ACADs (08-006) Covered Keywords Transuranic, radioactive waste, radwaste, waste regulations. Description Supporting Material 3.3.1.63.3.2.4.43.3.5.6.63.3.5.6.74.9.64.16.6.64.16.6.7.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Garfield graphics are copyrighted and reproduced with kind permission of PAWS Inc. All rights reserved Nuclear Power – Safety (Part 1)
Advertisements

1 Transuranic Waste Processing Center Karen Deacon, Deputy Federal Project Director Oak Ridge Office of Environmental Management.
Waste Classification NUCP U.S. Waste Classifications 2 NCRP Report No. 139, 2002 NCRP Report No. 139, Risk-Based Classification of Radioactive.
Uncertainties in Nuclear and Hazardous Waste Cleanup Max S. Power Washington Department of Ecology Nuclear Waste Program April 1, 2003.
1 Status of DOE Cleanup in Idaho Presentation to the “LINE Commission” By Rick Provencher Manager, DOE Idaho Operations Office April 7, 2012 Idaho Falls,
Progress on Cleanup of the INL Site for the INL Retired Employees Association Bob Iotti, President and CEO September 2008.
Hazardous Waste means wastes {solid, liquid or containerized gas}which because of its quantity, concentration, or physical, chemical or infectious characteristics.
Disposal of Non-hazardous, Hazardous and Nuclear Waste.
U.S. DOE Preparation for Shipping of Transuranic Radioactive Waste Cross Country – The Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) O.W. “Lynn” Eaton, Manager External.
Underground Facilities Stub 2 Stub 2a,3 ‘H’ Area JIF Area The underground research facilities have evolved since dark matter studies began at Boulby. There.
ACADs (08-006) Covered Keywords Byproduct material, source material, controller, custodian, ORM, sealed source, exempt source, special nuclear material.
The Harnessed Atom Lesson Seven Waste from Nuclear Power Plants.
Chapter 16 Nuclear Energy.
Decommissioning of Nuclear Power Plants Case Study: Dounreay Nuclear Facility Case Study: Dounreay Nuclear Facility Samuel Chapman Heriot-Watt University.
Yucca Mountain Deep Repository Michael Hynd. Yucca Mountain Repository Proposed Deep Geological Repository Storage facility for spent fuel and high-level.
School for drafting regulations Nuclear Safety Decommissioning Vienna, 2-7 December 2012 Tea Bilic Zabric.
Nucular Waste A Technical Analysis Ian Baird 5/12/08.
1 Waste Management David Nickless Environmental Management Los Alamos Field Office March 3, 2015.
The Belt of Stability. But the sources may not be what you’re expecting…
NUCLEAR ENERGY What is it? David J. Diamond Energy Sciences & Technology Department February 2009.
Safe and secure management of sealed radioactive sources in Ghana: status of the borehole disposal project G. Emi-Reynolds, E.T. Glover, M. Nyarku*, P.
Radioactive waste and risk to health L.O: explain how time and source is a factor in disposing of waste Define the risk of radiation doses to health.
NRC Decommissioning Activities for the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station Bruce A. Watson, CHP Chief, Reactor Decommissioning Branch Division of Decommissioning,
Radioactive Materials Management NUCP2311. Low Level and High Waste Treatment Options Low level – diluted – dispersed – If short T 1/2 can let decay High.
Bapetco NORM Control Case Study IDENTIFY ASSESS CONTROL & RECOVERY.
Waste sampling and verification
Remote-Handled Transuranic Waste Disposition Discussion Meeting of the National Governors’ Association April 12, 2001 U. S. Department of Energy.
RADIOACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT
Nuclear Power Discussion March 25, 2009 Joint meeting of the Legislative Energy Commission; the House Energy Finance & Policy Division; and the Senate.
Authorization and Inspection of Cyclotron Facilities Authorization for the Decommissioning of the Facility.
Tom Enyeart Senior Nuclear Engineer NNSA Nevada Site Office Community Environmental Monitoring Program Workshop July 25, 2011 Radiation Sources and Isotopes.
Nuclear Energy and Nuclear Waste The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly…
