Application of Cement-Based Materials as a Component of an Engineered Barrier System at Geological Disposal Facilities for Radioactive Waste—A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. International Cement-Based Materials Application in Design Concepts and Operating Facilities of RW Deposition
2.1. Cement as Matrix for LLW and ILW
- Cementing directly in the barrel/container. During this process, the components, including radioactive waste, are mixed in a standard 200 L steel barrel using a single or interchangeable mixing element. After the cement is grasped and solidified, the barrel with the resultant compound is closed with a lid and sent to a near-surface disposal facility.
- Cementing by a mixing plant. In this method, cement and waste are mixed to a homogeneous state and poured into standard 200-L steel drums or containers. The barrel/container shall be locked and, once the strength has been established, disposed of in the near-surface facility.
- Cementing in situ. Radioactive waste cementing is often carried out on a large scale. For example, in India, 4 m3 tanks are used for radioactive waste conditioning, which are placed in a concrete ditch on a vermiculite layer. The air-conditioning tanks are interconnected at a certain level to avoid overflow. They are also equipped with one-time mixing mechanisms and a cement injection channel. All the tanks in the reinforced concrete trench are connected to an exhaust system equipped with a cyclone separator, filters and a blower. Since immobilization in cement is made inside the conditioning vats, this process is defined as «cementing in situ». This process is also used in the United States, where vats and bunkers of up to several million liters are filled with cemented radioactive waste.
2.2. Cement as a Buffer Material for Radioactive Waste Disposal
2.2.1. Cement as a Backfill Material in the Deep Geological Repository Project for Long-Lived (LL) High-, Intermediate-, Low- and Short-Lived (SL) High-Level Waste (Belgium)
2.2.2. Cement Buffer NRVB (Nirex Reference Vault Backfill) in the Concept of Intermediate-Level Radioactive Waste Isolation in Geological Disposal Facility (United Kingdom)
- The high hydrogen index of the medium (pH) provided by the dissolution of the various mineral components of the cement buffer by underground water, which makes it possible to significantly reduce the mobility of many radionuclides;
- High porosity and, consequently, permeability to ensure homogeneous chemical conditions, allowing for the removal of gaseous products resulting from corrosion of metal components of radioactive waste (H2), activity of micro-organisms in aerobic and anaerobic conditions when they decompose organic radioactive waste (CH4, CO2), as well as a number of radioactive gases (containing isotopes 3H, 14CO2, 14CH4, 222Rn) [27,28] and the creation of a high specific surface area for the sorption of radionuclides;
2.2.3. Cement Mortar as a Filler for Concrete Containers with Short-Lived Low- and Intermediate-Level Waste in Geological Repository in Bátaapáti (Hungary)
2.2.4. Cement as a Component of the Backfilling Material in the Geological Repository of Low- and Intermediate-Level Waste at Morsleben (Germany)
2.2.5. Cement Filling of Containers with Low-Level Waste of Geological Disposal Facility Cigéo (France)
2.2.6. Special Cement Composition as Radioactive Waste Chamber filling Material for Low- and Intermediate-Level Waste in the Geological Disposal Facility Project (Switzerland)
2.2.7. Cement Backfilling as One of the Options to Fill the Gaps between Radioactive Waste Containers in the SFL Geological Repository Project for Long-Lived Low- and Intermediate-Level Waste (Sweden)
2.3. Concrete as a Material for Lining and Isolation of Tunnels for Radioactive Waste in Geological Repository/Disposal Facility
2.3.1. Concrete as Material for Tunnel Lining in the Host Rock of Bátaapáti National Radioactive Waste Repository (Hungary)
2.3.2. Concrete as a Drift Lining Material in High-Level Waste and Spent Nuclear Fuel Deep Geological Repository Project (Spain)
2.3.3. Concrete as a Material of Tunnel Plugging, Isolation of Waste Chambers in the Low- and Intermediate-Level Waste Repository Project in the Municipality of Kincardine (Canada)
2.3.4. Concrete as a Lining and Plugging of Tunnels Material with Intermediate- and High-Level Waste in the Project of Geological Disposal Facility Cigéo (France)
2.3.5. Concrete as Bunker Lining Material of the Short-Lived Low- and Intermediate-Level Waste Geological Repository SFR (Sweden)
2.3.6. Low-pH Concrete as Tunnel Plug Material in Design Concepts for High-Level Waste and Spent Nuclear Fuel Deep Geological Repository KBS-3 (Sweden, Finland)
2.3.7. Concrete as Lining and Plugging Material in the Geological Disposal Facility Design Concept of Disposal High-Level Waste and Transuranic Spent Nuclear Fuel (Japan)
2.4. Conclusions
- Radioactive waste contained in cement matrices inside steel drums;
- The material of radioactive waste conditioned container and/or its buffer;
- Buffer material between radioactive waste container and storage walls;
- The material of the lining of the walls of the storage;
- Material isolating tunnels with placed radioactive waste packaging structures (tunnel plugs, walls and seals).
