Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1737822 Journal of Environmental Radioactivity 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A material for a permeable reactive barrier for Cs-137 remediation is proposed.•The mechanism is based on the sorption of cesium on illite-containing clay.•The permeability is provided by mixing the clay on a matrix of wood shavings.•Laboratory tests combined with transport modeling have been used to design a full scale barrier.

Clay minerals are reputed sorbents for Cs-137 and can be used as a low-permeability material to prevent groundwater flow. Therefore, clay barriers are employed to seal Cs-137 polluted areas and nuclear waste repositories. This work is motivated by cases where groundwater flow cannot be impeded. A permeable and reactive barrier to retain Cs-137 was tested. The trapping mechanism is based on the sorption of cesium on illite-containing clay. The permeability of the reactive material is provided by mixing clay on a matrix of wood shavings. Column tests combined with reactive transport modeling were performed to check both reactivity and permeability. Hydraulic conductivity of the mixture (10−4 m/s) was sufficient to ensure an adequate hydraulic performance of an eventual barrier excavated in most aquifers. A number of column experiments confirmed Cs retention under different flow rates and inflow solutions. A 1D reactive transport model based on a cation-exchange mechanism was built. It was calibrated with batch experiments for high concentrations of NH4+ and K+ (the main competitors of Cs in the exchange positions). The model predicted satisfactorily the results of the column experiments. Once validated, it was used to investigate the performance and duration of a 2 m thick barrier under different scenarios (flow, clay content, Cs-137 and K concentration).

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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