Harris R. Greenberg
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
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Archive | 2011
Rob L Howard; Mark Dupont; James A. Blink; Massimiliano Fratoni; Harris R. Greenberg; Joe Carter; Ernest Hardin; Mark Sutton
Reference concepts for geologic disposal of used nuclear fuel and high-level radioactive waste in the U.S. are developed, including geologic settings and engineered barriers. Repository thermal analysis is demonstrated for a range of waste types from projected future, advanced nuclear fuel cycles. The results show significant differences among geologic media considered (clay/shale, crystalline rock, salt), and also that waste package size and waste loading must be limited to meet targeted maximum temperature values. In this study, the UFD RD (2) waste generated from reprocessing of LWR UOX UNF to recover U and Pu, and subsequent direct disposal of used Pu-MOX fuel (also used in LWRs) in a modified-open cycle; and (3) waste generated by continuous recycling of metal fuel from fast reactors operating in a TRU burner configuration, with additional TRU material input supplied from reprocessing of LWR UOX fuel. The geologic setting provides the natural barriers, and establishes the boundary conditions for performance of engineered barriers. The composition and physical properties of the host medium dictate design and construction approaches, and determine hydrologic and thermal responses of the disposal system. Clay/shale, salt, and crystalline rock media are selected as the basis for reference mined geologic disposal concepts in this study, consistent with advanced international repository programs, and previous investigations in the U.S. The U.S. pursued deep geologic disposal programs in crystalline rock, shale, salt, and volcanic rock in the years leading up to the Nuclear Waste Policy Act, or NWPA (Rechard et al. 2011). The 1987 NWPA amendment act focused the U.S. program on unsaturated, volcanic rock at the Yucca Mountain site, culminating in the 2008 license application. Additional work on unsaturated, crystalline rock settings (e.g., volcanic tuff) is not required to support this generic study. Reference disposal concepts are selected for the media listed above and for deep borehole disposal, drawing from recent work in the U.S. and internationally. The main features of the repository concepts are discussed in Section 4.5 and summarized in Table ES-1. Temperature histories at the waste package surface and a specified distance into the host rock are calculated for combinations of waste types and reference disposal concepts, specifying waste package emplacement modes. Target maximum waste package surface temperatures are identified, enabling a sensitivity study to inform the tradeoff between the quantity of waste per disposal package, and decay storage duration, with respect to peak temperature at the waste package surface. For surface storage duration on the order of 100 years or less, waste package sizes for direct disposal of SNF are effectively limited to 4-PWR configurations (or equivalent size and output). Thermal results are summarized, along with recommendations for follow-on work including adding additional reference concepts, verification and uncertainty analysis for thermal calculations, developing descriptions of surface facilities and other system details, and cost estimation to support system-level evaluations.
Volume 1: Low/Intermediate-Level Radioactive Waste Management; Spent Fuel, Fissile Material, Transuranic and High-Level Radioactive Waste Management | 2013
Rob P. Rechard; Joon H. Lee; Mark Sutton; Harris R. Greenberg; Bruce A. Robinson; W. Mark Nutt
This paper provides a qualitative evaluation of the impact of advanced fuel cycles, particularly partition and transmutation of actinides, on the uncertainty associated with geologic disposal. Based on the discussion, advanced fuel cycles, will not materially alter (1) the repository performance, (2) the spread in dose results around the mean, (3) the modeling effort to include significant features, events, and processes in the performance assessment, or (4) the characterization of uncertainty associated with a geologic disposal system in the regulatory environment of the United States.Copyright
Annals of Nuclear Energy | 2016
Nicholas R. Brown; Brett W. Carlsen; Brent Dixon; Bo Feng; Harris R. Greenberg; Ross D. Hays; Stefano Passerini; Michael Todosow; Andrew Worrall
Archive | 2014
Kathryn D. Huff; Massimiliano Fratoni; Harris R. Greenberg
Archive | 2012
C Smith; James A. Blink; Massimiliano Fratoni; Harris R. Greenberg; W Halsey; A J Simon; Mark Sutton
Archive | 2011
M. Sutton; James A. Blink; Massimiliano Fratoni; Harris R. Greenberg; William G. Halsey; Thomas J. Wolery
Archive | 2015
Ernest Hardin; Teklu Hadgu; Harris R. Greenberg; Mark Dupont
Transactions of the american nuclear society | 2014
Kathryn D. Huff; Massimiliano Fratoni; Harris R. Greenberg
Archive | 2014
Bill Walter Arnold; Patrick V. Brady; M. Sutton; Karl P. Travis; Robert J. MacKinnon; Fergus G. F. Gibb; Harris R. Greenberg
Archive | 2013
Ernest. Hardin; Rob L Howard; John M Scaglione; Harris R. Greenberg; Joe Carter; Srnl; William Mark Nutt