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Toshiba unveils device for Fukushima nuclear reactor probe

By , on December 22, 2017


Hamamatsucho Building (Old name:Toshiba Building) in Tokyo, Japan.The Headquarters of Toshiba Corporation and Cosmo Oil Company. (Photo By EXECUTOR - Own work, Public Domain)
Hamamatsucho Building (Old name:Toshiba Building) in Tokyo, Japan.The Headquarters of Toshiba Corporation and Cosmo Oil Company. (Photo By EXECUTOR – Own work, Public Domain)

YOKOHAMA, Japan— Toshiba Corp.’s energy systems unit on Friday unveiled a long telescopic pipe carrying a pan-tilt camera designed to gather crucial information about the situation inside the reactor chambers at Japan’s tsunami-wrecked Fukushima nuclear plant.

The device is 13 metres (43 feet) long and designed to give officials a deeper view into the nuclear plant’s Unit 2 primary containment vessel, where details on melted fuel damage remain largely unknown.

The Fukushima plant had triple meltdowns following the 2011 quake and tsunami.

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Finding details about the fuel debris is crucial to determining the right method and technology for its removal at each reactor, the most challenging process during the plant’s decades-long decommissioning.

Toshiba officials said the new device will be sent inside the pedestal, a structure directly below the core, to investigate the area and hopefully to find melted debris. The mission could come as soon as late January.

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The device looks like a giant fishing rod about 12 centimetres (4.7 inches) in diameter, from which a unit housing the camera, a dosimeter and thermometer slowly slides down. The probe, attached by a cable on the back, can descend all the way to the bottom of the reactor vessel if it can avoid obstacles, officials said.

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Two teams of several engineers will be tasked with the mission, which they will remotely operate from a radiation-free command centre at the plant.

A simpler predecessor to the pipe unveiled Friday had captured a limited view of the vessel during a preparatory investigation in February. A crawling robot sent in later in February struggled with debris on the ground and stalled in the end due to higher-than-expected radiation, its intended mission incomplete.

The upgraded probe has been co-developed by Toshiba ESS and International Research Institute for Nuclear Decommissioning, a government-funded unit of construction and nuclear technology companies over the past nine months.

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