scholarly journals Effects of Kinetic Radionuclide Sorption onto Colloids for Radionuclide Transport in Fractured Rock Experimental and Numerical Studies

2004 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 249-256
Author(s):  
Susumu KUROSAWA ◽  
Motomu IBARAKI ◽  
Shinzo UETA ◽  
Mikazu YUI ◽  
Hideki YOSHIKAWA
2004 ◽  
Vol 824 ◽  
Author(s):  
Susumu Kurosawa ◽  
Motomu Ibaraki ◽  
Mikazu Yui ◽  
Shinzo Ueta ◽  
Hideki Yoshikawa

AbstractNumerous studies have shown that colloidal particles in groundwater can facilitate radionuclide transport in subsurface environments. A series of laboratory experiments was conducted to investigate the effects of radionuclide sorption onto colloids and the surfaces of rock fractures. This research especially focused on the kinetic behavior of the sorption process. A mixed solution of Cs and clay colloids was injected into a single artificial fracture in a granite column. Simulations were also performed to analyze the experimental results using a numerical code, COLFRAC, which describes colloid-facilitated solute transport in discretely-fractured media. The code allows for either equilibrium or kinetic sorption onto the colloidal particles. The experimental and analytical results indicate that transport of Cs is facilitated by the colloidal particles, which can sorb Cs and transport through the fracture. The analyses also illustrate the importance of evaluating parameters that describe kinetic sorption onto colloids. Furthermore, radionuclide transport is likely to be retarded as colloidal particles that sorb radionuclides are filtered on the fracture surface.


2012 ◽  
Vol 414-415 ◽  
pp. 220-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhenxue Dai ◽  
Andrew Wolfsberg ◽  
Paul Reimus ◽  
Hailin Deng ◽  
Edward Kwicklis ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 663 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Ota ◽  
W.R. Alexander ◽  
P.A. Smith ◽  
A. Möri ◽  
B. Frieg ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe joint Nagra/JNC Radionuclide Retardation Programme has now been ongoing for 15 years with the main aim of direct testing of radionuclide transport models in as realistic a manner as possible. A large programme of field, laboratory and natural analogue studies has been carried out at the Grimsel Test Site in the central Swiss Alps and the Kamaishi In Situ Test Site in north-east Japan. The understanding and modelling of both the processes and the structures influencing radionuclide transport/retardation in fractured host rocks have matured as has the experimental technology, which has contributed to develop confidence in the applicability of the underlying research models in a repository performance assessment. In this paper, the successes and set-backs of this programme are discussed as is the general approach to the thorough testing of the process models and of model assumptions. In addition, a set of key findings is presented, involving discussions on the enhancement of confidence through the program.


1994 ◽  
Vol 353 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dwayne A. Chesnut

