Nuclear Power Plant Safety

Nuclear Power Plant Safety
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I have to say, as someone that spent 4 years working as a emergency management planner assigned to our Nuclear Power Plant Safety program, and dedicated to training first responders in how to remain safe during a power plant response, I have little tolerance for the fear-mongering and nonsense that some people in the preparedness community spout about nuclear power.

Radiation is a well understood scientific principle, and it is pretty easy to find, shield, and stay away from acute levels of radioactivity.

As a hazardous materials technician – and someone that has plaid a part in more than one actual radiological emergency I would tell you that I would much rather deal with a radiological event than a extreme hazardous material event.

Anyway, for those that live near a nuclear power plant here are some tips:

Stay ready at all times:  have a disaster plan and drill it often.  Have second-nature knowledge of official evacuation routes – or, better yet, a map showing them (available from TVA).  Have a specific place to meet if you and yours become separated.  Have an emergency kit – stocked, on hand and ready to take at a moment’s notice.

  • A siren is not an evacuation signal – it might only be a test, and the correct response to a real event varies with the specific type of event. Your reaction to a siren should be to tune to local radio, TV or NOAA radio for instructions.
  • Stay off telephones unless absolutely necessary.  Much of the communication by emergency response workers is via telephone, and lives could be lost if they can’t complete calls.
  • NEVER call 911 to get information!
  • If told to shelter-in-place:  close doors and windows; turn off anything that allows or draws air into the house like furnaces, air conditioners and fireplace vents; if you must go outside, protect your lungs with a damp cloth or towel over your mouth.
  • If told to leave:  stay calm, don’t rush; take your emergency kit with you; turn off lights, appliances and water; follow the evacuation route, using your own transportation if possible; hang a white towel or cloth on your front door so emergency workers will know the building has been evacuated.
  • As soon as an all-clear is given, check on your neighbors.
  • If you have children, know the specifics of what to do about them when they are in school.
  • If you farm or garden; listen to the emergency information from the Tennessee Department of Agriculture.
  • If you live within 10 miles of a nuclear power plant and would need special help in an event, contact TVA now.
How to Test a Faraday Cage

How to Test the Effectiveness of Different Homemade Faraday Cages

 

EMP Protection with Homemade Faraday Cages
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I feel we covered the theory of EMP in the last article, so now I want to link to some videos of the Homemade Faraday Cages experiments I have done trying to find the best system for protection of my personal equipment.

Like I said in the previous article, you hear a lot of internet commando ideas on Faraday cages, but you rarely see anyone actually test the cages they talk about. I did not build a EMP generator for obvious reasons, so I had to find a reasonable alternative.

For the tests I used a cell phone and a FMRS/GMRS handle talkie. Cellphones operate in the 850/900/1800/1900 MHz ranges at about .75 to 1 watt, a FRS/GMRS is around the 463 Mhz range at about 5 watts.

Neither of these are within the test ranges of the 1962 HEMP tests of 1 KHz to 100 MHz but they are within the range of later tests that show EMP ranges from 200 MHz – 5GHz and may be as high as 30-billion watts (depending on type, and distance from source).

I am not trying to protect my cellphone.  In a post EMP area, a cell phone would be useless (unless you have steel wool). If my cage cannot shield against cell phone transmission, then it is worthless against the much higher EMP.

I am NOT trying to protect the phone.  I am seeing if the cage can block the signal TO the phone

Please view the videos below to see some of the cage designs I tested. Personally I don’t rely on any of them, and just keep a few redundant items in them to make life easier.

I feel that in the event of a man made EMP attack, the few things I can store won’t balance with use verses cost, so I spend my resources on items to work around electrical dependence.

Besides the FEMA guidance I mentioned in the earlier article, you may want to visit this document: http://ids.nic.in/jces/ART-3.htm

Aluminum Foil

Mylar Bag

Popcorn Tin

What is an EMP

 

What is EMP
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A common question asked by new preppers is “what is EMP?”

