartBermingham
      @StuartBermingham Рік тому +29

      Haha I agree, steam and turbines! Sounds like something the armish would be using

    • @richb2229
      @richb2229 Рік тому +10

      There are other ways to get energy from nuclear reactors. But for commercial reactors some sort of fluid is generally used to transfer heat to a turbine.

    • @Whinywinston
      @Whinywinston Рік тому +24

      There’s a 4chan meme that was kinda funny. Everything we do as humans to make power is boiling water brrr

  • @danuttall
    @danuttall Рік тому +135

    One thing to note from this explanation. The primary loop water, which goes through the reactor, never goes through the steam turbines. There is a heat exchanger to the secondary loop, which carries the energy to the steam turbines. If you ran the primary loop through the steam turbines, the turbines would become so radioactive that you could never service them. Therefore, the primary loop and secondary loop water never touch. This was over-simplified in this video.

    • @ethannicolls3939
      @ethannicolls3939 Рік тому +16

      That's true for PWRs. The type shown in the video is a BWR, which has only a single loop (activation products do get into the turbine at BWRs, but their dosimetry programs prevent major issues there).

    •  4 місяці тому +1

      That’s correct for PWR but not for RBMK.

    • @ahmetmutlu348
      @ahmetmutlu348 4 місяці тому

      they released first loop to ocean after fukushima accident ... ;P and so far we are fine. except covid like chaoses may or may not be related :D

    • @kjellrogerjgensen60
      @kjellrogerjgensen60 3 місяці тому

      So simplified it wasn't even there....

    • @Not_Sure_2505
      @Not_Sure_2505 2 місяці тому +3

      As noted above, BWRs operate this way. PWRs have a primary and secondary loop with a tertiary loop to the cooling towers or other ultimate heat sink.

  • @scottwhitley3392
    @scottwhitley3392 Рік тому +172

    The reactor cannot become an atomic bomb due to the much lower enrichment of the uranium.

    • @ThomasConover
      @ThomasConover Рік тому +12

      It can still produce equal amount of nuclear waste spreading over a whole continent. Just research what happened to Tsjernobyl.

    • @angrytedtalks
      @angrytedtalks Рік тому +1

      Underpaid huh?

    • @kayakMike1000
      @kayakMike1000 11 місяців тому +30

      ​@@ThomasConoveryou're comparing apples and oranges dude. Atomic bombs CAN make a crap ton of radioactive materials if the are ground burst. This is from nuetron activation of the earthen materials.

    • @ThomasConover
      @ThomasConover 11 місяців тому +2

      @@kayakMike1000 🤣🤣🤣 you obviously have allowed your doctor to X-ray scan your brain a few hundred times too much. I’m not disagreeing to your statement tho, but your statement was completely irrelevant to my comment whatsoever. 👍😊

    • @policíasdeinvestigaciones
      @policíasdeinvestigaciones 9 місяців тому +21

      ​@@ThomasConoverChernobyl was a gas explosion, too much steam, xenón-135 and hydrogen caused the seal to explode due to the high preassure and go up and down and when hydrogen meets oxigen it becomes volatile and thats was the big explosion.

  • @JonBorpa
    @JonBorpa Рік тому +36

    its not just control rods at most plants. at the plant i work at we use boron in the water to absorb neutrons and thats the primary way to control the reaction. Think if we had to insert the control rods from the top a lot of the fuel would be unevenly used therefore the boron allows for a more even use of the fuel as it is in equal concentration through the reactor coolant water

    • @dornog70
      @dornog70 11 місяців тому

      Most plants use valves and pumps to control the plant like cvcs

    • @JonBorpa
      @JonBorpa 11 місяців тому +1

      @@dornog70 there’s a lot of things that go into maintaining plant status. We’re talking about reactivity and that’s controlled through boron. There’s also 31000 valves 😂

    • @dornog70
      @dornog70 11 місяців тому

      @@JonBorpa yea I hate how these “tutorials” aren’t realistic like steam going into the steam generators is crazy

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 7 місяців тому

      ​@@dornog70The turbines run on actual steam, but that steam is created with additional steps to avoid steam in the reactor itself (which generally is part of a major accident) .

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron 5 місяців тому

      I always wondered about uneven use of the fuel ....like the bottom would runout first. Boron does gobble up neutrons.

  • @loggrad9842
    @loggrad9842 Рік тому +65

    Control rods are generally made of hafnium. Fuel rods are tubes made of zirconium alloys.

    • @douglasfox9283
      @douglasfox9283 Рік тому +12

      Or Indium*-Silver-Cadmium, I think halfniun is either a GE or a boiling water reactor thing.