3. Changes in Concrete Engineered Barrier by Means of External Factors of Geological Disposal Facility
3.1. Concrete Changes Due to Elevated Temperatures (above 100 °C) Typical for RW Class 1 Packages
- Compressive strength decreases by about 25% at the specified maximum temperature of the operating geological disposal facility of 300 °C and continues to decrease with greater force when this limit is exceeded. Strength degradation tends to increase when cement dries.
- Modulus of elasticity decreases in volume than strength and is a more sensitive parameter to external influences. The relative modulus tends to decrease linearly from 100 °C to almost zero at 800 °C but fluctuates strongly at 300 °C—the relative value is in the range of 40 to 90%. However, this significant reduction of the elastic module does not endanger the integrity of the geological disposal facility barriers. Maintaining a high modulus of elasticity is critical if the strain under the load is limited. In the geological disposal facility, the primary load at elevated temperatures will be the result of limiting temperature and shrinkage strains. Under these conditions, achieving a low elastic modulus value is useful because it reduces the stresses caused by limiting deformation and therefore reduces the risk of cracking.
- Temperature expansion coefficient of concrete is approximately constant at the maximum operating temperature of 300 °C, with a value of 10 ± 2·10−6 mm/(mm·°C). For cement mortar, deformation at elevated temperatures can be reinforced by shrinkage during drying, so the final deformation is caused by shrinkage.
- Thermal conductivity of concrete decreases approximately linearly over the entire range of 20 to 300 °C, with a relative coefficient of thermal conductivity around 0.4.
- Hydraulic permeability of concrete increases with temperature. This conclusion is based on a limited amount of data on the change of porosity of concrete at elevated temperatures and using information on the permeability to porosity ratio, its estimated value, assumed for the maximum operating temperature of 300 °C may be 10 times higher than for the standard temperature. This could result in a high flow rate of groundwater through the geological disposal facility barriers, even though the effect of changes in cement materials would be relatively small and comparable to cracking.
3.2. Changes in Concrete Due to Groundwater in Geological Disposal Facilities
3.3. Effects of HLW Irradiation on Concrete Properties
3.4. Influence of Biogenic Processes on Cement Material Properties
4. Influence of Concrete on Individual Component of Engineered Barrier System under Exposure of Conditions of Geological Disposal Facility
4.1. Changes of Bentonite Clay Buffer Properties under the Exposure of Model High-Alkali Conditions of Cement/Concrete
4.2. Interaction of Engineered Barrier Materials in the System «Concrete-Steel» under the Exposure of Groundwater
4.2.1. Influence of Low Oxygen Content and High Pore Cement Solution pH on the Integrity of Steel Packages after Closure of Geological Disposal Facility
4.2.2. Pitting Corrosion and Stress Corrosion of Steel Super Container Material under the Action of Cement Pore Solution with pH~13.6
4.2.3. Formation of Iron Sulphides on the Surface of a Steel Container in Contact with Groundwater with Low-Alkali Cement and Related Corrosion Mechanisms
4.3. Influence of Cement Materials on the Solubility Rate of Vitrified RW Class 1
4.3.1. Dissolution of Borosilicate Glass, a Material of Vitrified HLW in Air Conditioning Practice, under the Action of Groundwater Contacting Cement, as a Material of Engineered Safety Barrier
