Help | Contact Us
NukeWorker.com
NukeWorker Menu Low Level Radioactive Waste Treatment options  

Author Topic: Low Level Radioactive Waste Treatment options  (Read 4937 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Lobby

  • Guest
Low Level Radioactive Waste Treatment options
« on: Jul 14, 2010, 09:38 »
Folks,

Please forgive me if this is the wrong place for this thread.

I'm wondering what options exist for treatment of low level rad waste instead of storage at the three underground facilities in the U.S.   

I don't work in the nuclear industry, but I have some background in non-radioactive waste management (industrial).  I'd appreciate any advice ya'll can give.

Thanks!

Offline Marlin

  • Forum Staff
  • *
  • Posts: 17049
  • Karma: 5147
  • Gender: Male
  • Stop Global Whining!!!
Re: Low Level Radioactive Waste Treatment options
« Reply #1 on: Jul 15, 2010, 08:14 »
   Good question, it has been asked for the last 30 years by people inside the business. Solutions tend to be on the front end, do not create unnecessary LLRW. ALARA (As Low As Reasonably Achievable) is a philosophy that exists primarily in the nuclear field, meeting the regulatory limits is not enough. Whenever possible and reasonable personell exposure, environmental release, and waste volume must be reduced. Processing radioactive waste for the reduction of radioactivity is only possible for High Level Radioactive Waste (spent nuclear fuel) where some of the recovered radioactive material becomes useful product. LLRW must be buried, but it can be processed for volume reduction. Some companies make a living by receiving LLRW, monitoring it and removing the clean material or reducing the volume by shredding it or compacting it. Personal protective clothing makes up a lot of the waste volume and there is a paper suit (Orex) that can be digested and filtered leaving only a fraction of the original waste volume. Waste management in the nuclear field is big business particularly on the DOE side where many of the old buildings and sites (Manhattan Project facilities) are CERCLA sites (Hazardous Waste Sites designated for cleanup) and are far beyond their useful life spans.
   By the way "storage" is probably not the right term for LLW each of these burial sites is intended for 300 years of containment at which time the radioactive components of the waste is essentially gone and only the lead, PCB, asbestos and other hazardous wastes are left provided the landfill is licensed for that. Not much different from any other landfill. High Level or "Greater than class C" waste is the only waste that has to be stored until a long term solution is found.
« Last Edit: Jul 15, 2010, 08:25 by Marlin »

Offline Rennhack

  • Forum Administrator
  • *
  • Posts: 8996
  • Karma: 4683
  • Gender: Male
Re: Low Level Radioactive Waste Treatment options
« Reply #2 on: Jul 15, 2010, 08:41 »
+k

mostlyharmless

  • Guest
Re: Low Level Radioactive Waste Treatment options
« Reply #3 on: Jul 16, 2010, 09:58 »
Material is incinerated, compacted. melted and recycled into things like storage containers,and other wise cleaned. Most processes are an effort to deduce the volume of waste. If you can clean an object the size of a refrigerator and end up with a clean refrigerator plus a contaminated object the size of a roll of paper towel you have much less to store. Ultimately after all the reduction possible it must be stored. The nuclides decay off of course and can be treated as nonnuclear,but some have half lives of thousands of years and unless you can manipulate the material on an atomic level without creating more waste, you must sore it in some fashion.

 


NukeWorker ™ is a registered trademark of NukeWorker.com ™, LLC © 1996-2024 All rights reserved.
All material on this Web Site, including text, photographs, graphics, code and/or software, are protected by international copyright/trademark laws and treaties. Unauthorized use is not permitted. You may not modify, copy, reproduce, republish, upload, post, transmit or distribute, in any manner, the material on this web site or any portion of it. Doing so will result in severe civil and criminal penalties, and will be prosecuted to the maximum extent possible under the law.
Privacy Statement | Terms of Use | Code of Conduct | Spam Policy | Advertising Info | Contact Us | Forum Rules | Password Problem?