    • @romanMW383
      @romanMW383 Рік тому +4

      Arvin knew this but he didn't wanna say in the video so he don't get on the US watch list

    • @richb2229
      @richb2229 Рік тому +2

      Originally they were made of carbon graphite. But other more exotic materials are used today to better control neutron speed.

    • @railworksamerica
      @railworksamerica Рік тому +1

      Now I know how to build a nuclear reactor

    • @timothy098-b4f
      @timothy098-b4f Рік тому +5

      Boron is also used for control rods.

  • @WilburJaywright
    @WilburJaywright 4 місяці тому +7

    Edit: This may no longer be correct.
    OP: For those wondering, the neutron-absorbing material is usually cadmium, indeed as in nickel cadmium rechargeable batteries (it’s what we had before NiMH, and they were heavy).

    • @ChaineYTXF
      @ChaineYTXF 3 місяці тому +1

      Isn't graphite also used? Just domething I thought I remembered

    • @WilburJaywright
      @WilburJaywright 3 місяці тому

      @@ChaineYTXF I’m beginning to wonder if cadmium was just the first material they used and they changed.

  • @ClearerThanMud
    @ClearerThanMud 6 місяців тому +4

    I really like Arvin's presentation style. "How is the chain reaction controlled ...?" "Now how do control rods do that?" Asking questions like that prepares the viewer to receive the next bundle of facts. And it never sounds like he is READING the script; the delivery is always as if he were just talking naturally. Excellent.

  • @psychedelapena7893
    @psychedelapena7893 8 місяців тому +12

    Well, that's one way to boil water.

  • @Nevario1
    @Nevario1 11 місяців тому +17

    The water isn't boiled in the reactor. It reaches an EXTREMELY high temperature with water kept at high pressure to avoid the creation of steam. Steam is created from a loop within the reactor that brings the high pressure heated water through a pipe into a steam generator tank, where water surrounding the high temp water piping gets coverted into steam.

    • @tobeyrodriguez7836
      @tobeyrodriguez7836 6 місяців тому +5

      You’re talking about a PWR. this video is explaining a BWR type reactor

    • @squireson
      @squireson 2 місяці тому

      Boiling Water Reactors boil their primary water in the reactor.

  • @iq8483
    @iq8483 Рік тому +19

    Boron or cadmium is used as control rod in different countries .

  • @carlhopkinson
    @carlhopkinson Рік тому +57

    A nuclear reactor could NEVER become an atomic bomb.

    • @matsu8205
      @matsu8205 Рік тому +5

      What happened with tschernobyl and fukushima

    • @NavSci
      @NavSci Рік тому +1

      those are not nuclear bomb level explosions they are meltdowns , totally different things @@matsu8205

    • @kiattichairungsithum4716
      @kiattichairungsithum4716 Рік тому +37

      @@matsu8205 a meltdown happened, not an explosion

    • @ethannicolls3939
      @ethannicolls3939 Рік тому +23

      @@matsu8205 Chernobyl: Meltdown to steam/pressure explosion. Fukushima: Chemical explosion (hydrogen gas with oxygen), also with a meltdown

    • @daveroberts7295
      @daveroberts7295 5 місяців тому +6

      Just a nuclear contamination mess. Small booms from hydrogen and if you live near by, well now you don't.

  • @BrokenLifeCycle
    @BrokenLifeCycle 11 місяців тому +17

    It's always an aneurysm-inducing nightmare whenever I read the comment section of anything nuclear-related.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron 5 місяців тому +3

      try it with a phd in nuke fizz...but really, the reactor talk is engineering, they never discuss the actual physics.

    • @tony-does-stuff
      @tony-does-stuff 4 місяці тому

      Facts. This is why nothing can ever progress anymore. Too many uneducated brainwashed fudds who refuse to do a sliver of research think their opinions should matter on a subject they've been made to be scared about.

