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Would it be possible in a Fukushima-style meltdown to halt the process (edit: I mean halting the meltdown process, not the actual nuclear processes) by dumping large amounts of iron into the vessel? The iron would melt and mix with the uranium, which would 1) Dilute the fuel to slow the reaction 2) Absorb and transport away heat 3) Encase the fuel in a massive block of metal 3) Iron doesn't contain carbon, as steel would. Carbon moderates the neutrons.

Of course, this would render the reactor useless, but if it is already melting down, it is already useless. It would slow the reaction and lower the temperature so you stop building up hydrogen gas in the containment vessel. Other metals might be theoretically better, but iron is cheap, strong, and readily available.

cassius
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    The obvious difficulties are 1) Fukushima style reactors don't have any obvious mechanism for introducing iron into the reactor. 2) The problem at Fukushima was not stopping the nuclear fission of the fuel but in removing residual heat in the absence of power for the cooling systems. – RedGrittyBrick Aug 14 '13 at 23:43
  • I'm not talking specifically about fukushima. If the process worked, it could be designed into future reactors or retrofitted in current ones. 2) It seems to me this would work much better for mitigating residual heat than simply pumping in more water.
  • – cassius Aug 14 '13 at 23:59
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    Further to RedGrittyBrick, the residual heat includes the decay energy of the short-lived fission products, which typically amount to 5% of full power. *IOW, YOU CAN'T TURN IT OFF!!* – DJohnM Aug 15 '13 at 00:39
  • Userr58220 - That actually wan't the question. I'm not talking about turning off anything. I'm talking about diluting the radioactive material to the point where it no longer poses the danger of generating hydrogen gas explosions. It seems to me that a large mass of metal would accomplish this before a breach in the outer containment vessel occurred. A similar process happened in the meltdown of the Chernobyl reactor, though it melted through the concrete and rock until it was diluted enough to solidify. – cassius Aug 22 '13 at 11:34