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Dive into the research topics where Geoffrey A. Freeze is active.

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Featured researches published by Geoffrey A. Freeze.


Archive | 2009

Deep Borehole Disposal of High-Level Radioactive Waste.

Bill Walter Arnold; Patrick V. Brady; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Peter N. Swift; Joshua. Stein

Preliminary evaluation of deep borehole disposal of high-level radioactive waste and spent nuclear fuel indicates the potential for excellent long-term safety performance at costs competitive with mined repositories. Significant fluid flow through basement rock is prevented, in part, by low permeabilities, poorly connected transport pathways, and overburden self-sealing. Deep fluids also resist vertical movement because they are density stratified. Thermal hydrologic calculations estimate the thermal pulse from emplaced waste to be small (less than 20 C at 10 meters from the borehole, for less than a few hundred years), and to result in maximum total vertical fluid movement of ~100 m. Reducing conditions will sharply limit solubilities of most dose-critical radionuclides at depth, and high ionic strengths of deep fluids will prevent colloidal transport. For the bounding analysis of this report, waste is envisioned to be emplaced as fuel assemblies stacked inside drill casing that are lowered, and emplaced using off-theshelf oilfield and geothermal drilling techniques, into the lower 1-2 km portion of a vertical borehole ~ 45 cm in diameter and 3-5 km deep, followed by borehole sealing. Deep borehole disposal of radioactive waste in the United States would require modifications to the Nuclear Waste Policy Act and to applicable regulatory standards for long-term performance set by the US Environmental Protection Agency (40 CFR part 191) and US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (10 CFR part 60). The performance analysis described here is based on the assumption that long-term standards for deep borehole disposal would be identical in the key regards to those prescribed for existing repositories (40 CFR part 197 and 10 CFR part 63).


Archive | 2015

Thermal-Hydrology Simulations of Disposal of High-Level Radioactive Waste in a Single Deep Borehole

Teklu Hadgu; Emily Stein; Ernest Hardin; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Glenn E. Hammond

Simulations of thermal-hydrology were carried out for the emplacement of spent nuclear fuel canisters and cesium and strontium capsules using the PFLOTRAN simulator. For the cesium and strontium capsules the analysis looked at disposal options such as different disposal configurations and surface aging of waste to reduce thermal effects. The simulations studied temperature and fluid flux in the vicinity of the borehole. Simulation results include temperature and vertical flux profiles around the borehole at selected depths. Of particular importance are peak temperature increases, and fluxes at the top of the disposal zone. Simulations of cesium and strontium capsule disposal predict that surface aging and/or emplacement of the waste at the top of the disposal zone reduces thermal effects and vertical fluid fluxes. Smaller waste canisters emplaced over a longer disposal zone create the smallest thermal effect and vertical fluid fluxes no matter the age of the waste or depth of emplacement.


Archive | 2014

Performance Assessment Modeling and Sensitivity Analyses of Generic Disposal System Concepts.

S. David Sevougian; Geoffrey A. Freeze; William Payton Gardner; Glenn E. Hammond; Paul Mariner

directly, rather than through simplified abstractions. It also a llows for complex representations of the source term, e.g., the explicit representation of many individual waste packages (i.e., meter - scale detail of an entire waste emplacement drift). This report fulfills the Generic Disposal System Analysis Work Packa ge Level 3 Milestone - Performance Assessment Modeling and Sensitivity Analyses of Generic Disposal System Concepts (M 3 FT - 1 4 SN08080 3 2 ).


Archive | 2011

Nuclear Energy Advanced Modeling and Simulation (NEAMS) Waste Integrated Performance and Safety Codes (IPSC): Gap Analysis for High Fidelity and Performance Assessment Code Development

Joon H. Lee; Malcolm Dean Siegel; Jose G. Arguello; Stephen Walter Webb; Thomas A. Dewers; Paul Mariner; Harold Carter Edwards; Timothy Jesse. Fuller; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Carlos F. Jove-Colon; Yifeng Wang

