Key Phenomena Governing HLW Glass Behavior in the French Deep Geological Disposal

2015 ◽  
Vol 1744 ◽  
pp. 127-138
Author(s):  
Stéphan Schumacher ◽  
Christelle Martin ◽  
Yannick Linard ◽  
Frédéric Angeli ◽  
Delphine Neff ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAccording to the Planning Act of 28th June 2006, Andra is in charge of ensuring the sustainable management of all radioactive waste generated in France, especially the high-level and long-lived vitrified waste produced from spent fuel recycling.Since 2006, all the studies and research related to the components of HLW cells have been incorporated into a broader R&D program which aims at characterizing and modeling (i) the glass matrix dissolution, (ii) the corrosion of the overpack and the lining, and (iii) the claystone evolution in the near field, considering all the interactions between these surrounding materials. This program, coordinated by Andra, has involved up to eighteen laboratories.After closure of disposal cells and overpack failure, glass alteration is expected to begin in partially saturated conditions due to hydrogen production resulting from carbon steel corrosion in anoxic conditions. Therefore, the glass should at least partially be hydrated by water vapor during thousands of years until complete saturation. A part of the studies aimed to determine the glass behavior in such conditions, the influence of the main parameters (temperature, relative humidity) and consequences of vapor hydration on subsequent radionuclides release by water leaching.In addition, the major part of the work focused on the influence of the environment on glass alteration. The effect of clay pore water on glass alteration rates (initial rate, rate drop and residual rate) was determined and particularly that of pH and magnesium. The nature of steel corrosion products and their interactions with glass alteration were also investigated. All these studies relied on experiments in surface laboratories, in Andra’s underground laboratory, together with natural or archeological analogs and modeling studies.

2006 ◽  
Vol 94 (9-11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael H. Bradbury ◽  
B. Baeyens

The retention characteristics of the bentonite near-field engineered barrier proposed in most of the concepts for the deep geological disposal of high-level waste and spent fuel are an important component in repository performance assessment studies. Montmorillonite generally constitutes 65 to 90 wt.% of the bentonite. Sorption edge measurements have been performed at trace concentrations for the actinides Am(III), Np(V) and Pa(V) on purified and conditioned SWy-1 montmorillonite under anoxic, carbonate free conditions. To the best of the author´s knowledge, this is the first time a sorption data set has been measured for


2003 ◽  
Vol 807 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Wersin ◽  
Lawrence H. Johnson ◽  
Bernhard Schwyn

ABSTRACTRedox conditions were assessed for a spent fuel and high-level waste (SF/HLW) and an intermediate-level waste (ILW) repository. For both cases our analysis indicates permanently reducing conditions after a relatively short oxic period. The canister-bentonite near field in the HLW case displays a high redox buffering capacity because of expected high activity of dissolved and surface-bound Fe(II). This is contrary to the cementitious near field in the ILW case where concentrations of dissolved reduced species are low and redox reactions occur primarily via solid phase transformation processes.For the bentonite-canister near field, redox potentials of about -100 to -300 mV (SHE) are estimated, which is supported by recent kinetic data on U, Tc and Se interaction with reduced iron systems. For the cementitious near field, redox potentials of about -200 to -800 mV are estimated, which reflects the large uncertainties related to this alkaline environment.


Author(s):  
Alain Sneyers ◽  
Bernd Grambow ◽  
Pedro Herna´n ◽  
Hans-Joachim Alheid ◽  
Jean-Franc¸ois Aranyossy ◽  
...  

The Integrated Project NF-PRO (Sixth Framework Programme by the European Commission) investigates key-processes in the near-field of a geological repository for the disposal of high-level vitrified waste and spent fuel. The paper discusses the project scope and content and gives a summary overview of advances made by NF-PRO.