Handling of Future Human Actions in the safety assessment SR-Site Eva Andersson.
The environment is everything that isn’t me. Albert Einstein Albert Einstein.
TM Technical Meeting on the Disposal of Intermediate Level Waste
Transportation of Radioactive Material in the United States Earl P. Easton.
1 U.S. Department of Energy Carlsbad Field Office TRU Sites and Transportation Division James Mason Institutional Affairs Manager Carlsbad.
1 LICENSING A U.S. GEOLOGICAL REPOSITORY WILLIAM BORCHARDT Executive Director for Operations U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Status of Commercial Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Facilities.
Nuclear Waste. What is Nuclear Waste? Waste that results from the use of radioactive materials -Nuclear energy -Nuclear weapons -Hospitals, Universities,
MethodAdvantageDisadvantage Landfills: Waste is buried in the ground  rotting material produces methane gas which cold be collected  filled ground.
MODULE “PREPARING AND MANAGEMENT OF DOCUMENTATION” SAFE DECOMMISSIONING OF NUCLEAR POWER PLANTS Project BG/04/B/F/PP , Programme “Leonardo da Vinci”
The Nuclear Fuel Cycle 1. NUCLEAR FUEL Nuclear fuel is the energy source of nuclear reactors and an essential element of the reactor core. The heat energy.
Nuclear Energy.
Waste Isolation Pilot Plant Program Status National Governors’ Association Meeting May 17, 2002 Alton D. Harris, III.
Phase I Decommissioning Project Update West Valley Demonstration Project Presented by: Bryan Bower, Department of Energy November 14, 2012.
Ch. 16 Environmental Science.  All matter is made of atoms  Atoms have Proton Electron Neutrons Nucleus contains protons and neutrons has most of the.
Frank Marcinowski Deputy Assistant Secretary for Regulatory Compliance Office of Environmental Management U.S. Department of Energy Environmental Management.
Nuclear Waste. High /Low Level Waste Low level waste: generated at hospitals, educational facilities, nuclear power plants and industry. Examples: radio-chemicals,
MethodAdvantageDisadvantage Landfills: Waste is buried in the ground  rotting material produces methane gas which cold be collected  filled ground.
Chapter 12 Nuclear Energy
Status of Low-Level Radioactive Waste (LLRW) Compacts and Update on Commercial LLRW Disposal Facilities.
Safety-related Issues for the Disposal of Intermediate Level Waste (ILW) Dr. Jürgen Wollrath Federal Office for Radiation Protection (BfS) Department Safety.
Waste and site related issues Fredrik Vahlund SKB.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Presenter Name School of Drafting Regulations for Borehole Disposal of DSRS 2016 Vienna, Austria Containment and.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Presenter Name School of Drafting Regulations for Borehole Disposal of DSRS 2016 Vienna, Austria Borehole Sealing.
International Atomic Energy Agency Reprocessing, Waste Treatment and Disposal Management of Spent Nuclear Fuel Seminar on Nuclear Science and Technology.
IAEA International Atomic Energy Agency Presenter Name School of Drafting Regulations for Borehole Disposal of DSRS 2016 Vienna, Austria Waste Acceptance.
Radioactive Materials Licensing Authorizing licenses for: Low-level radioactive waste disposal By-product material disposal Public water system NORM waste.
What About Nuclear Waste?
BASIC PROFESSIONAL TRAINING COURSE Module XIX Waste management Case Studies Version 1.0, May 2015 This material was prepared by the IAEA and.
The Off-Site Source Recovery Program Capabilities in Recovering Sealed Sources – CTMA, May 23-26, 2017 James (Jim) Matzke.
Shipping to WIPP Travis R. Myers 5/24/17 GV ppt.
The Path Forward for WIPP: A State and Local Perspective
Management of Radioactive Waste
Nuclear Waste.
Actions After Finding an Orphan Radioactive Source
Mary Lou Dunzik-Gougar, PhD ANS Teachers’ Workshop 2013
Transportation of Radwaste from Exelon Sites Mark Ross – Exelon Corporate Manager Radwaste Date: 10/07/2016.
Northeast High-Level Radioactive Waste Transportation Task Force
Presentation transcript:

