1 Class 19 Nuclear Spent Fuel Reprocessing. 2 Introduction During its time in the reactor, the fuel (bars, tubes…) is subject to important physical and.
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1
Class 19
Nuclear Spent Fuel Reprocessing
2
Introduction• During its time in the reactor, the fuel (bars, tubes…) is
subject to important physical and composition modifications due to the neutrons irradiation:
• The fissile material content (U-235 or Pu-239, Pu-241) decreases progressively by fission
• U-239 generates by capture Pu-239, which disappears by capture or by fission.– The capture reactions lead to the formation of Pu-240, Pu-241, Pu-
242 (with Pu-241 fissile). This apparition of new fissile isotopes compensate only partially the diminution of the global content of fissile matter
• Apparition of new elements in the fuel, baneful to the chain reaction progress– Transuranic elements (Np, Am, Cm)– Fission Products (Sr, Cs, Tc…) some of them are neutrons poison
such as Gd
3
Introduction (2)• The modifications of the fuel composition
associated to the strong heat release by fission provoke important changes in the physical state of the fuel.
• Crystals structure modifications (holes or concentrations of atoms)
• Variation of the volume: – The volume occupied by the atoms created by
fission is greater than the one of the disappeared matter.
– Moreover, some fission products are gaseous and their solubility in uranium is practically non-existent
4
Introduction (3)
• All of these changes will alter the physical properties and the structure of the fuel with modifications of the thermal, mechanical, dimensional characteristics.
• Consequently the cladding can be deteriorated, which can go to the formation of cracks or even break.
5
Introduction (4)
• The following implies that, after a certain period of irradiation time, it is necessary to take out the fuel from the reactor.– Decrease of the content of fissile material– Progressive poisoning of the fuel– Risk of cladding break
• This operation is performed before the consumption of all initial fissile material
6
Introduction (5)• The reprocessing activity answers 2
objectives:– Recovery of the fissile material (U-239, Pu-239,
Pu-241) to reuse it for the fabrication of new fuel elements (example Recycling Pu via MOX fuel fabrication, recycling of U from PWR for new enrichment)
– Separation of nuclear waste (activation and fission products) as a function of their pollution in order to store then to avoid any potential danger and release towards the biosphere
7
Irradiated Fuels Characteristics
• The irradiated fuels are taken out of the nuclear reactor after a certain time that can vary : (PWR: 3 years, fast breeder reactor: 2 years)
• The following table is presenting the principal characteristics of some nuclear fuels
8
Principal characteristics of irradiated fuels
Reactor type Form Nature Cladding Combustion Rate (Mwd/t)
UNGG Bars U metal slightly alloyed
Magnesium 3,000 to 5,000
Heavy water
Light water
Fast neutrons
Rods Natural UO2
Enriched UO2
(< 5%)(U,Pu)O2 with
15 to 20% of Pu
Zircaloy
Zircaloy,stainless steel
Stainless steel
10,000 to 15,000
20,000 to 40,000
50,000 to 100,000
Submarine reactors
Platesassembly
U-AlU-Zr
(enriched U up to 93%
AluminumZircaloy
30%< 30%
9
