Abstract
The depth and layout of a horizontal borehole repository has the potential to offer strong isolation of nuclear waste from the surface. However, the isolation may be compromised by the borehole used to access the repository, as it could provide a direct fast-flow path transporting radionuclides from the disposal section to the accessible environment. Thus, backfilling the disposal section and sealing the access hole are considered essential engineered safety components. To analyze the importance of plugging the open space between canisters and sealing the access hole, we numerically calculate non-isothermal fluid flow and radionuclide transport through the borehole and the surrounding geosphere for a variety of scenarios, which include backfill materials with different sealing properties and configurations that potentially induce strong driving forces along both the horizontal and vertical sections of the borehole. The simulations indicate that the dose contribution of radionuclides released through the access hole is small, even if the backfill material is of poor quality or has deteriorated, and even if considerable horizontal and vertical pressure gradients are imposed by assuming the underlying formation is overpressured and that the disposal section is intersected by faults activated during a seismic event. The modeling also reveals that the low influence of backfill integrity on repository performance partly arises from the very high length-to-diameter ratio of the borehole, which favors the radial diffusion of radionuclides—as well as pressure dissipation and associated advective transport—into the surrounding formation rather than axial transport along the borehole. The integrated modeling approach also exposes the importance of accounting for the connections and feedback mechanisms among the various subcomponents of the repository system.
Highlights
We investigate the disposal of nuclear waste in a deep horizontal borehole repository (DHBR) as a viable option to protect the public from radiation hazards [1]
Recall that the purpose of this study is to examine whether this leakage fraction is significant, and if so, whether it is essential to backfill the borehole with a sealing material that will have sufficiently low permeability for periods far outside the Energies 2021, 14, x FOR PEER REVrIEaWnge of engineering experience
Should the sealing of an access borehole be compromised, only the radionuclides from a fraction of a single disposal section may migrate toward the vertical access hole
Summary
We investigate the disposal of nuclear waste in a deep horizontal borehole repository (DHBR) as a viable option to protect the public from radiation hazards [1]. Such a geological repository consists of an array of vertical boreholes, each with a horizontal section that is drilled into a suitable host formation, and where waste canisters are emplaced endto-end in the cased horizontal disposal section. To facilitate waste emplacement (and potential retrieval), the disposal section is accessed by a vertical hole, which gradually turns horizontal to reach the host rock at the target depth of approximately 1 to 3 km. As part of repository closure, the vertical and curved sections of the access hole may be sealed and plugged in certain locations, and the rest can be backfilled, with the goal to prevent the development of preferential flow paths and to maintain or restore the natural conditions in the host rock, which may have been disturbed during the operational phase
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.