Abstract

The geological disposal of high-level radioactive waste is the final step in the nuclear fuel cycle. It is realized via isolating the high-level radioactive waste in the geological environment with an appropriate system of engineered barriers. Radionuclides-containing materials must be isolated from the biosphere until the radioactivity contained in them has diminished to a safe level. In the case of high-level radioactive waste, it could take hundreds of thousands of years. Within such a long timescale, a number of physical and chemical processes will take part in the geological repository. For the assessment of radionuclide migration from a geological repository, it is necessary to predict the repository’s behavior once placed in the host rock as well as the host-rock response to disturbances due to construction. In this study, the analysis of repository barriers (backfill, concrete, inner excavation disturbed zone (EDZ), outer EDZ, host rock) thermo–hydraulic–mechanical (THM) evolution was performed, and the scope of gas-induced desaturation was analyzed with COMSOL Multiphysics. The analysis was based on modelling of a two-phase flow of miscible fluid (water and H2) considering important phenomena such as gas dissolution and diffusion, advective–diffusive transport in the gaseous phase, and mechanical deformations due to thermal expansion of water and porous media. The importance of proper consideration of temperature-dependent thermodynamic properties of water and THM couplings in the analysis of near-field processes was also discussed. The modelling demonstrated that such activities as 50 years’ ventilation of the waste disposal tunnel in initially saturated porous media, and such processes as gas generation due to corrosion of waste package or heat load from the waste, also led to desaturation of barriers. H2 gas generation led to the desaturation in engineered barriers and in a part of the EDZ close to the gas generation place vanishing soon after finish of gas generation, while the host rock remained saturated during the gas generation phase (50–100,000 years). Radionuclide transport properties in porous media such as effective diffusivity are highly dependent on the water content in the barriers determined by their porosity and saturation.

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