Evaluation of the Retention Capability of Backfill Materials in the Presence of Cement Waste Form

1992 ◽  
Vol 294 ◽  
Author(s):  
N.K. Ghattas ◽  
K.A.El Adham ◽  
S.B. Eskander ◽  
N.S. Mahmoud

ABSTRACTThe present study focused on the retention capability of the different local backfill materials and on horizontal and vertical radionuclide migration in simulated repository conditions of a saturated static humid environment, using single or combined components of the near-field. The results obtained from semi-field experiment show that no migration of cesium radionuclide was detected outside the backfill zone within the time interval of the experiment. This reflects the possible efficiency, of the backfill materials used, for the confinement of radioactivity to the disposal site. On the other hand laboratory experiments show the effect of simulated repository condition on the sorption and desorption properties of backfill materials. It is clear from the results obtained that the presence of cement waste forms in equilibrium with underground water affect the retention capability of the backfill materials. The motivation of the work was a desire to provide a basis for minimizing radioactive waste processing by improving nonradioactive engineering barriers.

2003 ◽  
Vol 807 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. De Windt ◽  
H. Catalette ◽  
J. M. Gras

ABSTRACTThe reactive transport model HYTEC was used to simulate the migration over 100,000 years of cesium, americium and uranium released from spent fuel packages in the near-field components of an underground stiff clay disposal site. A global equilibrium thermodynamic approach including kinetic control of the spent fuel pellets was used with instantaneous release fractions and congruent dissolutions of the rim and the core zones. A failure scenario of the waste package after 10,000 years was considered with magnetite as the main corrosion product. The retention properties of magnetite and the different effects of bentonite and cementitious backfill materials were specifically analysed.


Author(s):  
Bernhard Kienzler ◽  
Peter Vejmelka ◽  
Volker Metz

Abstract The amount of mobile radionuclides is controlled by the geochemical isolation potential of the repository. Many investigations are available in order to determine the maximal radionuclide concentrations released from different waste forms of specific disposal strategies for disposal in rock salt formations. These investigations result in reaction (dissolution) rates, maximum concentrations, and sorption coefficients. The experimental data have to be applied to various disposal strategies. The case studies presented in this communication cover the selection, the volumes, and the composition of backfill materials used as sorbents for radionuclides. As an example, for brown coal fly ash (BFA) - Q-brine systems, sorption coefficients were measured as well as solublilities of several actinides and other long-lived radionuclides. Dissolved CO32− was buffered to negligible concentration by the presence of high amount of Mg in solution. In the sorption experiments Pu, Th, Np, and U concentrations close or below detection limit were obtained. Concentrations in the same ranges are computed by means of geochemical modeling, if precipitation of “simple” tetravalent hydroxides (An(OH)4(am) phases) is assumed. In the case of U in a Portland cement dominated geochemical environment, measured U(VI) concentration corresponds to the solubility of hexavalent solids, such as Na2U2O7. A similar behavior of U was observed in high-level waste glass experiments. Experiments investigating sorption behavior of corroded cement showed that in the case of application of a sufficient large inventory of actinides, measured concentrations were found to be independent of the inventory. In this case, measured concentrations were controlled by solid phases. If smaller actinide inventories were applied, resulting concentrations were found to be below concentrations constrained by well-known solids. Here, a more or less pronounced sorption of the radioactive elements was observed. The radionuclide concentrations determined in the BFA “sorption” experiments are found to be close to the detection limits. For this reason, it is not possible to extrapolate the radionuclide behavior to lower concentrations. We cannot distinguish, if sorption or precipitation controls measured radionuclide concentrations. However, in the presence of reducing materials such as BFA, solubilities of tetravalent actinides and of Tc(IV) represent a realistic estimation of the maximal element concentrations needed in performance assessment studies. The concentrations of these redox sensitive elements are controlled by precipitation of An(OH)4(am) phases for disposal concepts considered in German salt formations. Under this assumption, quantities such as solid-solution ratios used in (sorption) experiments do not affect the mobilization of the radionuclides. Additional conclusions can be drawn from comparison of the findings for the redox sensitive elements in the BFA / portland cement brine systems: We can assume that expected actinide and technetium concentrations in the near-field of radioactive wastes are affected by the total inventory of radionuclides in the disposal room. Sorption will be relevant, if the total dissolved radionuclide concentration remains below the maximal solubility defined by the solid radionuclide phase which is stable in the geochemical environment. In contrast to the portland cement system, the relevant radionuclide phase are most probably tetravalent hydroxides in the BFA systems. These conclusions are of high importance to performance assessment for the radioactive waste repository systems, because they restrict the applicability of sorption models in the near field of the waste.