    • @Not_Sure_2505
      @Not_Sure_2505 2 місяці тому +2

      ​@@DrDeuteronnuclear mechanical engineer, from what I've seen, you're right it mostly comes down to the application. The fizikz of the reactor are very intriguing, but I can see how it becomes a bit confusing, with all the daughter elements formed briefly and then forming something else almost instantaneously. It's alot of probability curves, esp in breeders in my understanding.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron 2 місяці тому

      @@Not_Sure_2505 the good news is decay rates (half lives) add just like resistors (capacitors)... so that math is well known.
      When I say "physics" I mean things like daughter 1/2 lives and reaction differential cross-sections vs. energy (esp. n + U235 -> X + Nn) and stuff like that. Also those meta-stable intermediate nuclei that gamma decay. That has all been measured and tabulated long ago. It's a massive body of work.
      e.g. the national nuclear data center at Brookhaven (one of the few labs I've never been to):
      nndc (dot) bnl (dot) gov (slash) nudat3

    • @johnbutler2780
      @johnbutler2780 2 місяці тому +1

      @@Not_Sure_2505I still can’t fathom nuclear. The people saying it’s primitive and it’s just a steam engine are just dumb imo. it’s so much more than a steam engine. We have a big plant in Ohio. David- bessy. Spelling could be wrong.

  • @CanariesExplorer
    @CanariesExplorer Рік тому +33

    A reactor cannot become a bomb because the enrichment of U 235 is far too low at less than 5%. Super criticality would lead to a meltdown. Control depends on the design but criticality is usually maintained through extent of insertion of control rods and/coolant chemistry in the case of water moderated reactors.

    • @kenwarner3715
      @kenwarner3715 Рік тому +3

      Glad u said that. I detected the same error in the story.

    • @skylanders23
      @skylanders23 Рік тому +1

      You’re absolutely right, either a meltdown or chemical explosion caused by xenon poisoning.

    • @ThomasConover
      @ThomasConover Рік тому +1

      Tsjernobyl entered the chat.

    • @anthonymonge7815
      @anthonymonge7815 Рік тому +1

      The enrichment is much higher than 5%. Try high 90’s. Source: I am a reactor operator.

    • @CanariesExplorer
      @CanariesExplorer Рік тому +1

      @anthonymonge7815 I am a nuclear scientist, working in Uk nuclear power industry for 35 years. Commercial reactors have a maximum of 5% U 235. Our AGRs have an average 3.8% while the water reactors have 4.5%. Only submarine reactors have high enrichments of more than 70 % because of high neutron leakage from their tiny reactors.

  • @cgirl111
    @cgirl111 Рік тому +13

    Control Rods are used to shut down a reactor not really controlling it. Reactor power is controlled by varying the concentration of boron in the cooling water.

    • @richb2229
      @richb2229 Рік тому +6

      Using Boron in the cooling (water) is one way but originally the control rods were partially lowered into an operating reactor to moderate the neutron velocity, which in turn slowed the reaction. Boron in the reactor fluid does the same thing but can be more precisely controlled and doesn’t leave hot spots like the old method did.

    • @cgirl111
      @cgirl111 Рік тому +1

      @@richb2229 Using rods to control reactor power is how the US military does it. Commercial reactors operate with all rods completely withdrawn. 10 years military nuc plus 22 years commercial nuc here. All on PWR operations dept.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron 5 місяців тому

      @@richb2229 they absorb the neutrons. Moderated neutrons (e.g., thermal) are what make the fission happen. Water moderated neutrons.

    • @cgirl111
      @cgirl111 5 місяців тому +3

      Military reactor power is controlled by the rods but commercial reactors are controlled by boron concentration. A military reactor uses highly concentrated U235 which is essentially bomb grade. Commercial reactors use very low concentrations which can't produce a nuclear bomb.
      10 years military and 23 years commercial nuclear plant operations here.

    • @lukasvrabec5783
      @lukasvrabec5783 4 місяці тому

      Actually Boron is used to compensate for lovering amount of fissile U235 in reactor during the fuel campaign.

  • @ashharhasan3120
    @ashharhasan3120 Рік тому +5

    Tell that to RBMK reactors.

  • @clarkraivencandelaria934
    @clarkraivencandelaria934 3 місяці тому +1

    you forgot the water ( moderator ) they slow down the moving neutrons so that it won't achieve nuclear fission that fast and also it cools down the reactor so it won't create to much heat

  • @hanslepoeter5167
    @hanslepoeter5167 Рік тому +9

    The nuclear reaction is not controlled by control rods. The nuclear reaction is stopped by the control rods. There is a moderator in the reactor coolant, usually boric acid, where the concentration controls the nuclear reaction. If not and control rods were inserted halfway the fuel would be used not evenly over the fuel element so that would not work.

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 7 місяців тому +1

      This seems specific to a single design . Multiple designs exist in the original nuclear countries . Some accept the uneven use of rods, some use solid moderator blocks, some vary the number of rods inserted etc. etc.

    • @hanslepoeter5167
      @hanslepoeter5167 7 місяців тому

      @@johndododoe1411 Absolutely correct. What I said is true for most pressurized water reactors. By far the most common.

