ThinksMarkedly wrote:I probably used the wrong term. I did not mean the moderator rods.
Yes, you DID mean the moderator rods, because that IS the correct rod. It is part of a whole, called the fuel assembly. The number of rods determine the output of the reactor.
ThinksMarkedly wrote:You're right that if you want a powered reactor at minimum power, you'd push the moderator rods all the way in, ...
NO!!! The moderator rods are fuel rods! You don't add more gasoline to a fire if you want a smaller fire. The fuel rods are also called "moderator" rods because they slow down the neutrons enough to support a chain reaction. Inserting more rods creates a bigger chain reaction!
Fission reactors produce heat from splitting an atom. It would be too costly and complicated to design a reactor that splits thousands of atoms each and every time from scratch. So a chain reaction is used instead. The domino effect.
Jonathan_S wrote:The fuel does spontaneously fission - though at a fairly low rate. Still it take quite a while for the decay chains from any single fission to work their way down to stable elements; and they produce a lot of heat while doing so. That's why spent fuel rods need to be kept in a cooling pond because even without active chain reaction splitting of the uranium the short lived elements it splits into continue self-fissioning through their short half-lives. (The fact that the mass of water also nicely absorbs the radiation they're putting off is a nice bonus)
Probably the closest thing to "stalling" a fission reactor is neutron poisoning, by creating too many short lived neutron absorbing elements; like xenon-135. Those make it very hard to control the reactor if restarted before letting them decay away - you have to pull the neutron absorbing control rods much further out than normal to overcome all that excess internal neutron absorption and get the reactor critical again and then as the neutron absorbing elements decay, or are burned away by all the neutrons the now critical reactor is producing, the reaction level can spike up dangerously forcing you to slam the control rods back down.
So in general if you shut a reactor down too quickly you simply have to wait out the neutron poisoning before it's safe to restart. (In some ways more like vapor locking an engine than just stalling it).
I see nothing wrong with your post except what I've highlighted. In some of the older reactor designs, which there are many still operational, you do not want to SCRAM (slamming the control rods back down) in that situation. It is what caused the Chernobyl disaster.
It is akin to slamming on your brakes when it first starts to rain. You get the opposite effect from what you intended. You speed up!