Irradiated Fuels Characteristics (2)
• If we consider only the characteristics important to the reprocessing, we can distinguish:– The composition (metal, alloy, oxide, carbide…)– The enrichment of the fissile material density– The structure or the form (bars or tubes, rods,
plates, spheres..)– Combustion rate whose depend the activity , ,
and the residual calorific power after irradiation
10
Irradiated Fuels Characteristics (3)
• For the “reprocessor”, the irradiated fuel can be considered as a mixture of 5 families of compounds:
– The fissile material (U-235, Pu-239 and Pu-241), which represents the noble part of the fuel and whose recovery is the main goal of reprocessing
– The fertile material (U-238, Pu-240)– Heavy isotopes, they are neither fissile nor fertile (U-
236, Np-237, Pu-242, Am and Cm)– The fission products (principal source of and activity)– The other metals (Mg, Al, Zr, metals coming from
stainless steel) part of the fuel or forming the cladding
11
Irradiated Fuels Characteristics (4)
• The composition of one ton of irradiated fuel coming from the following reactors– UNGG– PWR– Fast neutrons Reactors
• is reproduced in the next table and is illustrated for the PWR case in the following slide
• The content of fission products and of plutonium increase with the fuel rate as
UNGG > PWR > Fast BR
12
Fuel characteristics
from nuclear reactors
Reactor Type 1200MW
UNGG PWR Fast Neutrons reactors
Rod containing (U and Pu)O2
Stainless SteelCladding
Rod containingUO2 enriched
(3.25%)Zircaloy Cladding
U metallic Bar alloyed with
Mo or Al Mg cladding
Form and Initial
Composition
Average Burn upIn the reactor
80,000 MWd/t for the fuel
in the core reactor and activityResidual powerAfter 150 days
cooling
1,800 Ci = 75 W per kg of fuel
4,500 Ci= 20 W per kg of fuel
1,400 Ci= 6 W per kg of fuel
QuantityTo be treated
Qu
anti
ty o
f pri
nci
pal FP
(g/t
on
Total FP
Act
inid
es
(g/t
on
)
Total An
13
Characteristics of fuel irradiated during 3 years in a PWR
Initial Fuel (1,000 kg) Irradiated Fuel (1,000 kg)
3
years
Fission Products
Different IsotopesOf Pu (9 kg)
14
• The repartition in mass of the fission products can be deduced from the curves: Yield of fission vs. mass number of FP
• See next slide
15
Distribution curves of the FP of U-235
Yie
ld in m
ass
of
the fi
ssio
n (
%)
Fast Neutrons (14 MeV)Thermal Neutrons
Mass Number of the Fission Product
16
Distribution curves of the FP of U-233, U-235, Pu-239 (Thermal Neutrons)
Mass Number of the Fission Product
Yie
ld in m
ass
of
the fi
ssio
n (
%)
17
Irradiated Fuels Characteristics (5)
• An important characteristic of irradiated fuels is their residual calorific power, consequence of the activities and of fission products and activation products
• It decreases over time, as presented in the next table
18
Residuaire Power of irradiated Fuels
Residual Power in w/kg after
Reactor Type
Fuel RateMWd/t
90 days
120 days 150 days 180 days
UNGG 4,000 8.7 7.0 5.8 4.9
PWR 30,000 30 24 20 17
FBR 50,000 to100,000
80110
6590
5580
4772
19
Irradiated Fuels Characteristics (6)
• The reprocessing of these different types of fuels is not so much different, nevertheless, on needs to take into account the fissile material density, the content of fission products, the calorific power produced, the structure of the fuel elements.