  • @OSUHARDING1ATECHNICEXPERIENCE
    @OSUHARDING1ATECHNICEXPERIENCE 2 місяці тому +1

    Most reactors run with all rods out and a Boron solution is used to control the reactions

  • @Sams.Videos
    @Sams.Videos Рік тому +2

    This is basically a very sophisticated on/off switch.

  • @cremebrulee4759
    @cremebrulee4759 3 місяці тому +1

    Great and easy to understand explanation. Thank you!

  • @rolandlee6898
    @rolandlee6898 4 місяці тому +1

    Its rare to state so many things wrong in such a short video. Well done.

    • @ArvinAsh
      @ArvinAsh  4 місяці тому

      What's wrong?

    • @Times_Ticking
      @Times_Ticking 4 місяці тому

      ​@@ArvinAsh To begin with, commercial nuclear power plants lack the highly concentrated Uranium-235 necessary to cause a nuclear explosion, as was described and graphically shown.

  • @graysonblaufuss9166
    @graysonblaufuss9166 9 місяців тому +3

    A reactor cannot become an atomic bomb even without control rods

    • @chiphill4856
      @chiphill4856 3 місяці тому

      It can melt like a mfr though!

  • @galeforce69420
    @galeforce69420 Рік тому +1

    Understandably scary technology, but equally incredibly fascinating.

  • @017renegade
    @017renegade 11 місяців тому +2

    I already knew that. Also: nuclear power plants never turn into atomic bombs. That's an urban legend and you should really not promote it! 😅

  • @WRMonger1
    @WRMonger1 4 місяці тому

    I worked at the SONGS (San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station) for a couple of refueling cycles. In that system high pressure superheated water heated a secondary source for steam generators. That secondary source was further cooled through a third set of pipes that went out to the ocean.
    The dampening rods had a fail safe default to close using gravity if there was a catastrophic system failure or loss of power. In other words the dampening rods were raised to start the reaction and if a total shutdown was required they just dropped. It worked really well until California bureaucrats got involved.

  • @ms.magenta
    @ms.magenta 14 днів тому

    Along with control rods, other methods of limiting the rate of reactions are commonly used.
    Substances like boric acid are typically used as a type of "liquid control rod," or a nuclear poison. It functions essentially the same as the control rods except for the fact it's in solution, and thus as another person mentioned, has a more even effect on slowing a reaction.
    Also, the uranium in nuclear reactors is not weapons grade. That is, it isn't refined enough to cause a nuclear explosion when prompt critical.

  • @Poverty-PonyTony
    @Poverty-PonyTony 3 місяці тому

    Water in the primary vessel is not turned to steam, it is super heated, and uses a heat exchanger to transfer heat to non irradiated water to produce steam. The cavitations of boiling would allow heat spikes similar to Chernobyl.

  • @LG-qz8om
    @LG-qz8om Рік тому +1

    Most people don't realize that a Nuclear Reactor is just a Steam Generator.
    Barely beyond Locomotives of the 1940s.
    Amazing.

  • @universeindex6651
    @universeindex6651 5 місяців тому

    "become an atomic bomb" The rbmks were the only reactors that would blow up; this is because of bad design choices. All other reactors do not blow up but rather melt. The uncontrolled fission of the fuel causes it to melt, not explode. For instance, in Fukushima, the BWR reactors experienced fuel damage by melting (aka a meltdown). The explosions on the plant were hydrogen explosions completely separate from the reactors.

  • @kanazamkniety3046
    @kanazamkniety3046 4 місяці тому

    This the basic explanation of a BWR (Boiling water reactor). In a PWR (Pressurized water reactor) the water stays inside the reactor vessel, and is kept under pressure as the name suggests. The water then exchanges its heat through an exchanger and then steam is created. Now the RBMK (Infamous for the Chernobyl disaster) Has instead of just a vessel full of water, has steam channels. It works similar to a BWR, but has channels and is very old.

  • @exploreworldbirds
    @exploreworldbirds 6 місяців тому

    One obvious detail is 90% of reactors have a secondary heat transfer system & heat from reactor doesn't directly drive turbine, this isolates radiation.

