The atoms that do not find a
vacancy come to rest in non-ideal locations; that is, not along the symmetrical lines of the lattice. These
interstitial atoms (or simply "interstitials") and their associated vacancies are a
Frenkel defect. Because these atoms are not in the ideal location, they have a
Wigner energy associated with them, much as a ball at the top of a hill has
gravitational potential energy. When a large number of interstitials have accumulated, they risk releasing all of their energy suddenly, creating a rapid, great increase in temperature. Sudden, unplanned increases in temperature can present a large risk for certain types of nuclear reactors with low operating temperatures. One such release was the indirect cause of the
Windscale fire. Accumulation of energy in irradiated graphite has been recorded as high as 2.7
kJ/g--enough to raise the temperature by thousands of degrees—but is typically much lower than this. == Windscale and Chernobyl ==