Comparison of the accident process, radioactivity release and ground contamination between Chernobyl and Fukushima-1

  • Imanaka, Tetsuji
  • Hayashi, Gohei
  • Endo, Satoru
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Publication date
November 2015
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
ISSN
0449-3060
Journal
Journal of Radiation Research
Citation count (estimate)
6

Abstract

In this report, we have reviewed the basic features of the accident processes and radioactivity releases that occurred in the Chernobyl accident (1986) and in the Fukushima-1 accident (2011). The Chernobyl accident was a power-surge accident that was caused by a failure of control of a fission chain reaction, which instantaneously destroyed the reactor and building, whereas the Fukushima-1 accident was a loss-of-coolant accident in which the reactor cores of three units were melted by decay heat after losing the electricity supply. Although the quantity of radioactive noble gases released from Fukushima-1 exceeded the amount released from Chernobyl, the size of land area severely contaminated by [137] Cesium ( [137] Cs) was 10 times smaller...

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