20
The chemical Treatment
Objectives and constraints• The problem is as follows:• Obtain separately and with a high percentage yield
Uranium and Plutonium decontaminated from the fission products, in order to manipulate them later as if they were materials that have never been irradiated
• The decontamination factor of U and Pu in FP is between 107 to 108
• The purification of U and Pu towards non radioactive elements need to be also very specific
21
The chemical Treatment (2)
• The specifications to respect for finished products U and Pu issued from reprocessing of LWR and fast neutrons reactors fuels are described in the next table
22
Constraints for recovery and purification of finished products
EXTRACTION YIELD ≥ 99.5%
Decontamination Factors for Uranium and Plutonium (FP)
Cooled Fast Neutrons Reactor Fuels (6 m), Activity ~ 5 106 Ci/ton U+PuActivity ~ 9.105 Ci/ton U+Pu(100,000 MWD/t)
-Np 385g/ton U+Pu-Pu 10,000 g/ton U + Pu
FINISHED PRODUCTS SPECIFICATIONS, Activity
~ 0.5 mCi/g U~ 1 to 2 mCi/g Pu
Activity ~ 1,500 to 15,000 dpm/g U
LWR7,500 dpm = 5 g Np7,500 dpm = 10-8 g Pu
Fast Neutrons7,500 dpm = 5 g Np7,500 dpm = 10-8 g Pu
Cooled LWR Fuels (3 years), Activity ~ 7.5 105 Ci/ton U+PuActivity ~ 105 Ci/ton U+Pu
``-Np 385g/ton U+Pu-Pu 10,000 g/ton U + Pu
LWR PLANTDF U
, = 1.5 .106
Pu = 2.105
Np = 100 (77)DF Pu
, = 107 to 7.107
U ~ 6.4.105
(150 ppm in Pu)
FBR PLANTDF U
, = 107
Pu = 1.3.107
Np = 36 (or 360)DF Pu
, = 4.107 U ~ 1.5.105
Np 3 to 4
23
• Constraints to respect during reprocessing operations are numerous. Indeed,
• The fuel is inside a water proof cladding, in general refractory to the usual chemical reagents
• The intense radioactivity implies very special work conditions
• The fissile material masses require to be very careful towards criticality risks
• The radioactivity of the effluents release into the environment need to be very small and lower than the limits established by agencies such as EPA
24
• The next tables show the performances to reach for the liquid and gaseous effluents. The purification factors, ratio between quantity that enters the plant and quantity that exits the plant (via effluents) are depending on the plant but are in general very high, specially for alpha emitters.
25
Respect of the environment - Liquid Effluents
Purity Factor* for the most radioactive
EffluentsLa Hague
Pur. Factor , = 2.6 104
Pur. Factor = 2.6 104
ANNUAL ACTIVITY TREATEDIn UP2 800 + UP 3 (1600 t/year – LWR)SITE: La Hague, France, : 1.2 109 Ci/year3H : 1.12 106 Ci/year : 1.6 108 Ci/year
RELEASE ASKED FOR La Hague
, : 45,000 Ci/year3H : 5.3 106 Ci/year : 90 Ci/year
The purification factors, ratio between quantity that enters the plant and quantity that exits the plant (via effluents)NB: American norms for liquid release = 0.5 10-3 Ci per GWe and per year for a PWR cycle.This norm implies a purity factor of 1010 for the high active liquid effluents
26
Respect of the environment Gaseous Effluents
Purity Factor* for the most radioactive
EffluentsLa Hague
Pur. Factor Kr = 1
Pur. Factor > 30
Pur. Factor , , = 108
ANNUAL ACTIVITY TREATEDIn UP2 800 + UP 3 (1600 t/year – LWR)SITE: La Hague, FranceKr = 1.7 107 Ci/year3H = 1.1 105 Ci/year = 61 Ci/yearOthers FP = 109 Ci/year
ATMOSPHERIC RELEASE ASKED FOR La Hague
Kr-85 : 107 Ci/year3H : 5 104 Ci/yearI-129 and I-131 : 2Ci/yearOthers FP = 10 Ci/year
NB: American norms for gasreleaseKr-85 = 50,000 Ci: I = 5.10-3 Ci per GWe and per year for LWR which implies a Pur. Factor Iode > 200 andPur. Factor for Kr = 10 for La Hague
27
Principle
• The principle of chemical reprocessing of nuclear fuels relies essentially on liquid-liquid extraction.
• This choice implies the dissolution of irradiated fuels in an aqueous solution, after elimination of cladding material, followed by the realization of the liquid-liquid extraction cycles that leads to the chemical separation– Uranium + Plutonium towards fission products
and other metals– Uranium from Plutonium
28
• The universal process used today is the PUREX Process.
• It uses a nitric dissolution of the fuels
• A specific separation of U and Pu by extraction, using a solvent n-Tri-butylphosphate diluted in an aliphatic diluent (dodecane).
