These two expeditions, particularly the latter, established the radiological regime in and around the
The preliminary results from these two expeditions did not indicate the presence of radionuclides that may have been released from the submarine reactors or, potentially, from any nuclear weapons carried on board.
The presence of nuclear weapons on board the
At this stage, no attempt was made to sample within the sealed reactor compartment, nor was any significant monitoring undertaken of any thermal gradients in the flood hull in the vicinity of the reactor compartment.
The
Designed by RUBIN, The Russian State Marine Engineering Design Bureau in St Petersburg, the
The power plant comprised two, integrated type pressurized water reactors (OK 650b) each of ~200MW thermal output located in the sealed reactor compartment № 6. The reactors were arranged in line, in foreaft fashion, each in its own pressure sealed sub-compartment. Each reactor pressure vessel was housed within a sealed 25m3 capacity water shield tank that was resiliently mounted to absorb shock from the operational submarine when in battle situations. The steam generators were clustered immediately around the RPV with the main circulating pumps above with just over 1m head to assist in natural circulation in the event of pump failure. Fuel comprised annular elements of uranium-aluminum cermet or dispersion type fuel clad in zircaloy, zoned between 20 to 45% (core equivalent 30%) enriched U-235 of 48 assemblies, totaling about 200kg U-235 per reactor core. Gadolinium burnable poison was integrated within the fuel and control was via boron/hafnium absorbers.
Nuclear plant emergency shut down was via control rod injection by spring and pneumatic drive and core cooling was via a relatively conventional ECS with a supplementary bubble tank. As an ultimate safeguard the entire reactor compartment was capable of being flooded with seawater via valves set into the pressure hull.
The
Torpedo munitions comprised 24 torpedoes held in open rack magazines, potentially including torpedoes of nuclear capability, firing from 2?650mm and 4?533mm torpedo tubes in the bow (№ 1) compartment. The armaments could also include ASW Harpoon-type rockets and seabed mines also deployed from the forward torpedo tubes.
MAMMOET-SMIT RECOVERY PLANS
From about January 2001, the Russian Federation Navy and the
to comply with the promise of President Putin to the relatives of the crew. The first consortium formed, Smit-Heerema-Halliburton, withdrew because Halliburton believed the end of the year recovery deadline could not be safely achieved. In mid May 2001, the Russian Federation and RUBIN, jointly contracted Mammoet-Smit (M-S) to recover the
The M-S strategy was to effect the recovery in three phases, these being:
Phase 1: Preparatory activities, including surveying, radiation monitoring of the submarine, removal of silt around the area of the intended hull cutting operation, and cutting of the hull just forward of the № 1 bulkhead to sever the most damaged part of the submarine. Then, to give a stable and predictable lift and to mount the rigs, to cut 26 holes through the casing and pressure hull either side of the vertical centerline of the main hull for the subsequent insertion and clamping of the lifting fittings. The positions of these holes were selected by the RF to minimize hull bending during the lift and none were positioned in the reactor compartment. This also included the modification of the
Phase 2: Installation of the 26 lifting fittings, the lowering through the pre-inserted tubes in the barge hull and connecting of 26 sets of lifting cables, each comprising 54 strands of seven twisted wires each 6mm diameter and the raising of the
Phase 3: The fitting of two large pontoons, one under each side of the barge, to lift it entirely out of the water to give sufficient clearance of the underslung
Severing the remains of № 1 compartment deployed a heavy cable carrying thick-walled tubular sections coated with a very coarse (~25mm) abrasive. Reciprocating motion was to be provided by two 30 tonne hydraulic rams attached by suction anchors to the seabed.