In order to start up a controllable fission reaction, the assembly must be delayed-critical. In other words,
k must be greater than 1 (supercritical) without crossing the prompt-critical threshold. In nuclear reactors this is possible due to delayed neutrons. Because it takes some time before these neutrons are emitted following a fission event, it is possible to control the nuclear reaction using control rods. A steady-state (constant power) reactor is operated so that it is critical due to the delayed neutrons, but would not be so without their contribution. During a gradual and deliberate increase in reactor power level, the reactor is delayed-supercritical. The exponential increase of reactor activity is slow enough to make it possible to control the criticality factor,
k, by inserting or withdrawing rods of neutron absorbing material. Using careful control rod movements, it is thus possible to achieve a supercritical reactor core without reaching an unsafe prompt-critical state. Once a reactor plant is operating at its target or design power level, it can be operated to maintain its critical condition for long periods of time.
Prompt critical accidents Nuclear reactors can be susceptible to prompt-criticality accidents if a large increase in reactivity (or
k-effective) occurs, e.g., following failure of their control and safety systems. The rapid uncontrollable increase in reactor power in prompt-critical conditions is likely to irreparably damage the reactor and in extreme cases, may breach the containment of the reactor. Nuclear reactors' safety systems are designed to prevent prompt criticality and, for
defense in depth, reactor structures also provide multiple layers of containment as a precaution against any accidental releases of
radioactive fission products. With the exception of research and experimental reactors, only a small number of reactor accidents are thought to have achieved prompt criticality, for example
Chernobyl #4, the U.S. Army's
SL-1, and
Soviet submarine K-431. In all these examples, the uncontrolled surge in power was sufficient to cause an explosion that destroyed the reactor and released
radioactive fission products into the atmosphere. At Chernobyl in 1986, a test procedure which required cutting power to half of the reactor's coolant pumps was undertaken. This test, in combination with a poorly-understood positive
scram effect, resulted in a dangerously overheated reactor core. This led to the rupturing of the fuel elements and water pipes, vaporization of water, a
steam explosion, and a graphite fire. Estimated power levels prior to the incident suggest that it operated in excess of 30 GW, ten times its 3 GW maximum thermal output. The reactor chamber's 2000-ton lid was lifted by the steam explosion. Since the reactor was not designed with a
containment building capable of containing this catastrophic explosion, the accident released large amounts of radioactive material into the environment. In the other two incidents, the reactors failed due to errors during a maintenance shutdown involving the rapid and uncontrolled removal of at least one control rod. The
SL-1 was a prototype reactor intended for use by the US Army in remote polar locations. At the SL-1 plant in 1961, the reactor was brought from shut down to a prompt critical state by manually extracting the central control rod too far. As the water in the core quickly converted to steam and expanded (in just a few milliseconds), the reactor vessel jumped , leaving impressions in the ceiling above. All three men performing the maintenance procedure died from injuries. 1,100 curies of fission products were released as parts of the core were expelled. It took 2 years to investigate the accident and clean up the site. The excess prompt reactivity of the SL-1 core was calculated in a 1962 report: In the
K-431 reactor accident, 10 were killed during a refueling operation. The
K-431 explosion destroyed the adjacent machinery rooms and ruptured the submarine's hull. In these two catastrophes, the reactors went from completely shutdown to extremely high power levels in a fraction of a second, damaging the reactors beyond repair. ==List of accidental prompt critical excursions==