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To: FReepaholic

I am not sure why when the control rods go in hydraulically that the plant cannot be shut down. I realize it is still hot but would expect that within a few hours that the plant could be totally shut down.


59 posted on 03/11/2011 5:49:39 PM PST by Frantzie (HD TV - Total Brain-washing now in High Def. 3-D Coming soon)
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To: Frantzie
I am not sure why when the control rods go in hydraulically that the plant cannot be shut down. I realize it is still hot but would expect that within a few hours that the plant could be totally shut down.

Quantify "few": From what I read it is only 24-48 hours. Is three weeks "few"? Might depend upon what you're dealing with.

102 posted on 03/11/2011 7:04:09 PM PST by sionnsar (IranAzadi|5yst3m 0wn3d-it's N0t Y0ur5:SONY|http://pure-gas.org|Must be a day for changing taglines)
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To: Frantzie
I am not sure why when the control rods go in hydraulically that the plant cannot be shut down. I realize it is still hot but would expect that within a few hours that the plant could be totally shut down.

When the 'poles are in the holes', the reactor plant is shut down. However, it continues to produce heat at a slowly decreasing rate--fission reactions are still happening, but not enough to sustain criticality. Since the reactor plant is very heavily insulated, it retains all of that heat, minus minimal ambient losses, plus what is still being produced. A shutdown reactor requires cooling until the amount of heat produced no longer exceeds the ambient heat losses of the system. Depending on the size and design of the reactor plant (and many other variables), this can take days, weeks, or even months.
124 posted on 03/11/2011 9:58:10 PM PST by rottndog (Be prepared for what's coming AFTER America....)
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