• The scheme of the PUREX Process is reproduced next slide
29
Liquid effluents
UnloadingOff-GasTreatment
IodineKr-Xe
Storage
GAS TREATMENT
VENTILATION
Storage Pool
shearing Dissolution
Cla
rifi
catio
n 1st cycleTBPExtraction
2ndcycle
3rdcycle
2ndcycle
3rdcycle
Punitrate
Unitrate
PuO2
UO3
UO2
UF4
Pu
U HLWFP, Np, Cm, Am
ConcentrationDenitration
Interim liquid storage
Interim Storage of glass blocks in wellInterim Storage under water
TREATMENT
SLUDGE
Gaseous effluents
Solid compounds
LiquidEffluents
SOLID WASTES
Oxi
des
FuelAssemblies
WASTES
Vitrification
U(VI)-Pu(IV)
UF6
RE-INTRODUCTIONIN THE FUEL CYCLE
30
The different steps of the ProcessDeactivation and transport to the plant• The first destination of the irradiated fuel is close
to the reactor• This is the storage pool where the assemblies are
stored under a few meters of water• This period of cooling allow an important fraction
of the radioactivity to cool down• After a few months, the most instable
radionuclides, whose the half life time is in minute, hour, day, have practically disappeared and there are only the fission products left with long half-life time.
• It is then unnecessary to wait any longer, the irradiated fuel can be transported towards the reprocessing plant.
31
Transport• The fuel assemblies consisting of rod bundles
measuring about 4 m long, holding usually 264 rods (PWR 17*17) initially containing UO2 based on uranium enriched to about 3.5% U-235, irradiated to about 2.85*1012 J/kg (33,000MWd/t) for PWR fuel, ( and about 2.42*1012 J/kg (28,000 MWD/t for BWR fuels) are transported in shielded casks from the power plant sites to the reprocessing plants.
• These casks, designed for the simultaneous transport of several fuel assemblies are very heavy (about 100 t) and complex machines that must guarantee transport safety.
32
Transport (2)
• On their arrival at the reprocessing plant, the fuels are unloaded form the transport casks.
• This delicate operation is normally performed after the loaded cask is immersed in water
• To simplify this unloading operation, AREVA has successfully installed a dry unloading facility at La Hague, an operation designed to shorten unloading time and to minimize the volume of contaminated effluents to be treated.
• After unloading, the fuel assemblies are stored under water in pools awaiting reprocessing
33
Spent fuel storage capacity
• The spent oxide fuel storage capacity pf the reprocessing pants is already considerable.
• As an example, La Hague has 5 pools with a total capacity of 10300 t currently in operation.
34
The different steps of the Process (2)
Decladding and dissolution clarification
• First decladding takes place
• Decladding can be performed – Chemically if the material of the cladding and
the form of the fuel allow it (case of the magnesium cladding for UNGG)
– Mechanically for the UNGG, PWR and fast neutrons reactors fuels
35
Decladding operations(La Hague, Windscale …
ThumbWheel
Cylinder
Rod end
36
Shearing
37
Shearing• To enable nitric acid solution to attack the fuel, it is
necessary to chop the assemblies.• This operation is performed at the reprocessing
plant, after cutting the top and bottom ends of the assemblies, using a horizontal shear which accommodates the complete bundle.
• Each rod of the fuel element is thus broken into pieces about 30X 35 10-3 m long, which contain all or part of the nuclear material.
• At this stage a fraction of the gaseous fission products escapes through the dissolver off gas where it is subjected to iodine trapping by NaOH scrubbing and absorption on silver loaded inorganic solid sorbent.
38
The different steps of the Process (3)
• Once the decladding, and shearing are performed, the fuel dissolution can take place.