ACADs (08-006) Covered Keywords Transuranic, radioactive waste, radwaste, waste regulations. Description Supporting Material Radioactive Management and Disposal NUCP 2311 contributions from : John Poston (Texas A&M University) Ashley Bernardi (Purdue University) And

Transuranics What is a Transuranic? Part of the actinide series. Elements with atomic numbers >92 Many radionuclides have long half-lives. Many radionuclides are alpha-emitters. 2

Definition of TRU Waste “Radwaste that is not classified as HLW but contains an activity of more than 100 nCi/g from alph-emitting TRU isotopes with half-lives greater than 20 years.” - Radioactive Waste Management, Saling & Fentiman, p Definition varies internationally and with time. Activity can range from 0.3 to 1000 nCi/g of waste.

Practices Use to Treat and Immobilize Transuranic Wastes 4

5 X

Transuranic Waste (prior to 1970) TRU waste was not managed separately from LLW. TRU and LLW waste were combined into a single waste form. Disposed of in shallow burial trenches. 6

Transuranic Waste (after 1970) US adopted retrievable storage approach. Storage in metal drums or boxes. Either above- or below-grade, soil-covered storage pads. Some storage in buildings. TRU waste is managed at 20-21sites in the DOE complex. There are 12 sites at which the TRU waste from weapons production is managed. Most TRU waste is located at only 6 sites. 7

Transuranic Waste Storage and Disposal Sites (Resulting from Nuclear Weapons Production) 8

9

Transuranic Waste Further categorized by the external dose rate. Contact-handled TRU waste – dose rates less than 200 mrem/h (CHTRU). Remote-handled TRU waste – dose rates exceeding 200 mrem/h (RHTRU). 10

Transuranic Waste  Typical CHTRU contains the long-lived actinides which are alpha-emitters, e.g., Pu- 239, -239, -240, -241, Am-241 and Cm-244.  Typical RHTRU contains fission products, activation products and their resulting daughter radionuclides, e.g., Sr-90, Y-90, Cs- 137, Ba-137, Co-60, Eu-152, -154,  Why are these TRU ???? 11

Transuranic Waste May also contain hazardous substances subject to regulation under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) – called “mixed TRU waste.” May contain materials subject to the Toxic Substances Control Act such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) – called “PCB-TRU waste.” 12

Sources of TRU Wastes Fuel reprocessing. Waste immobilization facilities. Fuel fabrication of recycle Pu. Weapons material production. Decommissioning of nuclear facilities. 13

Transuranic Waste Radioactivity Categorized by Half-Life (Stored Waste Only) 14

Estimates of Pu-239 Content About 88 kg of Pu-239 is assumed to be in the buried TRU waste. About 2,600 kg of Pu-239 is assumed to be in the stored TRU waste. Activity of stored Pu-239 is estimated to be 160,000 curies. 15

WIPP – Deep Geologic Disposal 16

What is WIPP? First geological repository for permanent disposal of transuranic radioactive wastes and transuranic mixed wastes. Department of Energy Facility. Plant opened March 26, From:

What does WIPP do? Deep disposal site for defense-generated transuranic waste from across the nation. WIPP can store a max of 6.2 million cubic feet of transuranic waste. Currently, WIPP has 2.32 million cubic feet of waste. In next 35 years 3.7 million cubic feet if waste will be generated. 18

Types of Transuranic Waste Contact-handled transuranic waste (CHTRU) – 97% of the volume currently at WIPP. – Packed in 55-gallon metal drums or boxes. – Primarily emits alpha particles. Remote-handled transuranic waste (RHTRU) – Emits more radiation than CHTRU. – Handled and transported in shielded casks. – Primarily emits gamma radiation. 19

Why Salt? Deposits are geologically stable. Presence shows absence of free-flowing water. Salt is easy to “mine.” Formations will eventually fill in mined areas and seal radioactive waste from the environment. Rock salt heals its own fractures because of plastic quality. 20

Waste Isolation Pilot Project Authorized by Congress in 1979 Located in southeast New Mexico Site is a salt bed about 2000 feet thick Serves as an underground laboratory Site for permanent isolation or TRU wastes 21

WIPP Timeline 1955Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) asked National Academy of Sciences (NAS) to study permanent disposal methods for radioactive wastes from nuclear weapons produced in the US. 1957NAS study suggested that AEC bury TRU or high level waste in geologic formations (ie salt beds or salt domes). 1972Original location in Lyons, Kansas was withdrawn due to “drilling concerns.” Mid 1970’sThe WIPP site near Carlsbad, New Mexico was selected. 1979Congress authorized and funded the construction of WIPP. 1981The first exploratory shaft was drilled. 1983The go-ahead was given for full construction US Department of Energy assumed control of WIPP. 1992The “WIPP Land Withdrawal Act” passed in congress. 1999WIPP received first shipment of TRU waste. 22

Who is in charge WIPP? In 1993, the Carlsbad Area Office (CAO) was created by the DOE to head transuranic program. – Program includes waste-generating sites and national labs Westinghouse is the WIPP programs managing and operating contractor. Sandia National Laboratories is the programs lead technical contractor. 23

WIPP Facility Features For the first 5 years, used as a laboratory (i.e., the pilot phase). All waste will be retrievable during this time. Operations will be limited to handling fixed amounts of CHTRU and RHTRU. Nominal operating life of 25 years Accommodate >14,000 m 3 /y of CHTRU Accommodate >280 m 3 /y of RHTRU Design capacity – 1.78 x 10 5 m 3 of CHTRU Design capacity – 5100 m 3 of RHTRU 24

WIPP Facility Features Requires several shafts. Requires the construction of a number of rooms. Each room is 13 ft. high, 33 ft. wide, and 300 ft. long. Support is provided by 100 ft. thick columns. Emplaced waste will be back-filled with salt. 25

Where is WIPP? Chihuahuan Desert, New Mexico 26 From:

Waste Isolation Pilot Plant

Transuranic Waste Repository at Carlsbad, NM

29

Typical TRU Container Most waste stored in 55- gallon drums. Waste is “bagged” in polyethylene. Barrel has polyethylene liner. Waste stored in stacks inside and outside. 30

Typical TRU Container Effort underway to recover drums from storage. Assumed that 1% of the drums will have “failed”. Industrial and radiological safety challenge. 31

Specialized Routes to WIPP 32 From:

33 A truck carries three TRUPACT-II containers to the WIPP site pictured in the distance. This is the method by which transuranic waste is shipped to the WIPP. Waste shipments to the WIPP began on March 26, 1999.

