Submitted by Figorama t3_11pzjx4 in askscience
In one episode of the series the protagonist, Legasov, explains the function of the safety protocol AZ5 that forces the boron control rods to descend into the reactor. That boron rods slows reactivity but he elaborates that the control rods are tipped with graphite which accelerates reactivity. The character opposite him in this scene asks "Why?" the control rods are tipped with graphite. He explains that it's "cheaper", but I find that explaination unsatisfying.
It sounds to me like a fireman explaining that the first few bursts from a fire extinguisher will dispense jet fuel before any kind of flame retardant.
Why would the control rods in this reactor be tipped with an accelerant of all things?
Hiddencamper t1_jc1ir2b wrote
The design of the RBMK is fundamentally backwards. It’s all about the relative values of reactivity.
Coolant (water) goes in the bottom of the RBMK and boils as it goes up. Because this is a graphite moderated reactor, water has less moderation capability than the graphite. This is important because liquid water will reduce your neutron mean free path distance (how far the neutron travels before it is absorbed by something or lost from the reactor). As the water boils, it’s density drops significantly and the mean free path length for neutrons increases.
So let’s put this together. At the bottom of the reactor, you have neutrons which are more or less struggling to find graphite, get moderated, and get back into the fuel, before leaking out or being absorbed without causing fission.
At the top of the reactor, your neutrons have a very easy time getting to the graphite to get moderated and cause fission.
This also means the power generated at the bottom of the reactor is less than the top of the reactor (axial flux tilt is top peaked).
But the top of the reactor has less coolant (because much of the water has already boiled to steam). So the top of the reactor has a tendency to produce more power, with less coolant, which is inherently a risk to exceeding critical power ratio. While the bottom of the reactor, even with all control rods out, has little power production, and is also very sensitive to emergencies which cause rapid voiding since there are typically no control rods down there just to keep the bottom of the core running.
As a result, the RBMK has control rods which come in from the top. Backwards for a boiling type reactor but a necessity.
So what’s the problem here? Where the bottom of the reactor is going to not only barely have any power output, the fuel is going to be wasted down there, it’s more sensitive to certain transients, so what did they do? They put graphite followers on the rods. To help boost the reactivity in the bottom of the core. Yes this is a dumb idea, but on its own it’s not terrible. With the followers inserted in the core, they no longer have positive reactivity to add. They already have “done their damage” so to speak. So if you had a power spike, as the rods inserted, the graphite followers would be pushed down out of the core and be replaced with control rods.
This was a “win win” for this dumb backwards reactor.
Except….. if you ever find yourself pulling the followers out of the reactor, especially if you also have low reactor coolant flow and pressure and other conditions which could cause rapid boiling, and you have low control rod density, then the effect of a scram is to push the followers back into the core and cause a power spike.
Why there weren’t mechanical limits on the control rods equipped with followers or other system interlocks is beyond me. This design “feature” should never have existed without something in place to ensure those followers cannot be removed beyond a certain position. Or better yet, don’t build backwards reactor designs.