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Dive into the research topics where Fidel Grandia is active.

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Featured researches published by Fidel Grandia.


Journal of Contaminant Hydrology | 2008

Long-term geochemical evolution of the near field repository: Insights from reactive transport modelling and experimental evidences

David Arcos; Fidel Grandia; Cristina Domènech; Ana María Fernández; M.V. Villar; Arto Muurinen; Torbjörn Carlsson; Patrik Sellin; Pedro Hernán

The KBS-3 underground nuclear waste repository concept designed by the Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Co. (SKB) includes a bentonite buffer barrier surrounding the copper canisters and the iron insert where spent nuclear fuel will be placed. Bentonite is also part of the backfill material used to seal the access and deposition tunnels of the repository. The bentonite barrier has three main safety functions: to ensure the physical stability of the canister, to retard the intrusion of groundwater to the canisters, and in case of canister failure, to retard the migration of radionuclides to the geosphere. Laboratory experiments (< 10 years long) have provided evidence of the control exerted by accessory minerals and clay surfaces on the pore water chemistry. The evolution of the pore water chemistry will be a primordial factor on the long-term stability of the bentonite barrier, which is a key issue in the safety assessments of the KBS-3 concept. In this work we aim to study the long-term geochemical evolution of bentonite and its pore water in the evolving geochemical environment due to climate change. In order to do this, reactive transport simulations are used to predict the interaction between groundwater and bentonite which is simulated following two different pathways: (1) groundwater flow through the backfill in the deposition tunnels, eventually reaching the top of the deposition hole, and (2) direct connection between groundwater and bentonite rings through fractures in the granite crosscutting the deposition hole. The influence of changes in climate has been tested using three different waters interacting with the bentonite: present-day groundwater, water derived from ice melting, and deep-seated brine. Two commercial bentonites have been considered as buffer material, MX-80 and Deponit CA-N, and one natural clay (Friedland type) for the backfill. They show differences in the composition of the exchangeable cations and in the accessory mineral content. Results from the simulations indicate that pore water chemistry is controlled by the equilibrium with the accessory minerals, especially carbonates. pH is buffered by precipitation/dissolution of calcite and dolomite, when present. The equilibrium of these minerals is deeply influenced by gypsum dissolution and cation exchange reactions in the smectite interlayer. If carbonate minerals are initially absent in bentonite, pH is then controlled by surface acidity reactions in the hydroxyl groups at the edge sites of the clay fraction, although its buffering capacity is not as strong as the equilibrium with carbonate minerals. The redox capacity of the bentonite pore water system is mainly controlled by Fe(II)-bearing minerals (pyrite and siderite). Changes in the groundwater composition lead to variations in the cation exchange occupancy, and dissolution-precipitation of carbonate minerals and gypsum. The most significant changes in the evolution of the system are predicted when ice-melting water, which is highly diluted and alkaline, enters into the system. In this case, the dissolution of carbonate minerals is enhanced, increasing pH in the bentonite pore water. Moreover, a rapid change in the population of exchange sites in the smectite is expected due to the replacement of Na for Ca.


ChemInform | 2011

Assessment of the Radium—Barium Co-precipitation and Its Potential Influence on the Solubility of Ra in the Near-Field

Fidel Grandia; Joan Merino; Jordi Bruno


Applied Geochemistry | 2011

Quantitative assessment of radionuclide retention in the Quaternary sediments/granite interface of the Fennoscandian shield (Sweden)

Fidel Grandia; Clara Sena; David Arcos; Jorge Molinero; Lara Duro; Jordi Bruno


Greenhouse Gases-Science and Technology | 2015

Experimental and numerical modeling of CO2leakage in the vadose zone

Andrea Gasparini; Anthony Credoz; Fidel Grandia; David Angel Garcia; Jordi Bruno


Greenhouse Gases-Science and Technology | 2014

Use of diffusive gradients in thin films (DGT) as an early detection tool of low‐intensity leakage from CO 2 storage

Marco Agnelli; Fidel Grandia; Anthony Credoz; Andrea Gasparini; Jordi Bruno


Goldschmidt2013 Conference Abstracts | Goldschmidt 2013 | 25-30 de agosto | Florencia | 2013

Gas discharges for continental Spain: geochemical and isotopic features

Orlando Vaselli; Barbara Nisi; T. Franco; Tom Darrah; Jordi Bruno; Javier de Elio Medina; Fidel Grandia; Luis Pérez del Villar


Radioprotection | 2009

Modelling the radionuclide transfer from bedrock to surface systems at Forsmark site (Sweden)

Fidel Grandia; Clara Sena; David Arcos; Jorge Molinero; Lara Duro; Jordi Bruno


Energy Procedia | 2018

Metal release in shallow aquifers impacted by deep CO2 fluxes

Marco Agnelli; Fidel Grandia; David Soler; Alvaro Sáinz-García; David Brusi; Manel Zamorano; Anna Menció


Applied Geochemistry | 2017

Sorption of radium onto early cretaceous clays (Gault and Plicatules Fm). Implications for a repository of low-level, long-lived radioactive waste

Tiziana Missana; Elisenda Colàs; Fidel Grandia; Javier Olmeda; M. Mingarro; Miguel García-Gutiérrez; Isabelle Munier; Jean-Charles Robinet; Mireia Grivé


Annals of Geophysics | 2017

Atmospheric dispersion modelling of CO2 emission in the Colli Albani volcanic district (Central Italy)

Andrea Gasparini; Fidel Grandia; Luca Tarchini

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Jordi Bruno

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

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Juan Caballero

Technical University of Madrid

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Andrea Gasparini

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

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J. González

University of Cantabria

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