Waste Acceptance Criteria Container properties Radiological properties Physical properties Chemical properties Gas generation properties Data package contents (documentation) - See DOE/WIPP-069 (1999) for details. 34

Waste to WIPP All waste shipped to WIPP must be characterized before shipment. Constituents of the waste provide a huge challenge. A number of methods under development. No single method acceptable for all waste packages. 35

TRUPACT-II Waste Container (Contact Handled) 36 From:

Half PACT Waste Container ( 37 From:

RH-72B Waste Container 38 From:

RHTRU Waste at WIPP WIPP cannot accept RHTRU with a surface dose rate in excess of 1000 rems per hour. WIPP cannot accept more than 5 percent by volume of RHTRU with a surface dose rate in excess of 100 rems per hour. WIPP cannot accept more than 5.1 million curies of RHTRU. No more than 7,079 cubic meters of RHTRU can be emplaced in WIPP. 39

40 Miners at the WIPP use a Marietta Drum Miner to cut passages and rooms 2,150 feet underground in ancient, stable salt deposits.

41 An underground scaling machine, referred to in the mining industry as the "Fletcher Scaler, " removes loose rock from walls and ceilings in the WIPP underground, assuring safe working conditions.

42 A service vehicle travels a pathway 2150 feet (almost a half mile) underground in rock salt. All 7.1 miles of tunnels that make up the WIPP underground are mined with the same precision that is exhibited in this photo.

43 The underground facilities include maintenance shops, such as this one, where vehicles and machinery are repaired.

Step by Step (CH-TRU) Waste arrives by tractor trailer in TRUPACT-II or HalfPACT Security inspection, radiological survey and shipping document review Forklift transports package into waste handling building Radiological surveys still done to ensure does not have internal leaks The containers are then removed from TRUPACT-II or HalfPACT – Two seven-packs (55-gallon steel drums) – Two standard waste boxes – One ten drum over pack Forklift moves containers to conveyance loading car in airtight handling shaft Waste descends 2,150 feet into WIPP repository Underground machinery moves waste to disposal room Bags of Magnesium Oxide are placed on top and around the waste container for backfill and to control the solubility of radionuclide's 44

45 Upon arrival at the WIPP, the truck is inspected and TRUPACT-II shipping containers are tested to ensure that no radioactive material exists on the outer surface.

46 After radiological inspection, TRUPACT-II shipping containers are moved inside the waste handling building for unloading.

47 Forklifts move the TRUPACT-II shipping containers to the waste handling bays.

48 Waste handlers perform a "swipe test" prior to unloading 55-gallon transuranic waste drums from a TRUPACT-II. These tests are conducted before waste is unloaded to detect the presence of radioactive contaminants.

49 The 55-gallon waste drums are removed from the TRUPACT-II's using overhead cranes.

50 After unloading the TRUPACT-II, seven-packs of transuranic waste are transferred by forklift from the docks to the waste hoist.

51 Drums are removed from the transporter by forklift to be placed in disposal rooms, 2150 feet underground.

52 Drums of transuranic waste are stacked in a disposal room where salt will eventually move in and permanently encapsulate the containers.

Recertification The disposal facility must reapply every five years to required by the WIPP Land Withdrawal Act. The CRA was submitted to EPA on March 26, – Exactly five years after the first waste was received at WIPP. March 29, 2006: EPA officially recertified. CRA is due to EPA by March 26, CRA:Compliance Recertification Application. 53

Recent WIPP Facts 8,400 shipments received since opening in million transportation miles for WIPP material 54 ** Updated as of April 4, 2006 Taken from:

WIPP Information In June 2000 the Carlsbad Office of the US Department of Energy and Institute for Nuclear Particle Astronomy and Cosmology sponsored a workshop to encourage the research world to use their underground facility. – Neutrino research – Setup to make the first measurement of electron neutrino WIPP serves as a test bed for future geological repositories for other permanent disposal programs in repository performance and transparency. – Transparency-technologies and processes that provide information to outside parties for assessments of materials control 55

Questions