2008 ◽  
Vol 1104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claude Degueldre ◽  
Wolfgang Wiesenack

AbstractA plutonia stabilised zirconia doped with yttria and erbia has been selected as inert matrix fuel (IMF) at PSI. The results of experimental irradiation tests on yttria-stabilised zirconia doped with plutonia and erbia pellets in the Halden research reactor as well as a study of zirconia solubility are presented. Zirconia must be stabilised by yttria to form a solid solution such as MAz(Y,Er)yPuxZr1-yO2-ζ where minor actinides (MA) oxides are also soluble. (Er,Y,Pu,Zr)O2-ζ (with Pu containing 5% Am) was successfully prepared at PSI and irradiated in the Halden reactor. Emphasis is given on the zirconia-IMF properties under in-pile irradiation, on the fuel material centre temperatures and on the fission gas release. The retention of fission products in zirconia may be stronger at similar temperature, compared to UO2. The outstanding behaviour of plutonia-zirconia inert matrix fuel is compared to the classical (U,Pu)O2 fuels. The properties of the spent fuel pellets are presented focusing on the once through strategy. For this strategy, low solubility of the inert matrix is required for geological disposal. This parameter was studied in detail for a range of solutions corresponding to groundwater under near field conditions. Under these conditions the IMF solubility is about 109 times smaller than glass, several orders of magnitude lower than UO2 in oxidising conditions (Yucca Mountain) and comparable in reducing conditions, which makes the zirconia material very attractive for deep geological disposal. The behaviour of plutonia-zirconia inert matrix fuel is discussed within a burn and bury strategy.


1997 ◽  
Vol 506 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.F. McGinnes ◽  
J. W. Schneider

ABSTRACTThe direct disposal of spent fuel is one of the options considered in the Swiss high level waste management program. One of the important questions, within this program, is the heat generation from high-burnup UO2and MOX spent fuels. Depending on the repository boundary conditions (e.g. ambient temperatures at depth, thermal properties of the host rock etc.), on the maximum temperatures allowed in the near field and on the heat output of the fuel, it may not always be possible to completely fill the conceptual waste canister. The aim of this paper is to address the potential loading of spent fuel into canisters for different possible repository heat loading restrictions


2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (3) ◽  
pp. 13-18
Author(s):  
Dimitar Antonov ◽  
Madlena Tsvetkova ◽  
Doncho Karastanev

In Bulgaria, from the preliminary analyses performed for site selection of deep geological disposal of high-level waste (HLW) and spent fuel (SF), it was concluded that the most promising host rocks are the argillaceous sediments of the Sumer Formation (Lower Cretaceous), situated in the Western Fore-Balkan Mts. The present paper aims to compare the transport of three major radionuclides from a hypothetical radioactive waste disposal facility, which incorporates an engineering barrier of bentonite into the argillaceous (marl) medium. The simulations were performed by using HYDRUS-1D computer programme. The results are used for a preliminary estimation of argillaceous sediments as a host rock for geological disposal of HLW.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vanessa Montoya ◽  
Orlando Silva ◽  
Emilie Coene ◽  
Jorge Molinero ◽  
Renchao Lu ◽  
...  