  • @WorldtradecenterNJNYProperties
    @WorldtradecenterNJNYProperties 4 місяці тому

    not me having the urge to jump on the lids

  • @Slowensko98
    @Slowensko98 6 місяців тому

    this is an old method. today the chainreaction ist mostly controlled by adding bor-acid to the water. btw the material in the controlrods is also most likely bor. further more a reactor that reached criticality is self sutainable and has its balance at the criticality point (0.995 - 1.005)

  • @arfanzaman6817
    @arfanzaman6817 2 місяці тому

    Dependency on rode coating will also reduce an alterations

  • @bedprakash5288
    @bedprakash5288 8 днів тому

    information is wrong because i am mechanical enginne rso according to studies the water is never converted into steam, it is the hot water at high temperature having very low pressure goes to another water tank and heats the cold water in the pipes and converts it into steam and that cold water which is converted into steam is further made to move the turbine and electicity is generated and the hot water which comes from the reactor which heats the cold water echanges the heat and again goes to the reactor with low tempearture.

  • @Stxxal
    @Stxxal 4 місяці тому +1

    We are steampunks deep inside

  • @chiphill4856
    @chiphill4856 3 місяці тому

    Using a nuclear reactor to heat water as the main coolant working fluid is quite ingenious and not primitive. Water is excellent at this task. Water has high heat retention and it blocks some of the radiation. It can be pumped so that the energy from the core becomes portable and can be transferred to somewhere else, usually to another loop of water that becomes steam to run an electrical turbine. Turbines are important because the AC electricity used in our distribution infrastructure is most easily generated by a rotating armature in a magnetic field.

  • @thedevilsadvocate3577
    @thedevilsadvocate3577 3 місяці тому +1

    If we're going nuclear, it should be Thorium Molten Salt Reactors...

    • @Not_Sure_2505
      @Not_Sure_2505 2 місяці тому +1

      Problem is, regulations. LWRs have already been in commercial operation for a long time with lots of OPEX data and regulatory scrutiny. Unfortunately, but also fortunately, the regulations take a long time to go through, but it makes sure things all work correctly.

  • @stephenbrickwood1602
    @stephenbrickwood1602 6 місяців тому +1

    The grid is not big enough
    We need 5TIMES MORE ELECTRICITY.

  • @brukujinbrokujin7802
    @brukujinbrokujin7802 6 місяців тому

    A bit misleading. Control rod is not for stopping, but absorbing 1 out of 2 neutron, keeping the chain reaction linear.
    For stopping nuclear reactor, you have to take out the uranium. There is no other way. Even if you bury them by a solid block of "control rod", they just keep splitting, overheat, melting everything. In conclusion, control rod is not for stopping reactor, its for maintaining linear reaction.

  • @DerekJones1081962
    @DerekJones1081962 4 місяці тому

    Everyone tries to oversimply what we call reactor kinetics. You described the reactor shutdown system. Control for the reactor is actually based on the number of neutrons that are born delayed. In other words, those born from the decay of fission fragments. After reaching what is known as the point of adding heat (POH), the reactor is kept slightly subcritical in the power range. This buys the contorl system and operators' time to see how pressure and thermal effects are feeding back into the overall neutron population. There are typically 6 factors in the reactor control equation. Operators monitor these effects with many instruments. Power range nuclear (radiation) instruments, temperature and pressure instruments, and in the case of a pressurized water reactor (PWR) pressurizer level in the primary system. However, the rate that heat is removed by the steam systems affects the temperature of the primary (reactor) cold return water, which also affects the operation of the reactor core. If electrical demand increases, steam output must also increase, and that causes reactor return temperature to decrease. Therefore, the differential temperature of the core is important in keeping the power level constant. A reactor is not simply a boiler. And, criticality is the measure of the time rate of change of neutron density in the core. Exactly critical is where the total number of neutrons born in one generation is exactly equal to the number of neutrons to be born in the very next instance in time. In response to decreasing temperature, an operator withdraws the control rods a little, exposing more fuel to neutron flux in the reactor core so that more heat is generated in the core to make up for the previous loss. The number of new neutrons generated takes the core slightly above critical to cause more fission events and heating the reactor materials, raising hot output temperatures to generate more steam and things balance back out at a new equilibrium. Nothing but physics and math. People should have been told a long time ago that these truths, while moderately complex, are not mysterious. They are, in fact, extremely well understood. If this 61 year old can remember how a reactor works after being away from the industry for over twenty years, certainly young, vibrant minds could be taught this reality. Don't over simplify the facts. Instead, tell it all the way things really are!

    • @chiphill4856
      @chiphill4856 3 місяці тому

      tl;dr Ok professor, but this video is for average people and some reactor characteristics have been simplified. Surely you understand this concept.

  • @kris242
    @kris242 6 місяців тому

    Couldn’t help but hear this all in Jared Harris’ voice 😂

  • @Sirjohnwilliamuk
    @Sirjohnwilliamuk 3 місяці тому

    To start atomic weapons need 90% U-235, power plants have 3 to 5% fuel.
    Secondly a weapon needs amazing amount of pressure and heat in instateneous combustion... This is caused by exploding uranium with explosive charges to compress and heat the isotope...

