Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1
In Canada nepheline syenite glass containing 1100 Ci
mixed fission products has been buried in a swamp, below
the water table, since 1960. Careful studies of leaching, by
sampling of the soil and ground water downstream from
the disposal, have shown that fusion products equivalent to
the dissolving of 10^ ^10 g of glass per cm^2 per day are being
removed from the disposal. Less than 1 mCi has been dis-
solved in ten years from 1100 Ci. This suggests that burial
of active glass in dry soil, or even disposal into a big body
of water, would be acceptable for quite large quantities of
wastes.
Calcination Several methods have been developed for
evaporation and subsequent calcination of wastes. Oxides
are often soluble in water, so materials are usually added that
will bind the oxides into soluble complexes. The calcination
process is done in a heated steel container, a fluidized bed or
a spray calciner.
The pot calciner is essentially an expendable piece of
steel pipe heated in an electric furnace. The waste, mixed
with flass-forming fluxes such as borax or lead oxide, is
heated to about 9000C.
The spray calciner is a heated steel cylinder with a
nozzle at the top through which the waste is sprayed. At a
temperature of 875C a fine powder is produced which must
be stored in a dry place as it is leachable by water.
It is characteristic of all waste fixation methods involv-
ing evaporation, sintering and fusion that elaborate off-gas
treatment systems are required to prevent environmental
contamination by dust and volatile radionuclides. The con-
centrating equipment itself is essentially simple and often
not expensive to build, but the glass purification plant is
always sophisticated, complex and expensive. However, it is
also very effective.
Rock Fracturing The oil industry has developed methods
for creating fissures in rock in order to encourage movement

of oil to gas through a formation towards a well. This pro-
cess has been adapted to disposal of medium-level wastes.
A horizontally bedded formation—shale has been used
up to now—is drilled to several thousand feet. A high pres-
sure jet of sand and water cuts through the well casing and
penetrates between the strata near the bottom of the hole. The
well is then sealed and water forced down under very high
pressure, splitting the rock between the bedding planes. The
water is followed up by the waste, mixed with cement, sugar
and other additives. The mixture spreads out in a thin hori-
zontal sheet, which solidifies after several hours. Typically
the sheet is about a half inch thick.
The method has been used for disposal of a very large
volume of waste at Oak Ridge, Tennessee. The equipment,
including large bins for ingredients of the cement mix,
mixing apparatus, a drilling rig and a very powerful pump is
expensive, but the method is suitable for large-scale opera-
tion because successive sheets can be injected at intervals of
a few feet through the depth of the bedded rock formation.
Salt Mines The hazard that must be met by most
radioactive waste management systems is contamination of
public waters leading directly or indirectly to intake of radio-
nuclides by man. An ideal situation for disposal would there-
fore be one where public access was impossible and contact
with water incredible. The nearest approach to these condi-
tions is found in a deep salt mine. The presence of the salt
guarantees that water has been absent for millions of years,
and geological study can produce assurance that water is not
rapidly penetrating into the salt bed. The excavated galleries
of salt mines are large and stable tunnels, suitable for storage
and roomy enough for safe work with active loads.
Major disposals of “solidified” waste are being made
in a salt mine in Kansas, where detailed investigation has
shown that eventually the creep characteristics of the salt
will seal the disposal sites of heat-producing wastes. Work

638 MANAGEMENT OF RADIOACTIVE WASTES


LIME

NEPHELINE
SYENITE

FISSION
PRODUCT
SOLUTION

PELLET-
IZER

MIXER

DRYING
FURNACE
900°C

MELTING
FURNACE
1350°C

FISSION
PRODUCTS
IN GLASS

Ru & Cs
ADSORBERS

NITRIC ACID
RECOMBINER

CAUSTIC
SCRUBBER

EXHAUST
GASES

FIGURE 8 Fixation of fission products in glass. Fission product solution is added to pelletized nepheline syenite  lime,
dried and melted at 1350C.

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