Hassan Ahmed  Al Lawati

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In reactors that use water as both coolant and moderator, as the volume of steam increases, fewer neutrons are slowed, so reactivity falls. If too much steam forms—or even if the coolant leaks out entirely—the chain reaction stops, and the reactor shuts itself down. This negative void coefficient acts like a dead man’s handle on the reactor, a safety feature of the water-water designs common in the West.
Midnight in Chernobyl: The Untold Story of the World's Greatest Nuclear Disaster
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