4.3.2. Dissolution of Sodium-Aluminophosphate Glass, Which Is the Material of Vitrified HLW under the Exposure of Groundwater Contacting Cement, as a Material of Engineered Safety Barrier
5. Mutual Transformations of Concrete-Bentonite under Exposure of Granitic Host Rock Groundwater
5.1. Mutual Influence of Engineered Barrier Materials in the «Concrete-Bentonite» System under the Exposure of Groundwater in the Long Term Experiments
5.1.1. Concrete-Bentonite Mineral Surfaces Passivation and Formation of Crystalline Phases in the Concrete Pores by Means of Groundwater Exposure
5.1.2. Transport of Ions in the Concrete-Bentonite Interface (Transfer of Mg2+ Ions, SO42− from Bentonite to Concrete and Ca2+, Na+, K+ from Concrete to Bentonite) under the Action of Groundwater (Transfer of Cl− and HCO3− Ions Dissolved in Groundwater)
5.1.3. Alteration of the Mechanical Properties of Concrete at Concrete/Bentonite Interface Due to Groundwater Characteristic of the Host Rock
5.2. Mutual Influence of Engineered Barrier Materials in the «Concrete-Bentonite» System under the Exposure of Synthetic Groundwater in the S Term Experiments
- Decalcification of C-S-H in a medium in which portlandite dissolves and progressive hydration of anhydrous phases occurs.
- Development of a film of calcite on the interface of concrete with bentonite and dispersed precipitation of calcite in localized zones of bentonites.
- The beginning of the development of Mg-containing components on the interface of bentonite with concrete, associated with the formation of Mg-clay 2:1 sheet silicates as the main neogenic phases expected in the long term.
- Formation of secondary ettringite in concrete at the interface with bentonite.
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
µ-CT | Computer microtomography |
C/B | Concrete-Bentonite interface |
C/W | Concrete-Water interface |
CEC | Cation Exchange Capacity |
DGR | Deep Geologic Repository |
EBS | Engineered Barrier System |
EDX | Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Spectroscopy |
ESB | Engineered Safety Barrier |
FEBEX | Full-Scale Engineered Barrier Experiment |
GTS | Grimsel Test Site |
GW | Groundwater |
HLW | High-Level Waste |
IUPAC | International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry |
LL | Long-Lived |
LLW | Low-Level Waste |
LRW | Liquid Radioactive Waste |
NPP | Nuclear Power Plant |
NRVB | Nirex Reference Vault Backfill |
NSDF | Near-Surface Disposal Facility |
NSR | Near-Surface Repository |
OPC | Ordinary Portland Cement |
PEEK | Polyetheretherketone |
pH | Hydrogen index |
RW | Radioactive Waste |
SEM | Scanning Electron Microscopy |
SL | Short-Lived |
SNF | Spent Nuclear Fuel |
SNFA | Spent Nuclear Fuel Assembly |
SSA | Specific Surface Area |
STIMAN | Structural Image Analysis |
TEM | Transmission Electron Microscopy |
TRU | Transuranic |
W/C | Water-Cement ratio |
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Location | Type of RW | Process | Productivity by Initial Waste |
---|---|---|---|
Belgium, NPP (three) | Concentrates, slurries | Stirring in drums | 2 m3/day |
UK, Hinckley Point, NPP * | Sludge of spent fuel holding basins | Stirring in drums | 12 drums 80-L volume per day |
India, Tarapur NPP | Sludge | Cementing at disposal site | 500 m3/day |
India, The Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC) | Sludge | Cementing at disposal site | 225 m3/day |
Netherlands, Center of Nuclear Research in Petten | Sludge, liquid waste | Pre-stirring, final in drums | 5 m3/day 0.5 m3/day |
USA, Los Alamos National Laboratory | Concentrates of ILW | Stirring in drums | 4 m3/day |
USA, Brookhaven National Laboratory | Evaporation concentrates | Addition of concentrate to cement mixture with vermiculite (1:3) in concrete containers with a capacity of 4.2 m3 | 15 m3 per 6 months |
