February 18, 2015
Conference Paper

Gas Retention and Release from Hanford Site Sludge Waste Tanks

Abstract

Radioactive wastes from nuclear fuel processing are stored in large underground storage tanks at the Hanford Site. Solid wastes can be divided into saltcake (mostly precipitated soluble sodium nitrate and nitrite salts with some interstitial liquid consisting of concentrated salt solutions) and sludge (mostly low solubility aluminum and iron compounds with relatively dilute interstitial liquid). Waste generates hydrogen through the radiolysis of water and organic compounds, radio-thermolytic decomposition of organic compounds, and corrosion of a tank’s carbon steel walls. Nonflammable gases, such as nitrous oxide and nitrogen, are also produced. Additional flammable gases (e.g., ammonia and methane) are generated by chemical reactions between various degradation products of organic chemicals present in the tanks.

Revised: September 28, 2015 | Published: February 18, 2015

Citation

Meacham J.E., J.R. Follett, P.A. Gauglitz, B.E. Wells, and P.P. Schonewill. 2015. Gas Retention and Release from Hanford Site Sludge Waste Tanks. In Annual Waste Management Symposium (WM2015) March 15-19, 2015, Phoenix, Arizona, 8, 5963-5973; Paper No. 15491. Tempe, Arizona:WM Symposia, Inc. PNNL-SA-108228.