Fiona Erskine

Engineer. Writer. Swimmer.

My Blog

XIII – Chernobyl Accident 1986

Chernobyl Reactor 4 started up before the end of 1983 in order to meet a Soviet Union deadline for energy production targets. In the rush, an antiquated design was used and some of the commissioning tests were bypassed.

A worrying problem emerged: how to keep the reactor cool if power was lost.

Active cooling is required in nuclear reactors, running or idle, to remove the heat generated by radioactive decay. In the event of a reactor shutdown, back-up power must keep the water pumps running.

The standby diesel generators took over a minute to run up to speed, too long for the reactor core to be without cooling. A solution – a way of keeping the cooling pumps running for a short time – was proposed by electrical engineers and an experiment scheduled to prove that the problem had been solved.

Normal safety controls were over-ridden to allow the experiment to proceed.

An expert investigator later described the safety test as akin to ordering airplane pilots to switch off their engines mid-flight to check that they could be restarted.

And what if they couldn’t?

The operators who started the test on 25th April 1986 were unaware of the multiple design flaws in the RBMK-1000  nuclear reactors. The design had been hurriedly adapted from military to civilian use. The reactors were unstable at low power, a loss of water not only stopped cooling, but caused a positive increase reactor power, as did the initial entry of the boron control rods (designed to stop a runaway reaction) as their tips were made of a different material.

Instability had been observed in Reactor 2 in Chernobyl and in Lithuania, but the consequences were far less serious because the safety systems worked as intended. With several RMBK-1000 reactors in operation in the Soviet Union, a serious accident was just a matter of time.

There were many conspiracy theories – A US attack on the Soviet Union, A Russian attempt to cover up the overspend on Duga 1, the early warning system that never worked.

Occam’s razor. The simplest explanation is the most probable: a well-intentioned safety test which failed to take account of multiple design faults and went horribly, disastrously wrong.

But it could have been even worse.

As the scale of the April 1986 accident became clear, the team sent to manage the disaster struggled to come to terms with the fact that a further, far worse accident, was still possible.

The damaged reactor core was still active.

The first danger was that hot core would descend into the pool of fire-fighting water which had collected in the basement under the reactor. The water would flash into steam and explode into the atmosphere, flinging out further radioactive debris.

Divers were sent on a suicide mission to open valves in the dark and release the water. They were successful, but the danger was far from over.

Having capped the core, the core temperature continued to rise. If it reached the critical temperature, then a much more serious nuclear explosion would hurl radioactive particles into the atmosphere and winds would blow them in all directions.

Or the burning core would continue to descend, melting down into the water table – so called China Syndrome.

IMG_4738

Radiation affected the circuitry of machines, so miners were brought in to hand dig tunnels under the complex, working in shifts at temperature above 40 degrees, digging and hauling the earth away. The initial plan was to inject liquid nitrogen beneath the reactor core to cool it from below, but the hopelessly ambitious project was never followed through.

Instead the tunnels were filled with concrete to provide a foundation to contain the smouldering core.

The heroic actions of the “liquidators”, those sent to contain and clean up, saved countless lives.

Often at the cost of their own.

IMG_4742

IMG_4748

Chernobyl memorial – To those who saved the world

Continue reading?

Fiona Erskine’s debut thriller “The Chemical Detective” is published by the Oneworld imprint, Point Blank Books and is avialable from all good bookshops and on-line here.

Comments are closed.


I swam 24km in 5 days. Hard work?

Try tuna canning, salt drying or sulphur mining...

https://fionaerskine.substack.com/p/sulphur-and-salt


Goodbye #egadiislands and thank you @swimtrek for an amazing week - 24 kilometres with wonderful guides, fellow swimmers and multicoloured fishes!


This week #PhosphateRocks e-book is only £0.99 in UK

Who doesn't love a story about a demolition gone wrong? @raine_clouds_writes @lesleykellyauthor 

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Phosphate-Rocks-Death-Ten-Objects-ebook/dp/B0CTRRXKNY

PS: The audio book narrated by @rain.goblin is pretty special too


A quarter of my sales this month were overseas for the very first time!

Massive thanks to all those fine Canadians for topping the list. Say Hi if you see this.

https://fionaerskine.com/


On my way to Harrogate today

https://open.substack.com/pub/fionaerskine/p/harrogate

Say hello if you'll be there


What makes the perfect handbag and how much is it worth?

https://fionaerskine.substack.com/p/the-perfect-handbag


https://fionaerskine.substack.com/p/i-have-some-news

Goodbye @oneworldpublications and thank you for everything - it was such an honour to be published by you and I loved working with the team.