• It is performed on pieces of the cladding and the fuel by mixing to a nitric acid solution
• The dissolution reactions are:
and
OHNONOUONOHUO 232232 42)2,(3)(83
OHNNONONOUONOHU 2223223 25.205.085.055.1)2,()(
2
9
OHNOPuNOHPuO 234
32 2)4,(3)(4
UNGG
PWR andFast Neutrons Reactors
39
Dissolution
40
• Small amounts of residues remain during the dissolution phase of PWR and fast neutrons reactor fuels.
• These residues are made of small part of cladding and polymetallic inclusions containing fission products: Mo, Ru, Rh, Te, Pd + U, Pu whose the quantity increases with the combustion rate.
Dissolution (2)
41
• Fuel dissolution produces a solution with the following approximate composition:
• U(VI) = 250 kg/m3 (g/L)• Pu(IV) = 2.5 kg/m3 (g/L)• FP = 9 kg/m3 (g/L)• The and activities are approximately
200 Ci• The activity is approximately 1.87 Ci/L
Dissolution (3)
42
• The fuel is not totally dissolved and about 3 kg of FP is not dissolved.
• These are the highly active dissolution fines consisting of FP: Pd, Rh, Ru and Mo.
• A small fraction of Pu is found trapped in these residues.
Dissolution (4)
43
• Implementation of the dissolution operations must take into account the criticality risks.
• Tow alternatives are available:• Poisoning of the dissolution liquor by a neutron
absorbent (such as gadolinium) and• Criticality safety guaranteed by the geometry.• The next figure presents 2 types of continuous
dissolver, (rotary dissolver UP3, La Hague and helicoidal continuous dissolver (TOR, Cadarache).
Dissolution (5)
44
ContinuousRotary
Dissolver
Metal Feed
Wheel = 4m
engine
Discharge ofInsolubles
DissolutionSolution
Nitric Acid Feed
Fast Annular Continuous Dissolver
Feed
DissolutionSolution
SolidWastes
engine
Suspension with spring
45
Clarification
• Before being sent to the U and Pu extraction cycles, the dissolution liquors must be clarified to remove any traces of solid particles, whose presence would be detrimental to the extraction operations.
• The solution is cleared by centrifugation or filtration and adjusted to 4M HNO3 before going towards the extraction unit.
46
• The gas emitted from the dissolver contain nitrous vapors NOx and certain fission products, the noble gas Krypton and Xenon as well as Iodine (volatile as I2 form).
• Iodine is trapped as stable form PbI2 and the Nox gas are recycled as nitric acid, reaction performed by water wash, countercurrent of the gaseous flow plus addition of hydrogen peroxide:
NOx + O2 HNO3
H2O
47
Extraction Cycle
• The nitric acid dissolution solution of the irradiated fuel contains the totality of uranium and plutonium as nitrate complexes (UO2
2+, 2NO3-) and (Pu 4+, 4 NO3
-) and the fission products.
• The extractant chosen, tri-butyl phosphate (TBP) is diluted to 30% by volume in an aliphatic hydrocarbon, n-dodecane, HPT or a petroleum cut.
• TBP presents a great affinity towards U(VI) and Pu(IV).• Its affinity towards the FP and other metals is low, which
brings a very selective extraction of U (VI) and Pu(IV)
48
• During the contact between the organic phase and the aqueous phase, the 2 following reactions take place
• The reactions are strongly displaced towards right (extraction) if [NO3
-] is high and towards the left (reextraction) if [NO3
-] is low
• The choice of HNO3 allows to predict the direction of the solutes (U(VI) and Pu(IV)) transfer
2334
2232322
)(4)(2)4,(
)()(2)2,(
TBPNOPuTBPNOPu
TBPNOUOTBPNOUO
49
1st extraction cycle
• The 1st decontamination cycle (U + Pu) is presented on the next slide.
• The aqueous flow (U + Pu + FP) is contacted with the organic phase in a pulsed column, countercurrent flow.
• The first stage is hence a co-decontamination stage during which the U and Pu are removed from most of the FP
• The organic phase charged in U and Pu is then washed by a nitric acid solution in order to scrub from the organic phase the small quantities of FP that was entrained with U and Pu into the organic phase.