AbstractInflow measurements at Stripa and in other underground openings in Sweden, as well as observations elsewhere in mines and tunnels, reveal that there is generally an extremely broad distribution of groundwater flux in fractured rock. Non-sorbing and sorbing tracer tests typically show similar variability in groundwater travel time (GWTT) and tracer transport.In the U.S. Nuclear Waste Program, Nuclear Regulatory Commission regulations require the GWTT from the disturbed zone to the accessible environment to exceed 1000 years. The regulations seem to envision a rather uniform and narrow distribution of travel time, with perhaps a few identifiable “fast pathways” contained within the rock mass surrounding a potential repository. The premise is that most of these features could be mapped during site characterization, and that regions of the potential repository host rock containing such features could be avoided during waste emplacement.However, both field experience and theoretical studies in recent years provide strong evidence that groundwater flux, GWTT, and aqueous transport of dissolved substances exhibit extremely heterogeneous behavior, even in intact porous media and in fractured rock regions between major features. These phenomena are all dominated by the spatial distribution of permeability within the rock mass of interest. The permeability distribution is often approximately log-normal, with a natural log standard deviation, σ. For unfractured porous rock, σ typically ranges from about 0.6 to about 1.2 for field-scale investigations, and for fractured permeable media, it frequently exceeds 2. Values of σ smaller than 0.6 may be observed in small field-scale projects when the macroscopic flow regime is essentially linear within very uniform sediments and in laboratory displacement experitments.With some additional assumptions, a log-normal permeability distribution implies that groundwater flux, GWTT, and the transport of radionuclides from a potential repository are also log-normal. To first order, the appropriate value of σ describing these distributions is the same as the value for the permeability distribution. This allows σ to be estimated from a large number of hydraulic or pneumatic packer tests within the fractured rock mass of interest.We define a groundwater transport function (GWTF) for the rate of radioactivity release to the accessible environment (AE) at time t resulting from the release of a pulse of unit activity at time 0. The GWTF depends on the mean groundwater travel time, tw, and σ, as well as the retardation factor and decay constant. As σ increases from 0 (a hypothetical completely homogeneous system), the radioactivity breakthrough at early time increases from 0 to 100%. This behavior is consistent with our intuitive notions of “fast transport pathways” in heterogeneous systems, and σ is thus seen to be a parameter for quantifying the effects of heterogeneity.Convolution of the GWTF with a time-dependent release function for the Engineered Barrier System (EBS) is easily performed numerically, resulting in the rate of release to the AE as a function of time, which can then be integrated numerically to calculate the cumulative release as a function of time. The convolution approach clearly separates the effects of uncertainty and heterogeneity on repository performance and is extremely useful for sensitivity analyses. An example calculation shows the combinations of σ and tw required for compliance with total system release standards.Since the effect of heterogeneity is captured by a single parameter in a deterministic calculation, uncertainty can be investigated separately by Monte Carlo sampling from distributions of such parameters as σ, tw and source term strength, allowing (in the future) specific and scientifically meaningful goals to be defined for both site characterization and design.Finally, we emphasize that this approach, in its present form, does not include thermal effects. These effects may dominate both the EBS failure rate and hydrogeochemical behavior, including radionuclide transport, for most of the compliance period and beyond. It cannot be used directly to support any particular thermal loading strategy.


2012 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. vzj2011.0142 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bruce A. Robinson ◽  
Shaoping Chu ◽  
Zhiming Lu

2015 ◽  
Vol 22 (01) ◽  
pp. 1550008 ◽  
Author(s):  
YE XUE LI ◽  
ZHENG LI ◽  
JIAN HUI FAN ◽  
ZHI YONG JIA

A novel approach called the YUV dimension method is proposed in this study to indirectly characterize fractured rock surface topography. This model is based on YUV color model theory in iconography and graphics. The process is described in detail as follows. A true-color photo with m pixels is selected. Y is denoted by gray scale, U by hue, and V by the saturation components of the pixel color. These components are applied to create the z, x and y coordinates of the point in the coordinate system that originates from the pixel. A similar method is applied in each pixel. M points are created in the coordinate space. The number of created points is equivalent to one of the pixels. The m points are then connected and a rough YUV surface is established. Otherwise, the calculation method for the self-affine dimension of a n - 1 ~ n-dimensional fractal body is presented by fractal Brownian motion theory and then degenerated to one between the 2D and 3D case. The approach is applied to evaluate the dimension of the YUV surface, i.e. the YUV dimension. To validate the feasibility of YUV dimension theory, numerical studies on the YUV dimension are conducted through a laser profilometer scanning experiment and scanning electron microscopy with the same specimens. The surface characteristics of similar samples are analyzed by probing into the YUV, general and grayscale dimensions of the specimens. The comparison shows that the YUV and general dimensions of similar specimens are fundamentally identical, and the complete trends of the YUV and gray dimensions remain consistent with changing specimens. The result indicates that YUV dimension theory is reasonable and feasible. In short, the YUV dimension is a new method that exhibits more advantages than the general and grayscale dimensions. This method characterizes surface configuration indirectly.


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