Electromagnetic pulse protection can be a contentious subject among preppers. In my experience there are two dominant views on Faraday cages.  Which camp you belong to depends on if you are a ham radio operator or not. I base my ideas on the training I received when I worked as a radiological emergency response planner.  Additionally much of my information comes from the FEMA document CPG 2-17.

CPG 2-17 volume I explains the science behind electromagnetic pulse.  It also discusses the protection needed to mitigate this threat. Volume II and III of the CPG series deal with the construction of protection devices.  They also show the reader how they can harden structures against Electromagnetic Pulses. Unfortunately, FEMA has discontinued the series.  This makes the books a “holy grail” of EMP documents.  They are extremely hard to find. Personally I only have been able to acquire volume one.  Which means this article deals only with the theory behind EMP.

What Exactly is an Electromagnetic Pulse

An electromagnetic pulse (EMP) is a burst of electromagnetic radiation. Typically we think of EMP as coming from a nuclear explosion or from the sun. However, nuclear blasts and solar ejections are not the only situations where you can get an EMP. Several types of high energy explosions as well as suddenly fluctuating magnetic fields. can produce a burst of electromagnetic energy.

What you need to realize that EMP is Electromagnetic Radiation.  As as such a EMP fits in the electromagnetic spectrum. The electomagnetic spectrum spans the entire range of all possible frequencies of radiation. Light, heat, sound, radio waves, electricity, and radiation all fit on this spectrum. The EM spectrum is organized by frequency, with the lower frequencies to the left and the higher on the right.

Frequency is the number of occurrences of a repeating event per unit time. Hertz (Hz) is the unit of measurement for frequency. 1 Hz means the cycle repeats once a second. If a light flashes at 1 HZ then it will flash 60 times a minute.

Not only is the spectrum organized by increasing frequency, increasing frequency corresponds with decreasing wavelength.

Wavelength is a measure of the distance between repetitions of a shape feature such as peaks, valleys, or zero-crossings (zero crossings is where the wave crosses the center-line of the wave or 0 on the X axis)

Basically the more repetitions you cram into a span of time the smaller distance you can travel. I can make ten little hops a minute easier than I can make ten standing long jumps in a minute. The distance between when my feet leave the ground to where they land is wavelength, how many I do in a span of time is frequency.

Electromagnetic Pulses Often come from a Nuclear Detonation

Like I said above, we tend to think of EMP coming from nuclear detonation. As a military weapon, this works best if the nuclear warhead is detonated hundreds of kilometers above the Earth’s surface. This is called a high-altitude electromagnetic pulse (HEMP) device. Effects of a HEMP device depend on a very large number of factors, including the altitude of the detonation, energy yield, gamma ray output, interactions with the Earth’s magnetic field, and electromagnetic shielding of targets.

So lets talk a second about the mechanisms of injury that we get from EMP.  What do the pulses do to destroy the electrical grid and your electronic devices.

How an EMP Destroys Electronics

EMP works through induction – just like a transformer. When the electromagnetic energy passes by a conductor it induces the electrons inside the conductor to move – INDUCING electricity. It works just like the wall wart you use to charge your cell phone. The electricity coming from your wall at 115volt is run into an electromagnet this electromagnetism then induces current in a coil of wire next to the magnet – the electricity from that coil is a lower voltage and allows you to charge your cell phone.

The longer the conductor the more power is induced by a pulse. Power transmission lines, large antennas, metal pipelines all will have induced electricity. Anything connected to those items could have a large surge of electricity in the event of a EMP.

This surge of electricity can cause problems by melting tiny wires in the electronics, large enough surges can overwhelm insulators and turn them into conductors (melting them in the process). It can also exceed a diode’s breakdown voltage. This is the voltage required to reverse electrical flow in a one way diode – basically ending its life as a diode. If this happens the circuit will not work

Just because something does not plug into grid power does not mean it is immune to EMP – while equipment may not receive those strong induced currents, the tiny wires inside of microcircuits do not take as much current to melt so they can receive enough induced current through its internal circuits if the EMP is strong enough.

