Friday, April 10, 2020
Radioactive Wastes Essays - Hazardous Waste, Radioactivity
  Radioactive wastes         Radioactive wastes, must for the protection of mankind  be stored or disposed in such a manner that isolation from  the biosphere is assured until they have decayed to  innocuous levels. If this is not done, the world could face  severe physical problems to living species living on this  planet.     Some atoms can disintegrate spontaneously. As they do,  they emit ionizing radiation. Atoms having this property are  called radioactive. By far the greatest number of uses for  radioactivity in Canada relate not to the fission, but to  the decay of radioactive materials - radioisotopes. These  are unstable atoms that emit energy for a period of time  that varies with the isotope. During this active period,  while the atoms are 'decaying' to a stable state their  energies can be used according to the kind of energy they  emit.     Since the mid 1900's radioactive wastes have been  stored in different manners, but since several years new  ways of disposing and storing these wastes have been  developed so they may no longer be harmful. A very  advantageous way of storing radioactive wastes is by a  process called 'vitrification'.     Vitrification is a semi-continuous process that  enables the following operations to be carried out with the  same equipment: evaporation of the waste solution mixed with  the    1) borosilicate: any of several salts derived from both  boric acid and silicic acid and found in certain minerals  such as tourmaline.    additives necesary for the production of borosilicate glass,  calcination and elaboration of the glass. These operations  are carried out in a metallic pot that is heated in an  induction furnace. The vitrification of one load of wastes  comprises of the following stages. The first step is  'Feeding'. In this step the vitrification receives a  constant flow of mixture of wastes and of additives until it  is 80% full of calcine. The feeding rate and heating power  are adjusted so that an aqueous phase of several litres is  permanently maintained at the surface of the pot. The second  step is the 'Calcination and glass evaporation'. In this  step when the pot is practically full of calcine, the  temperature is progressively increased up to 1100 to 1500 C  and then is maintained for several hours so to allow the  glass to elaborate. The third step is 'Glass casting'. The  glass is cast in a special container. The heating of the  output of the vitrification pot causes the glass plug to  melt, thus allowing the glass to flow into containers which  are then transferred into the storage. Although part of the  waste is transformed into a solid product there is still  treatment of gaseous and liquid wastes. The gases that  escape from the pot during feeding and calcination are  collected and sent to ruthenium filters, condensers and  scrubbing columns. The ruthenium filters consist of a bed of  ------------------------------------------------------------  2) condensacate: product of condensation.    glass pellets coated with ferrous oxide and maintained at a  temperature of 500 C. In the treatment of liquid wastes, the  condensates collected contain about 15% ruthenium. This is  then concentrated in an evaporator where nitric acid is  destroyed by formaldehyde so as to maintain low acidity. The  concentration is then neutralized and enters the  vitrification pot.     Once the vitrification process is finished, the  containers are stored in a storage pit. This pit has been  designed so that the number of containers that may be stored  is equivalent to nine years of production. Powerful  ventilators provide air circulation to cool down glass.     The glass produced has the advantage of being stored as  solid rather than liquid. The advantages of the solids are  that they have almost complete insolubility, chemical  inertias, absence of volatile products and good radiation  resistance. The ruthenium that escapes is absorbed by a  filter. The amount of ruthenium likely to be released into  the environment is minimal.     Another method that is being used today to get rid of  radioactive waste is the 'placement and self processing  radioactive wastes in deep underground cavities'. This is  the disposing of toxic wastes by incorporating them into  molten silicate rock, with low permeability. By this method,  liquid wastes are injected into a deep underground cavity  with mineral treatment and allowed to self-boil. The  resulting steam is processed at ground level and recycled in  a closed system. When waste addition is terminated, the  chimney is allowed to boil dry. The heat generated by the  radioactive wastes then melts the surrounding rock, thus  dissolving the wastes. When waste and water addition stop,  the cavity temperature would rise to the melting point of  the rock. As the molten rock mass increases in size, so does  the surface area. This results in a higher rate of  conductive heat loss to the surrounding rock. Concurrently  the heat    
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