50
1st extraction cycle (2)
• After this first extraction column, most of the PF are separated from U and Pu and exit as raffinate.
• U and Pu exit the column as organic phase• The organic phase is stripped of U and Pu, and the
solvent can be recycled after treatment, to eliminate the degradation products H2MBP (monobutyl phosphate) and HDBP (dibutyl phosphate), formed by the hydrolysis and radiolysis of TBP.
• U and Pu prepurified exit the second column in the aqueous solution.
• In certain units, the implementation of the co-decontamination cycle may be complicated by the behavior of certain FP such as Zr and Tc.
51
SolutionU + Pu + FP
Solvent
HNO3 H2O
SolventTreatment
Extr
act
ion
U +
Pu
Solv
ent
Wash
Reextr
act
ion U
+ P
u
FP U + Pu
U +
Pu
1st EXTRACTION CYCLE
52
Feed
AqueousSolution
U+Pu+ FP*
Solvent
Mixing
U+Pu+PF*+
Solvent
PF*
Settling
U+Pu+
Solvent
1st extraction cycle (3)
53
Feed
AqueousSolution
U+Pu+ FP*
Solvent
Mixing
U+Pu+PF*+
Solvent
PF*
Settling
U+Pu+
Solvent
Solvent ExtractionSolvent Extraction
Centrifugal Contactor
SolventIn
Moteur
Solvent OutLoaded U + Pu
Exitraffinate FP*
Protectionlead / concreteFeed
Aqueous PhaseU+Pu+FP*
Pulsed Column
FeedAqueous PhaseU + Pu + FP*
Perforated Plates
Exitraffinate FP*
Low Mixer settler
Feed Solvent
Compressed Air
High Mixer Settler
Interphase
Exit SolventLoaded U + Pu
* FP : Fission Products
PF*
U+Pu
Mixer settler
U+Pu+FP* Solvent SolventIn
Feed Aqueous Phase
U+Pu+FP* SolventOutLoaded with U+Pu
Exitraffinate FP*
54
2nd Extraction Cycle- Splitting Stage• The second step consists in separating U/Pu realized by
liquid-liquid extraction (see next figure).• It exploits the different redox properties of U and Pu.• In the first extraction column, the co-extraction U(VI)/Pu(IV)
is again performed.• After washing, the organic phase loaded in U(VI)/Pu(IV) is
injected into the second column where it is contacted with an aqueous solution containing a specific Pu reducer.
• U/Pu splitting takes place by reductive stripping of the plutonium.
• Indeed, Pu(IV) is reduced to Pu(III) and migrates into the aqueous phase, the organic phase containing U(VI) is treated by water (countercurrent) to realize the extraction of U(VI) into the aqueous phase.
• From this step, U and Pu will go in separated purification cycles (2 more cycles)
55
SolutionU + Pu
Solvent
HNO3 Reducer
SolventTreatment
Extr
act
ion
U +
Pu
Solv
ent
Wash
Reextr
act
ion
Pu
Effluents Pu
U +
Pu
SEPARATION U/Pu CYCLE
Aqueous
Solu
tion W
ash
Reextr
act
ion U
U
H2O
56
Reducer for Pu
Several Pu reducer can be used
• Ferrous sulfamate (Fe 2+, 2NH2, SO3-)
Pu 4+ + Fe 2+ Pu 3+ + Fe 3+
• Uranium (IV)*2Pu 4+ + U 4+ + 2H2O 2Pu 3+ + UO2
2+ + 4 H+
• Hydroxylamine nitrate (NH3OH+, NO3-)*
(*: the most used)
3223
3334 93
2
1
2
12,82 NOHOHONPuNOOHNHNOPu
57
Final conditioning
Uranium• A purified uranyl nitrate solution is concentrated
by distillation and the concentrated solutions ( U > 400 to 500 g/L) are essentially stored waiting to be reused.