There are Different Types of EMP

With EMP there is some confusion – not only does it come from multiple events, it comes in several different variations.

This causes certain individuals to lump things that protect against one form of EMP and believe it protects against all types of EMP.

The International Electrotechnical Commission has categorized EMP into three types.

E1

The E1 pulse is the fastest form of nuclear EMP. It is extremely brief but very intense electromagnetic field that can quickly induce very high voltages in electrical conductors. E1 causes most of its damage by causing electrical breakdown voltages to be exceeded. E1 is the component that can destroy computers and communications equipment and it changes too quickly for ordinary lightning protectors to provide effective protection against it. Lightning has a building effect where the pulse takes a few milliseconds to build and protection circuits can detect it and shut down. E1 is almost instantaneous and moves through the circuits before they can detect. Like how you slow down after the cop has you on radar…

The E1 component is produced when gamma radiation from the nuclear detonation knocks electrons out of the atoms in the upper atmosphere (Compton effect).

E2

The E2 component is generated by the neutrons released by nuclear weapons. This E2 component is an “intermediate time” pulse that, by the IEC definition, lasts from about 1 microsecond to 1 second after the beginning of the electromagnetic pulse. The E2 component of the pulse has many similarities to the electromagnetic pulses produced by lightning. It has a lot of  similarities to a lightning strike.  Because of the widespread use of lightning protection technology, the E2 pulse is generally considered to be the easiest to protect against.

E1 will damage or destroy most lightning protection equipment, which means the later coming E2 will bypass those protections.

E3

Type E3 is different from both E1 and E2.  The E3 is a very slow pulse, lasting tens to hundreds of seconds.

What happens is that after a HEMP, the earth’s magnetic field thrown out of balance by the EMP, and the molten iron core of the earth that creates our magnetic field restores itself. This causes additional induction. This is the most similar to geomagnetic storms caused by a very severe CME.

This is most likely to cause induced currents in long electrical conductors, which can then damage components such as power line transformers.

Because of the similarity between solar-induced geomagnetic storms and nuclear E3, it has become common to refer to solar-induced geomagnetic storms as “solar EMP.” At ground level, however, “solar EMP” is not known to produce an E1 or E2 component.

How to Protect Against an Electromagnetic Pulse

The best way to protect against EMP is through the use of Faraday cages to shield against the pulse. While we will talk about and show some cages in a later post the are theoretically simple.

A Faraday cage is a conductor (either solid or a mesh smaller than the height of the electromagnetic wave. This cage completely encapsulates your device. It also has an insulator inside to keep the protected items from touching the cage.

Just like a rock on the beach causing waves to flow around it, EMP hits the cage and the energy is directed around your electronics rather than through it.

Some believe this cage needs to be made out of ferrous materials, but all that is needed is that the cage is a conductor, as any conductor can make an electromagnet.

Some also believe you need to ground your cage. Personally I disagree and feel the grounding wire will act as an antenna. However, it is possible for a conductor and an insulator to turn into a capacitor, and some believe a grounding rod will prevent this.

Real World EMP Tactical Consideration

My biggest fear when it comes to Faraday cages is that any enemy that uses a HEMP against us will know some of us will have items that are protected, and will detonate a second EMP at some point (week – 10 days, a month) after the initial attack to destroy our redundant systems just like an earthquakes aftershock. This coupled with the idea that Faraday cages only protect against items that are not in use and stored properly leads me to spend time in building capability in the non-electric realm rather than spend all my resources building redundant cages stocked with redundant gear. Our civilization developed without electronics.  As useful as modern electronics are, I can live without them.  Being independent of grid electricity and consumer electronics is the base of my EMP plan.