2013 ◽  
Vol 59 (No. 1) ◽  
pp. 16-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Müller ◽  
P. Hrabě

We evaluated a degree of the machine part abrasive wear with secondary focus on their hardness. The paper states laboratory results of overlay systems from their wear resistance point of view. Laboratory experiments were carried out by two-body abrasion on bonded abrasive of a P120 granularity. The results proved an increased abrasive wear resistance of martensitic, ledeburitic and stellitic overlays against eleven different original products. The overlay UTP Ledurit 60 reached the optimum values. The GD-OES (Glow Discharge Optical Emission Spectroscopy) method proved the different chemical composition of the overlay from the stated chemical composition of the overlaying electrode.    


Nukleonika ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 60 (3) ◽  
pp. 557-563 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wioleta Olszewska ◽  
Agnieszka Miśkiewicz ◽  
Grażyna Zakrzewska-Kołtuniewicz ◽  
Leszek Lankof ◽  
Leszek Pająk

Abstract Safety of radioactive waste repositories operation is associated with a multibarrier system designed and constructed to isolate and contain the waste from the biosphere. Each of radioactive waste repositories is equipped with system of barriers, which reduces the possibility of release of radionuclides from the storage site. Safety systems may differ from each other depending on the type of repository. They consist of the natural geological barrier provided by host rocks of the repository and its surroundings, and an engineered barrier system (EBS). The EBS may itself comprise a variety of sub-systems or components, such as waste forms, canisters, buffers, backfills, seals and plugs. The EBS plays a major role in providing the required disposal system performance. It is assumed that the metal canisters and system of barriers adequately isolate waste from the biosphere. The evaluation of the multibarrier system is carried out after detailed tests to determine its parameters, and after analysis including mathematical modeling of migration of contaminants. To provide an assurance of safety of radioactive waste repository multibarrier system, detailed long term safety assessments are developed. Usually they comprise modeling of EBS stability, corrosion rate and radionuclide migration in near field in geosphere and biosphere. The principal goal of radionuclide migration modeling is assessment of the radionuclides release paths and rate from the repository, radionuclides concentration in geosphere in time and human exposure to ionizing radiation


2010 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 243-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. D. Blech ◽  
M. M. Leibfritz ◽  
R. Hellinger ◽  
D. Geier ◽  
F. A. Maier ◽  
...  

Abstract. A spherical near-field antenna measurement facility employing a time domain hardware gating technique is presented. On-off keyed sinusoidal impulses are used as stimuli requiring wideband antennas with a bandwidth in excess of 400 MHz. The received signal is evaluated in the time interval after reaching the steady state and before multipath components arising in the non-ideal anechoic chamber distort the signal. An application specific pulse generator synthesizing sinusoidal impulses with a sub-nanosecond settling time and a low-cost equivalent time (ET) sampling receiver developed and optimized for this particular purpose are described. Measurement results of typical ultra-wideband (UWB) antennas show a significant improvement of the measured antenna pattern compared to conventional techniques.