Now, like #JaqSilver I'm going solo

Big thanks to @kidethic for my beautiful new covers


Such a treat to interview #TerryDeary about his first adult crime book #ActuallyImAMurderer (it’s great!) at @backofthebeyondbooks


Happy International Women in Engineering Day! 
Thanks to @Chem_Processing for highlighting #TheChemicalDetective!
 #INWED2025 #INWED25 
https://www.chemicalprocessing.com/voices/women-in-chemistry/podcast/55298245/celebrating-international-women-in-engineering-day


More canine readers in @forumbookscorbridge #winter #losingcontrol


This error message is only visible to WordPress admins

There has been a problem with your Instagram Feed.

Follow me on Instagram

Oh @adrianmckinty - where have you been all my life? Loving Sean Duffy’s adventures read by Gerard Doyle

Huge thank you to every person and bookshop that's ordered Ravenglass and made it stonking success so far 😍

This gripping and powerful tale of gender-fluid Kit/Stella traversing the world in the 1700s is very relevant in today's climate!

Order here: https://share.google/i6inpiZ7vDgHK3mMh

Delighted to celebrate International Week of Happiness at Work with a 99p deal in UK. Jaq Silver has found the perfect job in Brazil. Or has she?

The Chemical Cocktail (Jaq Silver Thriller) eBook : Erskine, Fiona: : Kindle Store https://www.amazon.co.uk/Chemical-Cocktail-Silver-Thrillers-Book-ebook/dp/B0FG8X59MT

The Chemical Cocktail goes right back to Jaq’s childhood and can be read first - only £0.99

Trust me, you won’t regret reading this. Exquisite prose and a rollicking, propulsive, deeply moving story. @novelcarolyn is a fearless writer who wears her deep research so lightly that you are instantly immersed into the booming north of the 1720s

Trust me, you won’t regret reading this. Exquisite prose and a rollicking, propulsive, deeply moving story. @novelcarolyn is a fearless writer who wears her deep research so lightly that you are instantly immersed into the booming north of the 1720s
Northodox Press 📖 @northodoxpress

🚨PUBLICATION DAY🚨

Ravenglass is available everywhere now! A tender and powerful tale of a gender fluid character trying to make their way in the 1700s, we can't recommend this incredible adventure novel enough 🏳️‍🌈

Order yours here: https://share.google/bfWyYAWWNBHLr9rB6

I was today years old when I learned I’ve been eating my favourite biscuits all wrong

Chocolate digestives: How do you eat them? Choc side up or down? - CBBC Newsround https://www.bbc.com/newsround/articles/cvg7lnp19n0o

Ravenglass by @novelcarolyn is the most beautifully written exploration of how we once lived and worked and lived and loved and fought in the north. A cracking good read, I cannot recommend it strongly enough - a complete breath of fresh air.

Ravenglass  by @novelcarolyn is the most beautifully written exploration of how we once lived and worked and lived and loved and fought in the north. A cracking good read, I cannot recommend it strongly enough - a complete breath of fresh air.
Northodox Press 📖 @northodoxpress

🚨RELEASE WEEK🚨

One of the biggest and most ambitious Northodox books to date is out this Thursday!

Join Kit Ravenglass on his seafaring journey in this swashbuckling, gender fluid, historical fiction novel!

It is incredible 😍

Preorder now: https://share.google/9lT4pFxkL9DOMypUR

🚨RELEASE WEEK🚨

One of the biggest and most ambitious Northodox books to date is out this Thursday!

Join Kit Ravenglass on his seafaring journey in this swashbuckling, gender fluid, historical fiction novel!

It is incredible 😍

Preorder now: https://share.google/9lT4pFxkL9DOMypUR

Big and lusty! Spot on. #Ravenglass is my book of the year so far.
I'm so looking forward to talking with @novelcarolyn this week on her northern tour!
Who is coming along ?

Big and lusty! Spot on. #Ravenglass is my book of the year so far.
I'm so looking forward to talking with @novelcarolyn  this week on her northern tour!
Who is coming along ?
Carolyn Kirby @novelcarolyn

6 days till #RavenglassNovel goes live and the first press review is a "big and lusty" 9/10!!! 🤩😁Thank you @peterboroughtel 😍

Follow me on X

All my books