  • @ntorix599
    @ntorix599 Рік тому

    The water acts as both as whybto get energy out of the system woth steam but also a moderator slowing down the neutrons to increase the probability of collision. As the water turns to steam, it becomes a worse moderator, which makes the fission events less likely, helping to regulate the reaction.

  • @kozer1.0
    @kozer1.0 10 місяців тому

    Control rods are made of boron if u wondering

  • @adog7787
    @adog7787 2 місяці тому

    Even if it wasn’t controlled it WILL NOT act like a nuclear bomb.

  • @deantsar6246
    @deantsar6246 5 місяців тому +1

    Wake up people
    This is the only sustainable energy of the future.

  • @sm1522
    @sm1522 Рік тому

    Control rods are usually made of boron carbide, where the four borons each absorbs a neutron becoming boron 11.

  • @Worker225
    @Worker225 4 місяці тому

    A reactor never becomes an atomic bomb. when a reactor has a meltdown, the fission chain reaction can't grow enough to be considered a nuclear explosion.

  • @centurionhomeinspectionsin2253
    @centurionhomeinspectionsin2253 2 місяці тому

    Ok-but a SCRAM of a reactor typically poisons the fuel rods, so full SCRAMS are avoided if at all possible.

  • @whatwasisaying
    @whatwasisaying 7 місяців тому

    The control rods do not stop the reactor from becoming a bomb. Reactor fuel rods are too far apart and then do not move so the fuel cannot become super critical and explode. They can over heat and the rods will melt forming a puddle of extremely hot radio active fuel that can spread radiation if exposed to water that explodes into steam. But it cannot explode by nuclear fission.

  • @austinj3881
    @austinj3881 27 днів тому

    I always find it funny that such a highly advanced technology is used to power a very old technology in a steam engine.

  • @squireson
    @squireson 2 місяці тому

    In most PWRs the control is through the boric acid concentration in the coolant water. The control rods are reserved for shutdowns and emergencies.
    just sayin ...

  • @edljnehan2811
    @edljnehan2811 6 місяців тому

    I remember Superman back in the 1950s saving the planet by putting those rods back in the holes😮

  • @probablygeorge6489
    @probablygeorge6489 11 місяців тому +1

    So how often do control rods need to replaced? Would they be as dangerous as spent fuel?

  • @--Skip--
    @--Skip-- Рік тому +3

    This is the absolute best explanation of how places like Watts Bar, Sequoia, and other nuclear energy facilities that generate electricity!

  • @TastyLiberalTears
    @TastyLiberalTears 7 місяців тому

    You forgot about the heat exchanger, turning heavy water into steam to power a turbine would be a very very dangerous thing

    • @joevignolor4u949
      @joevignolor4u949 5 місяців тому

      This represents a boiling water reactor or BWR. The water is boiled right inside the reactor and so it doesn't have a steam generator. You are thinking of a pressurized water reactor or PWR, which does have a steam generator.

  • @usaturnuranus
    @usaturnuranus Рік тому +1

    If the rods can't be lowered, use a basic heat fuse to open a big bottom hatch and drop the whole mess into a pool of control rod chunks. No threat of China Syndrome. Not that I actually know what I'm talking about, of course - take with a grain of molten salt.

    • @ethannicolls3939
      @ethannicolls3939 Рік тому +1

      A China Syndrome is not a legitimate accident scenario for nuclear reactors - the movie kinda hyped that up with no backing.

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 7 місяців тому +1

      Yet it almost happened at Chernobyl, the infamous "elephants foot" is the molten core on its way down, but stopped by a block of concrete .

  • @ciudadanubis
    @ciudadanubis Рік тому

    So if the control rods absob neutrons, they should increase the number of neutrons per atom, making the atoms unstable and therefore radiactive.
    Then the control rods will have a short lifespan, during which they will become less and less efficient at absorbing neutrons, I'm right @ArvinAsh?

  • @GravE88KeepeR
    @GravE88KeepeR 4 місяці тому

    If we knew how to deal with wastes it’d be one of the best energy solution…

  • @ashleyobrien4937
    @ashleyobrien4937 4 місяці тому

    and to think, all this high end tech. is coupled to something so primitive like spinning a steam turbine to turn some magnets around some copper wires...all these years and we still have not found another way, or a better way, to turn heat into electricity !

  • @darkframepictures
    @darkframepictures 2 місяці тому

    The moment you realize we haven’t actually progressed from steam power.

