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1 Characterizing Mercury Waste at DOE’s Sites & Developing Management Strategies Breaking the Mercury Cycle Conference Boston MS May 1-3, 2002 Mike Morris, ORNL Greg Hulet, INEEL
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2 The Department of Energy (DOE) World Map of Active DOE Sites Depending on how you count, there are facilities/affiliations: 70+ DOE Sites? 30+ States? Millions of acres
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3 Categories of DOE Mercury Wastes Categories of DOE mercury wastes (Rad & Non-Rad) Elemental < 260 ppm mixed wastes (sludges, soils, etc) >260 ppm mixed wastes (sludges, soils, etc) Mercury contaminated debris Mercury in oils (both 260 ppm) Mercury in water (plant effluents, creeks, rivers) Mercury in off gas You name it we have it!!!!!!!!
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4 Characterization of DOE Hg Wastes Radioactive elemental mercury 6-8,000 Kg Sites: Oak Ridge ~3,000 Kg,remaining quantity LLNL, LANL, ANL-W, Many sites have small amounts < 260 ppm mercury non-debris solids (waste) Don’t have a good handle because treatment same as other RCRA metals
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5 Characterization of DOE Hg Wastes Cont’ > 260 ppm mercury non-debris solids (waste) Very large quantities at various sites BNL ~1,100 yd 3 plus potential 6,000+ yd 3 additional Oak Ridge (excluding Y-12) ~4,000 yd 3 with PCBs INEEL 100s yd 3 of un-excavated along RR tracks Many sites have some quantity of this category As sites and facilities are decommissioned this category is expected to grow significantly Mercury contaminated debris Again very large quantities at various sites All sites have some quantity of this category As sites and facilities are decommissioned this is expected to grow even more significantly
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6 Characterization of DOE Hg Wastes Cont’ Mercury in Oils both 260 ppm <20 drums or ~ 1,000 gallons Mercury off gas measurement and treatment identified at many sites but will not be discussed here.
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7 The Ultimate Mercury Playground Y-12-National Security Complex in Oak Ridge 50,000 yd 3 of un-excavated radioactively contaminated Hg soils Hg in the creek at 300-1,000 ppt needing to be cleaned to 200 ppt interim and 51 ppt final. Creek flow: average 5,500 gpm, peak 70,000 gpm Alpha 4 (~600,000 ft 3 ) Building with ~150,000 lb of non-rad Hg engrained in the equipment. Removed ~ 100,000+ lb from equipment low spots High grade Hg storage; 4.2 million lb 2.6 million lb DOE 1.6 million lb DoD (DLA) Many other buildings similar to Alpha 4 still in use
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8 Management Strategy for Treatment of Hg Wastes Overall Management Strategy Whenever possible/practical/economical/available: Treatment by the Private Sector Preferably Off site
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9 Hg Treatment Strategies Radioactively Contaminated, Elemental Hg Treatment: Amalgamation by sulfur or metal Gather small quantities from the sites and treat as one waste stream under the BS contract at M&EC/PermaFix and dispose at Envirocare Other treatment option: Envirocare < 260 ppmHg non debris solid wastes Treatment: Stabilization Large streams individually or gather small quantities from the sites and treat as one waste stream under the BS contract at WCS and dispose at Envirocare Other treatment options: M&EC/PermaFix, Envirocare or ATG
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10 Hg Treatment Strategies cont’ > 260 ppmHg non debris solid wastes Treatment: Obtain variance to RCRA for stabilization or thermal desorbtion or polymer filtration and then amalgamation of recovered radioactive elemental Hg Large streams individually or gather small quantities from the sites and treat as one waste stream under the BS contract at M&EC/PermaFix and dispose at Envirocare Other treatment options: Envirocare or WCS Mercury contaminated debris Treatment: Retort or Macroencapsulation Establish BOA/contract for macroencapsulation & disposal at Envirocare
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11 Hg Treatment Strategies cont’ Mercury contaminated debris cont’ Get a polymer macro container approved for macroencapsulation Package on site and ship to disposal site for disposal Mercury in Oils both 260 ppm Treatment: Nochar with or without SAMMS Variance to RCRA may be required for >260 ppm Due to very small volumes, treat either at the site or at a private sector vendor
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12 Conclusions The DOE complex is very large, diverse and has most conceivable types of mercury problem/wastes For mercury wastes currently being stored the treatment strategy is Treatment by the Private Sector, Preferably Off-Site Treatment capabilities do exist for the most part in the private sector to treat these wastes
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