PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

MIT: Inside the innards of a nuclear reactor

Tiny robots may monitor underground pipes for radioactive leaks

2011-07-22
(Press-News.org) CAMBRIDGE, Mass. -- As workers continue to grapple with the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear powerplant in Japan, the crisis has shone a spotlight on nuclear reactors around the world. In June, The Associated Press released results from a yearlong investigation, revealing evidence of "unrelenting wear" in many of the oldest-running facilities in the United States.

That study found that three-quarters of the country's nuclear reactor sites have leaked radioactive tritium from buried piping that transports water to cool reactor vessels, often contaminating groundwater. According to a recent report by the U.S. Government Accountability Office, the industry has limited methods to monitor underground pipes for leaks.

"We have 104 reactors in this country," says Harry Asada, the Ford Professor of Engineering in the Department of Mechanical Engineering and director of MIT's d'Arbeloff Laboratory for Information Systems and Technology. "Fifty-two of them are 30 years or older, and we need immediate solutions to assure the safe operations of these reactors."

Asada says one of the major challenges for safety inspectors is identifying corrosion in a reactor's underground pipes. Currently, plant inspectors use indirect methods to monitor buried piping: generating a voltage gradient to identify areas where pipe coatings may have corroded, and using ultrasonic waves to screen lengths of pipe for cracks. The only direct monitoring requires digging out the pipes and visually inspecting them — a costly and time-intensive operation.

Now Asada and his colleagues at the d'Arbeloff Laboratory are working on a direct monitoring alternative: small, egg-sized robots designed to dive into nuclear reactors and swim through underground pipes, checking for signs of corrosion. The underwater patrollers, equipped with cameras, are able to withstand a reactor's extreme, radioactive environment, transmitting images in real-time from within.

The group presented details of its latest prototype at the 2011 IEEE International Conference on Robotics and Automation.

Cannonball!

At first glance, Asada's robotic inspector looks like nothing more than a small metallic cannonball. There are no propellers or rudders, or any obvious mechanism on its surface to power the robot through an underwater environment. Asada says such "appendages," common in many autonomous underwater vehicles (AUVs), are too bulky for his purposes — a robot outfitted with external thrusters or propellers would easily lodge in a reactor's intricate structures, including sensor probes, networks of pipes and joints. "You would have to shut down the plant just to get the robot out," Asada says. "So we had to make [our design] extremely fail-safe."

He and his graduate student, Anirban Mazumdar, decided to make the robot a smooth sphere, devising a propulsion system that can harness the considerable force of water rushing through a reactor. The group devised a special valve for switching the direction of a flow with a tiny change in pressure and embedded a network of the Y-shaped valves within the hull, or "skin," of the small, spherical robot, using 3-D printing to construct the network of valves, layer by layer. "At the end of the day, we get pipelines going in all … directions," Asada says. "They're really tiny."

Depending on the direction they want their robot to swim, the researchers can close off various channels to shoot water through a specific valve. The high-pressure water pushes open a window at the end of the valve, rushing out of the robot and creating a jet stream that propels the robot in the opposite direction.

Robo-patrol

As the robot navigates a pipe system, the onboard camera takes images along the pipe's interior. Asada's original plan was to retrieve the robot and examine the images afterward. But now he and his students are working to equip the robot with wireless underwater communications, using laser optics to transmit images in real time across distances of up to 100 meters.

The team is also working on an "eyeball" mechanism that would let the camera pan and tilt in place. Graduate student Ian Rust describes the concept as akin to a hamster ball.

"The hamster changes the location of the center of mass of the ball by scurrying up the side of the ball," Rust says. "The ball then rolls in that direction."

To achieve the same effect, the group installed a two-axis gimbal in the body of the robot, enabling them to change the robot's center of mass arbitrarily. With this setup, the camera, fixed to the outside of the robot, can pan and tilt as the robot stays stationary.

Asada envisions the robots as short-term, disposable patrollers, able to inspect pipes for several missions before breaking down from repeated radiation exposure. ###

Written by Jennifer Chu, MIT News


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Is anesthesia dangerous?

2011-07-22
In pure numerical terms, anesthesia-associated mortality has risen again. The reasons for this are the disproportionate increase in the numbers of older and multimorbid patients and surgical procedures that would have been unthinkable in the past. This is the result of a selective literature review of André Gottschalk's working group at the Bochum University Hospital in the current issue of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2011; 108[27]: 469-74). In the 1940s, anesthesia-related mortality was 6.4/10,000. By introducing safety standards such as pulse ...

Grazing management effects on stream pollutants

2011-07-22
MADISON, WI, JULY 21, 2011 -- Surface water quality is important for the proper function of aquatic ecosystems, as well as human needs and recreation. Pasturelands have been found to be major sources of sediment, phosphorus and pathogens in Midwest surface water resources. While poor grazing management may lead to contaminated surface water, little is known about the specific amount of pollution in pasture streams that can be attributed to grazing cattle. Scientists in the Departments of Animal Science, Veterinary Diagnostic and Production Animal Medicine, and Veterinary ...

Elimination of national kidney allocation policy improves minority access to transplants

2011-07-22
A new study published in the American Journal of Transplantation reveals that since the elimination of the kidney allocation priority for matching for HLA-B on May 7, 2003, access to kidney transplantation for minorities has been improved. Improvement is a result of a policy that reduced the requirements for tissue matching. Prior national kidney allocation rules provided priority to candidates who shared HLA-B antigens with potential deceased donors. On May 7, 2003, allocation priority for HLA-B matching was eliminated. Improvements in medications used to prevent transplant ...

