Abstract

Highly compacted bentonite is an ideal back-filling (buffer) material for the deep geological disposal of high-level radioactive waste. Montmorillonite is the main constituent mineral of it. The nanoscopic swelling characteristic of montmorillonite mineral particles greatly influences the macroscopic buffering performance of highly compacted bentonite blocks. Firstly, the montmorillonite suspension liquid was exfoliated by freeze-thaw cycles, the appropriate mineral particles were selected by atomic force microscope (AFM) for making colloidal probes. Then, the swelling pressure between mineral particles was measured by AFM, investigating the effects of interlayer distance, layer number, temperature, and interlayer cation type on the nanoscale swelling pressure. The experimental results showed that the swelling pressure of montmorillonite mineral particles peaks at about 0.7–0.8 nm interlayer distance. The swelling pressure of mineral particles with more layers is smaller. The higher the ambient temperature, the greater the swelling pressure. The swelling pressure of Ca-montmorillonite is significantly larger than that of Na-montmorillonite. The Laird model has a relatively good applicability with the interlayer distance of 0.6–1.2 nm; the DLVO theory has a good applicability with the interlayer distance greater than 1.5 nm. Finally, a predictive model was developed for the swelling pressure of nanoscopic mineral particles considering the effect of layer number. The research results provide data support and theoretical support for swelling pressure generation and cross-scale transmission mechanism of highly compacted bentonite hydration.

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