  • @harrybudgeiv349
    @harrybudgeiv349 7 місяців тому

    A nuclear reactor would never be able to turn into a nuclear bomb.

  • @carnivore4life470
    @carnivore4life470 Рік тому

    It is depending on what kind of reactor you're talking about. all modern reactors, especially the ones in America. Also cannot have a chain reaction without the water. If you're to cut off the water flow to a modern-day nuclear reactor, the neutrons become too fast to cause a chain reaction, and the reactor shuts down. water also acts what's known as a moderator. That's why it is almost impossible for a nuclear reactor now to melt down. Even if the control rods were to freeze and not be able to be inserted into the core as long as you just cut off the water flow, Fission can't happen. This is what makes nuclear energy actually the cleanest and safest source of energy that we have. When people like to think of nuclear energy being unsafe they always talk about things like fukushima or Chernobyl. Fukushima was by poor design. They put the spent to cores Near the reactor which caused a chain reaction when the water came in from The tsunami. And also that nuclear reactor is like over 50 years old which the design has changed due to modern physics and engineering. Chernobyl was also a reactor that is not used anywhere in the West. Its moderator is not water And that's what makes it the most dangerous. Even with the poor design The meltdown was caused by Unknowledgeable engineers who went against protocol and caused the incident. Nuclear energy is the safest form of energy that you can have and it causes 0 carbon emission. All the waste of nuclear energy is only large enough to fill room from all the time we've been using it. 😊

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 7 місяців тому

      Your Fukushima summary seems wrong . Your RBMK/Chernobyl summary is only partially right .

  • @martinwulf8253
    @martinwulf8253 4 місяці тому

    Let’s not pretend you need to stop it becoming a bomb. It’s not going to explode, and in fact it was very hard to come up with a way to make nuclear fuel into a bomb.

  • @peterb4926
    @peterb4926 4 місяці тому

    the unfortunate design is when you have a meltdown and it distorts the uranium rods so that the control rods can't be pushed down into them.

  • @dunckeroo1987
    @dunckeroo1987 2 місяці тому

    This is merely one type of fission reactor. Many different systems exist.

  • @spherence
    @spherence 4 місяці тому

    Thankfully Earth has no earthquakes or tsunamis to upset these fragile arrangements.
    🌊🏭

    • @chiphill4856
      @chiphill4856 3 місяці тому

      Extreme measures are taken when building reactor plants to mitigate the effects of natural disasters. Uniquely stable sites and massive foundations, for starters. There are several layers of containment. They are anything but fragile.

    • @spherence
      @spherence 3 місяці тому

      @@chiphill4856 You mean the GE 001 plants at fukushima daiichi are just perfectly safe then?
      Are you too young to remember?
      All those fuel rods on the bottom of the tank in a heap fizzing away…

  • @AndrewLambert-wi8et
    @AndrewLambert-wi8et 6 місяців тому

    Only one answer to our energy problems. Pity no loans to build them.

  • @tommytom5650
    @tommytom5650 Рік тому +4

    My control rod works in the opposite way. I insert it to start a chain reaction then explosion.

    • @--Skip--
      @--Skip-- Рік тому

      Your explanation is opposite of what Fermi did under the football field in Chicago during WWII.

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 7 місяців тому

      ​@@--Skip--r/woooooooooosh (too many Os, I know, reddit is dead anyway)

  • @dovbarleib3256
    @dovbarleib3256 Рік тому

    Thank you Enrico Fermi and Leo Szilard. Take a bow.

  • @frocurl
    @frocurl Рік тому

    Where are the triple redundancy rods? Can we not get a 3 sided reactor with multiple incertion points? Can we not include an emergency manual separate incertion rod? Considering the alternative this seems reasonable

  • @user-ln6tk9vq9g
    @user-ln6tk9vq9g 5 місяців тому

    Love it, thanks for the education!

  • @geometricgamer7
    @geometricgamer7 4 місяці тому

    I clicked on this because the image was a lightsaber 😂

  • @vampyreo2861
    @vampyreo2861 Рік тому

    me seeing some cool metal sticks on the floor outside a nuclear reactor:

  • @alexchudilovski860
    @alexchudilovski860 Рік тому

    That would mean uneven distribution of used/unused material on the rod.

  • @drr7086
    @drr7086 6 місяців тому

    That means it boils water with out the use of fire 😊

  • @vijaysstudio
    @vijaysstudio 5 місяців тому

    CANDU all the way... they have several independent layers of protection.