<p>In August 2015, the German government approved the national programme for the responsible and safe management of spent nuclear fuel (SNF) and radioactive waste proposed by the Federal Ministry for the Environment, Nature Conservation, Building and Reactor Safety (BMU). The assumption is that about ~ 1 100 storage casks (10 500 tons of heavy metal) in the form of spent fuel assemblies will be generated in nuclear power plants and will have to be disposed. However, a decision on the disposal concept for high-level waste is pending and an appropriate solution has to be developed with a balance in multiple aspects. All potential types of host rocks, clay and salt stones as well as crystalline formations are under consideration. In the decision process, evaluation of the risk of different waste management options and scenarios play an enormous role in the discussion. Coupled physical and chemical processes taking place within the engineered barrier system of a repository for high-level radioactive waste will define the radionuclide mobility/retention and the possible radiological impact. The objective of this work is to assess coupled processes occurring in the near-field of a generic repository for spent nuclear fuel in a high saline clay host rock, integrating complex geochemical processes at centimetre-scale. The scenario considers that radionuclides can be released during a period of thousands of years after full saturation of the bentonite barrier and the thermal phase.</p><p>Transport parameters and the discretization of the system, are implemented in a 2D axisymmetric geometry. The multi-barrier system is emplaced in clay and a solubility limited source term for the selected radionuclides is assumed. Kinetics and chemical equilibria reactions are simulated using parameters obtained from experiments. Additionally, porosity changes due to mineral precipitation/dissolution and feedback on the effective diffusion coefficient are taken into account. Protonation/deprotonation, ion exchange reactions and radionuclide inner-sphere sorption is considered.</p><p>Numerical simulations show, that, when the canister corrosion starts, the redox potential decreases, magnetite precipitates and H<sub>2</sub> is formed. Furthermore, the aqueous concentration of Fe(II) increases due to the presence of magnetite. By considering binding to montmorillonite via ion exchange reactions, the bentonite acts as a sink for Fe(II). Additionally, magnetite forms a chemical barrier offering significant sorption capacity for many radionuclides. Finally, a decrease of porosity in the bentonite/canister interface leads to a further deceleration of radionuclide migration. Due to the complexity of reactive transport processes in saline environments, benchmarking of reactive transport models (RTM) is important also to build confidence in those modelling approaches. Development of RTM benchmark procedures is part of the iCROSS project (Integrity of nuclear waste repository systems - Cross-scale system understanding and analysis) funded by both the Helmholtz Association and the Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF).</p><p> </p>


2006 ◽  
Vol 94 (9-11) ◽  
Author(s):  
Laurent de Windt ◽  
H. Schneider ◽  
C. Ferry ◽  
H. Catalette ◽  
V. Lagneau ◽  
...  

A physico-chemical model developed for spent fuel alteration was integrated in a global reactive transport model of a spent fuel disposal system, considering both decaying and stable isotopes, corroded steel canisters, bentonite backfills and a clayey host-rock. Fuel evolution took into account radiolytic-enhanced corrosion and long-term solubility-controlled dissolution as well as instantaneous release fractions. The calculations show that spent-fuel dissolution has no significant alteration effect on the near-field components except an oxidizing plume in the vicinity of the waste packages. The dissolved uranyl species, partly precipitate as schoepite on the fuel pellets, and partly diffuse in the near-field where magnetite and pyrite reduce U(VI) to yield uraninite precipitation. Under disposal conditions, preliminary calculations indicate that steel corrosion may generate sufficient dissolved hydrogen as to react with radiolytic oxidants and inhibit fuel dissolution. The formation of a protective schoepite layer could also reduce the alteration of fuel pellets. Radionuclides migration (Am, Cs, I) in the near-field is discussed in a second stage discriminating between sorption, precipitation and radioactive decay processes. The migration of Cs is translated in terms of cumulative activity profiles useful for integrated performance assessment.


1992 ◽  
Vol 294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrik Sellin ◽  
Nils Kjellbert

ABSTRACTThe near-field radionuclide migration code Tullgarn has been developed for performance assessment purposes. As a part of the PROPER-code package it has been successfully applied in the SKB 91 safety analysis.The features and processes included in the code are:- Radioactive chain decay- Different canister failure mechanisms (copper corrosion from sulphide attack, steel corrosion, internal overpressure and initially defective canisters) - Spent fuel dissolution. The model is based on the assumption that the dissolution rate is proportional to the α-dose rate- Transport calculations are done with a resistance-network model. Tullgarn calculates the stationary release of radionuclides from a defect in the canister through the buffer and out into a fracture in the rock or up to the damaged zone under the deposition tunnel.Tullgarn can be used as a stand-alone model for near-field release calculations or as a submodel in an integrated assessment. In the SKB 91 analysis, Tullgarn gave the source term to the far-field model.


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