April 1, 2012
Report

Ion Exchange Kinetics Testing with SRF Resin

Abstract

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Hanford Site contains more than 53 million gallons of legacy waste generated as a byproduct of plutonium production and reprocessing operations. The wastes are a complex mixture composed mostly of NaNO3, NaNO2, NaOH, NaAlO2, Na3PO4, and Na2SO4, with a number of minor and trace metals, organics, and radionuclides stored in underground waste tanks. The DOE Office of River Protection (ORP) has contracted Bechtel National Incorporated (BNI) to build a pretreatment facility, the River Protection Project-Waste Treatment Plant (RPP-WTP), that will separate long-lived transuranics (TRU) and highly radioactive components (specifically 137Cs and, in selected cases, 90Sr) from the bulk (non-radioactive) constituents and immobilize the wastes by vitrification. The plant is designed to produce two waste streams: a high-volume low-activity waste (LAW) and a low-volume high-activity waste (HLW).

Revised: April 30, 2012 | Published: April 1, 2012

Citation

Russell R.L., D.E. Rinehart, G.N. Brown, P.P. Schonewill, and R.A. Peterson. 2012. Ion Exchange Kinetics Testing with SRF Resin Richland, WA: Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.