scholarly journals The Secret of the Copper Box: public experiments and the prospects of living archives of Swedish nuclear waste

2021 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 197-198
Author(s):  
Thomas P. Keating ◽  
Anna Storm

Abstract. This paper approaches the question of nuclear safety in relation to the prospects of living archives, and in particular, it explores two public events where sociocultural aspects of nuclear waste management in Sweden were enacted. Drawing on an ongoing research collaboration with the Swedish Nuclear Fuel and Waste Management Company (SKB), the paper examines (1) a grass-roots play entitled Kopparkistans hemlighet (or The Secret of the Copper Box), and (2) a drawing competition hosted by schools located near a nuclear waste storage facility in the Östhammar municipality, considering how these events help reproduce certain kinds of social and cultural responsibility. Contributing to critical debates in the social sciences and humanities intersecting questions of memory preservation, nuclear waste, and post-nuclear natures, we consider how the forms of responsibility produced through these public experiments inform important, albeit unconventional, modes of nuclear waste management insofar as they suggest how long-lived nuclear waste sites might become living archives without assuming a narrow notion of heritage and human memory preservation for all time and space. To conclude, we evaluate how the legacy of the two events might be incorporated into wider strategies of nuclear waste management.

2002 ◽  
Vol 757 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arun K. Setty ◽  
B. R. Cooper ◽  
D. L. Price

ABSTRACTPlutonium, well known for its unusual nuclear and material properties, has remained an unsolved problem for over a half century. Due to the continuing issue of safe, longterm nuclear waste storage, gaining an understanding of plutonium and its compounds cannot be overstated. Self-irradiation in plutonium leads to vacancy formation [1], and our computations indicate that the electronic structure we predict for pure delta plutonium is preserved in the presence of vacancies, and that vacancies do stabilize the delta phase. A preliminary study of self-diffusive properties of plutonium, and of diffusion at the interface of plutonium and iron indicates that plutonium atoms readily diffuse across the interface with steel. This has relevance in nuclear waste storage in steel containers for assessing the depth of penetration to be dealt with in surface treatment for decontamination. The effect of thermomigration (Soret effect) in the plutonium-steel system appears to facilitate the movement of plutonium atoms into the bulk steel.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald Joseph Turner ◽  
Pieter Bots ◽  
Alan Richardson ◽  
Paul Bingham ◽  
Alex Scrimshire ◽  
...  

(Hydroxy)apatite [Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2], has emerging potential as a cement coating material, with applications in environmental remediation, nuclear waste storage and architectural preservation. In these low temperature environments and when precipitating from...


Energies ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 3709
Author(s):  
Bader Alshuraiaan ◽  
Sergey Pushkin ◽  
Anastasia Kurilova ◽  
Magdalena Mazur

Recently, issues related to the effects (benefit or harm) of processing nuclear waste and its further use as fuel have been increasingly often raised in the scientific discussion. In this regard, the research aims to investigate issues related to the assessment of the economic potential of nuclear waste use, as well as the cooperation between states in the context of the reduction of risks associated with nuclear waste storage and processing. The research methodology is based on an integrated approach, including statistical, factor analysis, and the proposed system of performance indicators for managing spent nuclear fuel use. The research was carried out on the basis of materials from Russia and the EU countries. In the course of the study, a model of cooperation between states has been developed (based on the example of technologies and methods of processing nuclear waste used in the EU and Russia) according to the nuclear waste (spent nuclear fuel) management algorithm. The model considers the risks and threats associated with ecology and safety. The developments and other results described in the study should be used in further research devoted to the use of nuclear waste as heat-producing elements.


2003 ◽  
Vol 807 ◽  

The symposium “Scientific Basis for Nuclear Waste Management XVII” was held in June 15 – 19, 2003, in Kalmar, Sweden. The symposium, which was officially opened by the County Govenor of Kalmar County, Sven Lindgren, attracted 222 participants from 21 countries. Nearly 200 papers were presented during the three days of scientific sessions.Organizing a symposium this size requires the assistance of a large number of people involved both in establishing the scientific program and in planning and executing the practical organizational arrangements. Our window to the world, the symposium's homepage, was continuously kept up to date through the excellent work of Jonny Rönnfjord.


2021 ◽  
Vol 570 ◽  
pp. 121016
Author(s):  
Akhilesh C. Joshi ◽  
Mainak Roy ◽  
Dimple P. Dutta ◽  
Raman K. Mishra ◽  
Sher Singh Meena ◽  
...  

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