2006 ◽  
Vol 932 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elie Valcke ◽  
Mireille Gysemans ◽  
Hugo Moors ◽  
Pierre Van Iseghem ◽  
Nicole Godon ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTIn the frame of an integrated in situ test on the alteration of the SON68 reference glass in realistic disposal conditions, the leaching of Np, Pu, and Am from α-doped SON68 glass samples and their migration in three clay-based backfill materials at high density was measured. The addition of powdered glass frit to a Ca-bentonite decreased the glass alteration by two orders of magnitude, and resulted in a concomitant decrease of the radionuclide leaching in comparison with dried Boom Clay, which is the more agressive backfill. All actinides were selectively retained in the alteration layer, but the retention degree was lower for Np than for Pu and Am. All backfill materials proved to be efficient barriers against radionuclide migration. For nearly all radionuclides and backfill materials, the migration profile showed a contribution of colloidal transport.


2012 ◽  
Vol 1475 ◽  
Author(s):  
Noelia R. Sileo ◽  
Néstor O. Fuentes

ABSTRACTDevelopment of numerical tools for performance assessment studies of radioactive waste disposal facilities, must address the management of the wide-ranging uncertainties associated with the long-term behaviour of these complex systems. Different approaches and assumptions are made in order to identify and describe relationships between the disposal system and its environment. They take into account, among other factors, the uncertainties associated with temporal evolution of the system within a proposed scenario; the landscape changes arising from future human actions, climate and geological events and processes; the relationships between components of the disposal system and its immediate environment; the behaviour and characteristics of radionuclides within the system and their role in contributing to radiation exposure. In all cases, the different scenario-based models are typically used to determine the radiological significance of potential future discharges from waste disposal facilities. However, it is important to keep always in mind that in any specific case, the purpose of developing and/or applying a model may vary from a simple calculation (e.g. to support concept development) to detailed site-specific performance assessment in support of a disposal license application. The assumptions and modelling simplifications that are appropriate to one type of calculation may not be so easily justified in different circumstances. In order to develop the capability of modelling different long-term scenarios for a generic disposal site for low and intermediate level radioactive wastes, implementation of models of both the near-field/geosphere and biosphere were performed using general approaches for geosphere-biosphere interface, with sub-models for the whole system.


MRS Bulletin ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 19 (12) ◽  
pp. 20-23 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Grambow

Borosilicate glass is the principal solid matrix for immobilizing 99% of the highly radioactive, heat-generating nuclides extracted by reprocessing spent nuclear fuel. Production of the glass has begun in several countries, yet no final disposal site is available anywhere in the world. This is due partly to political issues and partly to the difficulties of credibly demonstrating that nuclear waste can be safely isolated in deep underground repositories for hundreds of generations. The release of hazardous quantities of radionuclides from a repository is prevented by a multiple barrier containment system, including a central engineered system consisting of the canistered glass, an overpack, and backfill materials. If the glass could retain all radionuclides upon contact with groundwater, it would not be necessary to demonstrate that geological isolation is safe. However, the glass corrodes slowly in water and humid air, and inevitably, certain quantities of radionuclides are mobilized. The glass is not inherently corrosion-resistant, but rather depends on the waste package and on surrounding geochemical and hydrological constraints. The difficulty is predicting the release/retention of radionuclides for long time periods while considering the interactions with other engineered and natural barriers.


2016 ◽  
Vol 254 ◽  
pp. 207-211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erika Popa ◽  
Liviu Pascu ◽  
Ana Socalici ◽  
Marius Ardelean

The paper relates laboratory experiments in order to obtain a composite material used for brake shoe manufacture. Regarding the testing materials were processed 38 samples. The percentage and composition of materials are: 15-45% novolac, 1,5-10% hexametyltetramin, 0-8% sulfur, 0-15% carbon fiber, 0-20% graphite, 0-25% aluminum, 15-28% brass and 0-40% rubber. The evolution of tribological and temperature parameters were analyzed in the contact zone tribological testing disk - split pin method. The composite material has the role to replace the classic material (cast iron) used in brake shoes composition in order to reduce the noise caused by rolling stock.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document