This report describes a gap analysis performed in the process of developing the Waste Integrated Performance and Safety Codes (IPSC) in support of the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Nuclear Energy Advanced Modeling and Simulation (NEAMS) Campaign. The goal of the Waste IPSC is to develop an integrated suite of computational modeling and simulation capabilities to quantitatively assess the long-term performance of waste forms in the engineered and geologic environments of a radioactive waste storage or disposal system. The Waste IPSC will provide this simulation capability (1) for a range of disposal concepts, waste form types, engineered repository designs, and geologic settings, (2) for a range of time scales and distances, (3) with appropriate consideration of the inherent uncertainties, and (4) in accordance with rigorous verification, validation, and software quality requirements. The gap analyses documented in this report were are performed during an initial gap analysis to identify candidate codes and tools to support the development and integration of the Waste IPSC, and during follow-on activities that delved into more detailed assessments of the various codes that were acquired, studied, and tested. The current Waste IPSC strategy is to acquire and integrate the necessary Waste IPSC capabilities wherever feasible, and develop only those capabilities that cannot be acquired or suitably integrated, verified, or validated. The gap analysis indicates that significant capabilities may already exist in the existing THC codes although there is no single code able to fully account for all physical and chemical processes involved in a waste disposal system. Large gaps exist in modeling chemical processes and their couplings with other processes. The coupling of chemical processes with flow transport and mechanical deformation remains challenging. The data for extreme environments (e.g., for elevated temperature and high ionic strength media) that are needed for repository modeling are severely lacking. In addition, most of existing reactive transport codes were developed for non-radioactive contaminants, and they need to be adapted to account for radionuclide decay and in-growth. The accessibility to the source codes is generally limited. Because the problems of interest for the Waste IPSC are likely to result in relatively large computational models, a compact memory-usage footprint and a fast/robust solution procedure will be needed. A robust massively parallel processing (MPP) capability will also be required to provide reasonable turnaround times on the analyses that will be performed with the code. A performance assessment (PA) calculation for a waste disposal system generally requires a large number (hundreds to thousands) of model simulations to quantify the effect of model parameter uncertainties on the predicted repository performance. A set of codes for a PA calculation must be sufficiently robust and fast in terms of code execution. A PA system as a whole must be able to provide multiple alternative models for a specific set of physical/chemical processes, so that the users can choose various levels of modeling complexity based on their modeling needs. This requires PA codes, preferably, to be highly modularized. Most of the existing codes have difficulties meeting these requirements. Based on the gap analysis results, we have made the following recommendations for the code selection and code development for the NEAMS waste IPSC: (1) build fully coupled high-fidelity THCMBR codes using the existing SIERRA codes (e.g., ARIA and ADAGIO) and platform, (2) use DAKOTA to build an enhanced performance assessment system (EPAS), and build a modular code architecture and key code modules for performance assessments. The key chemical calculation modules will be built by expanding the existing CANTERA capabilities as well as by extracting useful components from other existing codes.


MRS Online Proceedings Library Archive | 2011

Preliminary Performance Assessment for Deep Borehole Disposal of High-Level Radioactive Waste

Peter N. Swift; Bill Walter Arnold; Patrick V. Brady; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Teklu Hadgu; Joon H. Lee


Archive | 2012

A prototype performance assessment model for generic deep borehole repository for high-level nuclear waste.

Joon H. Lee; Bill Walter Arnold; Peter N. Swift; Teklu Hadgu; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Yifeng Wang


Archive | 2012

Sensitivity Analysis of Seals Permeability and Performance Assessment of Deep Borehole Disposal of Radioactive Waste.

Teklu Hadgu; Bill Walter Arnold; Joon H. Lee; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Palmer Vaughn


Archive | 2011

A simplified performance assessment (PA) model for radioactive waste disposal alternatives.

Geoffrey A. Freeze; Joon H. Lee


Geological Repository Systems for Safe Disposal of Spent Nuclear Fuels and Radioactive Waste (Second Edition) | 2017

Deep borehole disposal of nuclear waste: US perspective

Patrick V. Brady; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Kristopher L. Kuhlman; Ernest Hardin; David Sassani; Robert J. MacKinnon


Archive | 2016

Drilling and Testing in the Deep Borehole Field Test.

Kristopher L. Kuhlman; David Sassani; Geoffrey A. Freeze; Ernest Hardin; Patrick V. Brady

Collaboration


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Ernest Hardin

Sandia National Laboratories

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Patrick V. Brady

Sandia National Laboratories

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Robert J. MacKinnon

Sandia National Laboratories

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Bill Walter Arnold

Sandia National Laboratories

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David Sassani

Sandia National Laboratories

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Peter N. Swift

Sandia National Laboratories

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Joon H. Lee

Sandia National Laboratories

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Glenn E. Hammond

Sandia National Laboratories

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Paul Mariner

Sandia National Laboratories

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S. David Sevougian

Sandia National Laboratories

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