Estimation of Effective Diffusivity in Compacted Ben Tonite

1994 ◽  
Vol 353 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Kato ◽  
M. Muroi ◽  
N. Yamada ◽  
H. Ishida ◽  
H. Sato

AbstractEffective diffusivities of radioactive nuclides in compacted bentonite were calculated theoretically by using an electric double layer theory. Comparison between calculated diffusivities and measured ones show good agreements.The effective diffusivity is dominated by pore structure and pore diffusivity Dp. The pore structure can be characterized by effective porosity ε eff, constrictivity δ, and tortuosity Γ. The δ was assumed to be unity. The ε eff and the Γ were determined experimentally. The Dp was estimated by means of the electric double layer theory. In the estimation, smectite interlayer was assumed the space between parallel plane sheets of smectite crystal lattice.Diffusion experiments were carried out by using Cs+ for monovalent cation, C1- and Tc04- for monovalent anion, and tritiated water for neutral molecule. The measured and calculated effective diffusivities in different densities showed the same tendency of cation > neutral > anion. The dry density of bentonite became higher, the discrepancy between the estimated and the measured diffusivities became larger. The calculation was limited by the applicability of the electric double layer theory in the near surface region of smectite.

1996 ◽  
Vol 465 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Johansson ◽  
J. Byegård ◽  
G. Skarnemark ◽  
M. Skålberg

ABSTRACTStatic through-diffusion experiments were performed to study the diffusion of alkali- and alkaline earth-metals in fine-grained granite and medium-grained Äspö-diorite. Tritiated water was used as an inert reference tracer. Radionuclides of the alkali- and alkaline earth-metals (mono- and divalent elements which are not influenced by hydrolysis in the pH-range studied) were used as tracers, i.e. 22Na+, 45Ca2+ and Sr The effective diffusivity and the rock capacity factor were calculated by fitting the breakthrough curve to the one-dimensional solution of the diffusion equation. Sorption coefficients, Kd, that were derived from the rock capacity factor (diffusion experiments) were compared with Kd determined in batch experiments using crushed material of different size fractions.The results show that the tracers were retarded in the same order as was expected from the measured batch Kd. Furthermore, the largest size fraction was the most representative when comparing batch Kd with Kd evaluated from the diffusion experiments. The observed effective diffusivities tended to decrease with increasing cell lengths, indicating that the “transport” porosity decreases with increasing sample lengths used in the diffusion experiments.


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