• For U coming from PWR, a fraction is recycled for new enrichment, which requires the steps of precipitation/filtration of ADU, thermal decomposition which gives U3O8 and then transformation into UF6
58
Final conditioning (2)
• Uranium (2)• The recycling of uranium produced by LWR fuel
reprocessing is to as easy as the U-235 content of 1.07% would tend to imply.
• In fact, the uranium thus produced is also enriched with isotopes of atomic weight 232 (harmful due to hard g emitters decay products) and neutron absorbents U-234 and U-236.
• In France, however, the decision has been taken to recycle reprocessed uranium
59
Final conditioning (3)
Plutonium
• Plutonium is precipitated from the purified aqueous solution by addition of oxalic acid
• The plutonium oxalate, after filtration is calcinated at 450°C, which gives PuO2
HOHOCPuOCHPuOH
46)(2 22424224 2
222450
2242 466.)( COOHPuOOHOCPuC
60
Final conditioning (4)
Plutonium(2)• The plutonium recycle strategy currently adopted
by many countries consists in the preparation of mixed fuels (U, Pu)O2 (~7% Pu) called MOX for LWR reactors.
• A plant is build in France, MELOX, with a production capacity of 100 tons of heavy metal per year.
• A plant is being constructed in USA (August 2007), the MFFF facility, Savannah River Site (see class 20)
61
Final conditioning (5)
Military Plutonium
• In the case of military application of plutonium, Pu metal will be fabricated, 2 steps are necessary:
24
24500
2
22
24
CaFPuCaPuF
OHPuFHFPuOC
Fluorination
CalciothermyHigh
Temperature
62
Waste Conditioning
• Most of the radioactivity of the irradiated fuels can be found in the waste issued from the reprocessing plant.
• These waste from different flows (gas, liquid, solid) need to go towards different treatment units for– Reduction of their volume– Immobilization in specific matrices for their
temporary or permanent storage to avoid their release towards the biosphere
63
Gaseous Waste
• The different gaseous flows from the decladding unit and the off-gas from the dissolvers contain dangerous radionuclides: Kr-85, I-131(I2) and Ru-104 (RuO4)
• Furthermore considerable quantities of NOx gas are produced, that need to be recycled. Gas are washed, countercurrent wash, with water in the presence of H2O2, which gives the formation of HNO3 that can be recycled.
• NaOH trapping will trap I2 and Ru, radioactive iodine can be conditioned as PbI2, that can be safely stored.
• After going through different filters, the gas, that contain still radioactive isotopes of noble gas such as Kr-85, are rejected into the environment through chimneys that allow the rapid active gas dilution.
64
Liquid Waste
• The essential of FP is in the raffinate of the 1st extraction cycle.
• The other radioactive effluents produced by the other purification cycles contain lower amount of radioactivity.
• A second series of liquid effluents is made of degraded organic phases
• We will see in class 21 the treatment of these effluents
65
Solid Waste
2 categories• Waste issued from the process
– Cladding– Gas Traps (PbI2, AgI)– Muds produced during the treatment of liquid effluents– Solid products issued form the final treatment of the
solvent– Ion exchange resins ( treatment of the pools)
• Technological waste– Apparatus– Pumps…
66
Solid Waste (2)
• The main solid residue issued from dissolution consist of sections of clad or hulls weighing 300 kg per ton of fuel.
• For the time being, these wastes are stored at La Hague under water, amounting to interim storage. In the UP 3 and UP2 800, La Hague France, the hulls are immobilized in a concrete matrix for subsequent final disposal.
67
Solid Waste (3)
• The different waste are classified as a function of the radioactive type and its importance (, , , low, medium and high level waste).
• The conditioning is specific, it can be• Cementation (PWR hulls)• Wrapping in Epoxy resin (for the ion
exchange resins)• Bitumen isolation (mud from the effluent
treatment unit)
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