France, Marcoule, NPP | Solid and liquid RW | Stirring in concrete containers | 6 m3/day 3–5 m3/day |
France, Nuclear Research Centre at Fontaine-au-Rose | Evaporation concentrates | Stirring in the drum (cement + vermiculite) | 0.3 m3/day |
France, Centre for Nuclear Research in Saclay | Sludge | Pre-mixing and discharge into concrete containers | 100–300 kg/day |
France, Nuclear Research Centre in Cadarache | Evaporation concentrates | Stirring in concrete containers | 1.7 m3/day |
France, Waste Management Centre in La Manche | Compacted solid waste | Cementing in drums | 20 m3/day |
Germany, NPP | Evaporation concentrates, sludge | Stirring in drums | 2–7 m3/shift |
Germany, Center for Nuclear Research in Jülich | Concentrates of LLW | Stirring in drums | 50 L/day |
Germany, Nuclear Research Centre in Karlsruhe | Concentrates of ILW | Stirring in drums | 3–4 m3/shift |
Switzerland, NPP (two) | Evaporation concentrates, sludge, ion-exchange resins | Stirring in drums | 10–25 drums/day |
Sweden, Ringhals NPP, Oskarshamn NPP | Evaporation concentrated, ion-exchange resins | Stirring in 1 m3 concrete containers | 2–5 containers/day |
Component | Mass Content, % |
---|---|
OPC (CEM I 52,5N) | 26 |
Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) | 29 |
Hydrated lime (Ca(OH)2) | 10 |
Water | 35 |
Component | Amount, kg/m3 | Mass Content *, % |
---|---|---|
Sulphate resistant Portland cement CEM I 42,5 N SR3 MH/LA, produced by Anläggningscement Degerhamn, Sweden | 120 | 5.14 |
Silica fume or silica fume slurry ** (SiO2) | 80 | 3.43 |
Limestone Limus 25 (CaCO3) | 369 | 15.80 |
Water | 165 | 7.06 |
Sand 0-8 mm (natural, from Äspö site) | 1037 | 44.41 |
Gravel (natural or crushed) | 558 | 23.90 |
Superplasticizer Glenium 51 | 6 | 0.26 |
Total | 2335 | 100.00 |
Country | Repository/Disposal Facility | Type of Engineered Barrier |
---|---|---|
Belgium | DGR project | Drift backfill/One of supercontainer barriers |
Canada | DGR project at Bruce cite | Concrete walls isolating RW containing chambers/Concrete caps isolating access shafts |
Finland | GDR project (KBS-3V) | Concrete plugs and seals |
France | Cigéo GDF project | Concrete plugs/Tunnel buffer mixed with bentonite/Concrete lining |
Germany | DGR Morsleben | Mine backfill |
Hungary | DGR Bátaapáti | RW matrix/Container filling/Drift lining |
Spain | DGR project | Concrete lining |
Sweden | SFL DGR project for ILW/LLW disposal | Buffer |
SFR DGR for ILW/LLW disposal | Shaft lining | |
DGR project (KBS-3V) | Concrete plugs and seals | |
Switzerland | GDF project for ILW/LLW | Cement matrix/Container filling/Buffer |
United Kingdom | GDF project (ceased) | Cement matrix/Buffer/Container filling |
Japan | GDF project for HLW and SNF | Container filling/Concrete lining/Concrete plugs |
Radionuclide | Specific Activity, Bq/t U | |
---|---|---|
VVER-440 (T = 7 Years) | BN-600 (T = 14 Years) | |
14C | 5.6 × 109 | 5.24 × 1010 |
79Se | 8.58 × 108 | 2.38 × 109 |
99Tc | 7.50 × 1011 | 1.44 × 1012 |
129I | 1.03 × 109 | 2.29 × 109 |
135Cs | 1.85 × 1010 | 1.39 × 1011 |
234U | 3.23 × 109 | 1.94 × 1010 |
235U | 3.62 × 108 | 1.34 × 1010 |
237Np | 5.56 × 109 | 2.87 × 1010 |
238Pu | 1.20 × 1013 | 5.75 × 1013 |
239Pu | 2.14 × 1013 | 7.19 × 1013 |
240Pu | 2.65 × 1013 | 1.15 × 1013 |
241Pu | 1.11 × 1014 | 7.60 × 1013 |
242Pu | 6.08 × 1010 | 1.52 × 108 |
241Am | 9.83 × 1013 | 2.48 × 1012 |
243Am | 1.14 × 1011 | 1.24 × 108 |
245Cm | 5.53 × 107 | 7.15 × 104 |
Aqueous Phase | Na+ | Al3+ | Si4+ | K+ | Mg2+ | Ca2+ | Cl− | SO42− | HCO3− | pH |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Model solution before experiment | 8.87 | - | - | 1.15 | 4.95 | 12.2 | 25.6 | 4.95 | 8.87 | 6.1 |
After experiment | 67.8 | 0.01938 | 0.3877 | 119.82 | 0.000411 | 0.8034 | - | - | - | 12.1 |