  • @zoleedevofficial
    @zoleedevofficial 7 місяців тому

    It is most likely not U-235, as it isnt as effective. The common uranium type used in reactors is U-238

    • @Not_Sure_2505
      @Not_Sure_2505 2 місяці тому

      Mostly U-238 and enriched to 3-6% U-235, as it is more fissile.

    • @zoleedevofficial
      @zoleedevofficial 2 місяці тому

      @@Not_Sure_2505 yes but it is energy inefficient too.

    • @Not_Sure_2505
      @Not_Sure_2505 2 місяці тому

      @@zoleedevofficial compared to what?

  • @HaradhanKerani
    @HaradhanKerani 2 місяці тому

    Cadmium rods

  • @francobuzzetti9424
    @francobuzzetti9424 5 місяців тому

    someone back in 1986 messed this part up

  • @johnnybhoy4278
    @johnnybhoy4278 Рік тому

    Thanks Arvin! I'm going to get a job at the local nuclear power plant now.

  • @davemiller6055
    @davemiller6055 Рік тому +2

    Hot rocks boil water.

  • @Early-Bhinox
    @Early-Bhinox 17 днів тому

    Steam engine with a twist of a massive explosion with jist one wrong step☠️

  • @HuckyJ2448
    @HuckyJ2448 5 місяців тому

    Soviet RBMK reactors have entered the chat 💥🔥

  • @TheCanadianHumor
    @TheCanadianHumor Рік тому

    Like Einstein said , nuclear power is a hell of a way to boil water 😂😂

  • @ahmetmutlu348
    @ahmetmutlu348 4 місяці тому

    and in case of emergency there is nothing like spring... they used electric motors on fukuchima which faile as leaking water shorted electrical lov voltae systems :P and welcome to chaos... they had to add a mechanism that releases sprin or grawity powered rods that fall down in case of emergency i gguess... sadly they didnt think of that in past it seems :/
    anyway mostlikely reaction still continues slowly ewen after rods are there but im not sure ..

  • @JT-nt6tk
    @JT-nt6tk 4 місяці тому

    Just read like 10 of these comments, my brain hurts.

  • @user-vg4vj1xv1v
    @user-vg4vj1xv1v 2 місяці тому

    Rods prevents the end of the world.😅😂

  • @richarddixon6984
    @richarddixon6984 2 місяці тому

    I wanna hear about thorium reactors

  • @silviosarunic3234
    @silviosarunic3234 Рік тому +2

    Reactor CAN NOT explode like nuclear bomb!

  • @cflyin9
    @cflyin9 11 місяців тому

    I thought most reactor control rod come from the button up except for rmbk

  • @CDI36
    @CDI36 4 місяці тому

    That's the 80 year old version. Think cold war era tech. The new stuff is waaaay different and safer.

  • @user-ej4yu5ce4o
    @user-ej4yu5ce4o 2 місяці тому

    Can control rods get saturated with neutrons and stop absorbing anymore?

  • @aufoslab
    @aufoslab 21 день тому

    good explaination🎉

  • @sprites4ever482
    @sprites4ever482 6 місяців тому

    Here's a disturbing truth: Most people who oppose nuclear power don't even know what is explained in this video.

  • @kevingurnani
    @kevingurnani 16 днів тому

    fyi they are cadmium rods !

  • @henryluk2036
    @henryluk2036 6 місяців тому

    Can you elaborate why during the Japan 311 nuclear event or decommissioned core, the use of boron rods cannot immediately shutdown the fission. Does it meant even when no reaction, the system need a cycle of half life to reduce the reaction rate and thus the heat generation

    • @Authaire1
      @Authaire1 5 місяців тому

      The control rods were damaged due to an earthquake followed by a tsunami causing the rods to get stuck

    • @joevignolor4u949
      @joevignolor4u949 5 місяців тому +1

      Putting in the control rods does immediately stop the fissioning completely because the reactor goes below criticality right away. However, there is still radioactive decay going on inside the fuel, which produces about 7% of the core's normal maximum output. In a commercial nuclear power plant this produces a lot of heat. That's why the core must still be cooled continuously even when the reactor is shut down. If you don't cool the core continuously it will eventually melt down. At Fukushima they had a power failure because the whole local grid went down and the emergency generators got flooded out by the tsunami. This caused the cooling pumps to stop and the core overheated.

  • @bj_s_world
    @bj_s_world 6 місяців тому

    So this proves that energy can be created? 🎉

    • @joevignolor4u949
      @joevignolor4u949 5 місяців тому +1

      You noticed that too. The reactor converts energy from one form to another. It doesn't create it.