Treatment and conditioning are used to convert radioactive, mixed, and hazardous wastes from various waste processing or used nuclear fuel reprocessing activities into inert waste forms for transportation, storage, and final disposal. The treated and conditioned wastes must ultimately be disposed of in a suitable disposal facility. Multiple disposal options are currently being considered for the most highly radioactive wastes, including geologic repositories and deep borehole disposal. This session discusses advances made in waste form development, reprocessing facility off-gas capture technologies, and disposal facility design and optimization.


Papers

To access paper attachments, you must be logged in and registered for the meeting.

Register NowLog In

Iron Phosphate Glass Waste Forms to Immobilize Dehalogenated Salt Wastes

Matthew Page (Clemson Univ.), Adam Gootgeld (Clemson Univ.), Ming Tang (Clemson Univ.)

Advanced Long-Term Environmental Monitoring Systems (ALTEMIS) for Consent-Based Siting of Nuclear Facilities

Haruko Wainwright (MIT), Carol Eddy-Dilek (SRNL)

Adsorption of Radioactive Iodine Using Aged Nanocarbon-Coated Ceramic Substrate

Chaithanya Balumuru (Univ. Idaho), Krishnan Raja (Univ. Idaho), Piyush Sabharwall (INL), Vivek Utgikar (Univ. Idaho)

Features, Events, and Processes Prioritization for Deep Borehole Disposal Concepts in Crystalline Rock and Shale

Ethan Bates (Deep Isolation), John Midgley (Deep Isolation)

Effects of Storage on Methyl Iodide Adsorption by Mordenite Sorbent

Heinrik Goettsche (Univ. Idaho), Raja Krishnan (Univ. Idaho), Vivek Utgikar (Univ. Idaho)


Discussion

To join the conversation, you must be logged in and registered for the meeting.

Register NowLog In