Cement/from Cement Exposure | Changes in Concrete/from Concrete Side Barrier |
---|---|
Temperatures characteristic of RW Class 1 and 2 packages | Reduced concrete compressive strength by 25% |
Groundwater flow through pores of concrete | Dissolving Portlandite, cement C-S-H gel, increasing porosity and reducing strength. The hydraulic permeability of concrete with silica fume admixture is at the level of permeability of granite rocks, which meets the requirement for material for deep repositories. |
Influence of HLF irradiation on concrete properties | No significant changes of compressive strength, no visible damage of concrete samples and sufficient changes in structure under absorbed dose of high-level waste up to 108 Gy. The maximum radiolytic hydrogen release does not exceed 10−3 mol/(g of the sample) at 108 Gy. |
Biogenic processes | Carbonization and neutralization of basic cement stone minerals, resulting in their leaching and reduced strength (for nitrate-containing cement matrices with radioactive waste). It is assumed that the cement materials in the geological disposal facility at Yeniseysky site will contact the indigenous and extraterrestrial microbiota, as well as intensification of microbial processes under the influence of heat emission and radiolytic gases. |
Cement/from Cement Exposure | Changes in Concrete/from Concrete Side Barrier |
---|---|
Effect of alkaline concrete pore solution on compacted bentonite buffer | No significant changes in cation exchange capacity, swelling pressure and hydraulic permeability of compacted bentonite at pH 12.4 which is common for hardened concrete. At values of pH typical for fresh cement mortar (13.3), compacted bentonite buffer shows a decrease in cation exchange capacity, swelling pressure, and an increase in hydraulic permeability. |
Influence on steel container from alkaline pore solution of concrete | Under anaerobic conditions, geological disposal facility ensures the integrity of the steel packaging structure (corrosion rate 0.03 µm/year) |
Influence on steel container from alkaline pore solution of concrete at temperature 80 °C | Increased corrosion rate of 3–6 μm/year in anaerobic geological disposal facility conditions with occurrence of local corrosion hotspots with thickness of 10 μm. |
Effect of alkaline pore solution of concrete on borosilicate and aluminophosphate glass matrices | With increased pH, the dissolution rate of glass matrices increases. |
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Tyupina, E.A.; Kozlov, P.P.; Krupskaya, V.V. Application of Cement-Based Materials as a Component of an Engineered Barrier System at Geological Disposal Facilities for Radioactive Waste—A Review. Energies 2023, 16, 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16020605
Tyupina EA, Kozlov PP, Krupskaya VV. Application of Cement-Based Materials as a Component of an Engineered Barrier System at Geological Disposal Facilities for Radioactive Waste—A Review. Energies. 2023; 16(2):605. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16020605
Chicago/Turabian StyleTyupina, Ekaterina Aleksandrovna, Pavel Pavlovich Kozlov, and Victoria Valerievna Krupskaya. 2023. "Application of Cement-Based Materials as a Component of an Engineered Barrier System at Geological Disposal Facilities for Radioactive Waste—A Review" Energies 16, no. 2: 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16020605
APA StyleTyupina, E. A., Kozlov, P. P., & Krupskaya, V. V. (2023). Application of Cement-Based Materials as a Component of an Engineered Barrier System at Geological Disposal Facilities for Radioactive Waste—A Review. Energies, 16(2), 605. https://doi.org/10.3390/en16020605