Sensors could monitor reactors in disaster
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Oct 23, 2012 -- UPI
U.S. researchers say they've created self-powered sensors
that could monitor a nuclear reactor in a disaster even when
electrical power to the reactor fails.
The research was prompted by the 2011 Fukushima Dai'ichi
nuclear disaster in Japan, when the electrical power supply to
the nuclear reactor failed during a severe earthquake and
subsequent tsunami and rendered backup electrical generators,
coolant pumps and sensor systems useless.
The loss of power meant the plant's operators were unable to
monitor the fuel rods in the reactor and spent fuel in the
storage ponds.
Penn State researchers have teamed with the Idaho National
Laboratory to create a self-powered sensor capable of harnessing
heat from nuclear reactors' harsh operating environments to
transmit data without electronic networks, a release from the
American Institute of Physics reported Tuesday.
The sensors use a technology called thermoacoustics to create
energy from the heat with a nuclear reactor.
"Thermoacoustics exploits the interaction between heat and
sound waves," Randall A. Ali, a graduate student studying
acoustics at Penn State, said. "Thermoacoustic sensors can
operate without moving parts and don't require external power if
a heat source, such as fuel in a nuclear reactor, is available."
The researchers will present their findings at the Acoustical
Society of America's meeting this week in Kansas City, Mo.
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