Researchers stumble on colorful discovery

Researchers stumble on colorful discovery
2011-07-22
Modified metals that change colour in the presence of particular gases could warn consumers if packaged food has been exposed to air or if there's a carbon monoxide leak at home. This finding could potentially influence the production of both industrial and commercial air quality sensors. "We initially found out by accident that modified rhodium reacts in a colourful way to different gases," says Cathleen Crudden, a professor in the Department of Chemistry. "That happy accident has become a driving force in our work with rhodium." Rhodium that is modified using carbon, ...

UCI-led butterfly study sheds light on convergent evolution

2011-07-22
Irvine, Calif., July 21, 2011 – For 150 years scientists have been trying to explain convergent evolution. One of the best-known examples of this is how poisonous butterflies from different species evolve to mimic each other's color patterns – in effect joining forces to warn predators, "Don't eat us," while spreading the cost of this lesson. Now an international team of researchers led by Robert Reed, UC Irvine assistant professor of ecology & evolutionary biology, has solved part of the mystery by identifying a single gene called optix responsible for red wing color ...

Minority participants crucial to effective aging studies

2011-07-22
A new supplemental issue of The Gerontologist urges aging researchers to include representative samples of ethnically diverse populations in their work. The publication also identifies research priorities for moving the science of recruitment and retention forward, in addition to providing several strategies that scholars can employ in their work. The U.S. Census Bureau predicts that non-white minorities will make up 42 percent of the country's 65-and-over population by 2050. "The cultural-historical background and sociopolitical conditions of each diverse group poses ...

Exoplanet aurora: An out-of-this-world sight

Exoplanet aurora: An out-of-this-world sight
2011-07-22
VIDEO: In this animation, stunning aurorae ripple around a "hot Jupiter. " When a stellar eruption known as a coronal mass ejection hit the planet, it triggered these aurorae, which are the... Click here for more information. Earth's aurorae, or Northern and Southern Lights, provide a dazzling light show to people living in the polar regions. Shimmering curtains of green and red undulate across the sky like a living thing. New research shows that aurorae on ...

Forest fungus factory

2011-07-22
An invasive insect, hemlock woolly adelgid, has been marching north along the Appalachians, killing almost every hemlock tree in its path. The adelgid has devastated forests in Georgia, Tennessee, and Virginia. The pest recently arrived in Vermont and other parts of New England. So far, only extreme cold stops the adelgid. But now a University of Vermont scientist has developed what he calls a "fungal microfactory" technology that promises to give forest managers and homeowners a tool to fight back. Working with the U.S. Forest Service, the State of Vermont, and others, ...

Hepatitis C is transmitted by unprotected sex between HIV-infected men

2011-07-22
Sexual transmission of hepatitis C virus (HCV) is considered rare. But a new study by researchers at Mount Sinai School of Medicine, working with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), provides substantial evidence that men with HIV who have sex with other men (MSM) are at increased risk for contracting HCV through sex. The results of the study are published in today's edition of the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. HCV transmission primarily occurs through exposure to blood, and persons who inject drugs at greatest risk. But when Mount Sinai ...

Paternity testing helps fill in family tree for Puget Sound's killer whales

2011-07-22
In a study published online this month in the Journal of Heredity, NOAA researchers and others, using DNA testing to fill in a missing link in the lives of killer whales that seasonally visit Washington's Puget Sound, have discovered that some of the progeny they studied were the result of matings within the same social subgroups, or pods, that are part of the overall population. One implication of this inbreeding behavior is a significant reduction in the genetic diversity of what is already a perilously small population of animals, formally known as Southern Resident ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

FAU’s CAROSEL offers new ‘spin’ on monitoring water quality in real time

Study: College women face greater risk of sexual violence than others

Baystate Health Researcher receives new grant from the National Institutes of Health to enhance support for parents recovering from substance use disorders

Engineering defects could transform the future of nanomaterials

UBCO researchers apply body preservation technique to wood

Are we ready for robot caregivers? The answer is a cautious “yes, if...”

Study shows why living in a disadvantaged neighborhood may increase dementia risk

Tie climate action to protecting a way of life to increase motivation, study says

New therapeutic brain implants defy the need for surgery

The chilling effect of air pollution

New approach expands possibilities for studying viruses in the environment

Are there different types of black holes? New method puts Einstein to the test

CRISPR screen identifies new regulator of androgen receptor in prostate cancer

Ice Age trees helped stabilize Earth's atmosphere by suffocating

Unlocking how viruses punch above their weight

New modelling shows difficult future for the GBR under climate change

More polar ocean turbulence due to planetary warming

Bowel cancer's "Big Bang" moment revealed

Fishes, young and old, are shrinking in Michigan's inland lakes

Predicted CO2 levels cause marked increase in forest temperatures

Common antibiotic may reduce schizophrenia risk, study shows

Delta.g appoints current Chair of Serendipity Capital and former HSBC Holdings Group CFO Ewen Stevenson as Chair of the Board

How much benefit comes from programs aimed at reducing pollution?

What factors determine the severity and outcomes of cyberwarfare between countries?

Can therapies against cellular aging help treat metabolic diseases?

New insights on gut microbes that prevent formation of cancer-causing compounds

Preventing dangerous short circuits in lithium batteries

Successful bone regeneration using stem cells derived from fatty tissue

ELSI to host first PCST Symposium in Japan, advancing science communication across Asia

Researchers improve marine aerosol remote sensing accuracy using multiangular polarimetry

[Press-News.org] MIT: Inside the innards of a nuclear reactor
Tiny robots may monitor underground pipes for radioactive leaks