May 1, 2012
Book Chapter

Radionuclide and contaminant immobilization in the fluidized bed steam reforming waste products

Abstract

The goal of this chapter is to introduce the reader to the Fluidized Bed Steam Reforming (FBSR) process and resulting waste form. The first section of the chapter gives an overview of the potential need for FBSR processing in nuclear waste remediation followed by an overview of the engineering involved in the process itself. This is followed by a description of waste form production at a chemical level followed by a section describing different process streams that have undergone the FBSR process. The third section describes the resulting mineral product in terms of phases that are present and the ability of the waste form to encapsulate hazardous and radioactive wastes from several sources. Following this description is a presentation of the physical properties of the granular and monolith waste form product including and contaminant release mechanisms. The last section gives a brief summary of this chapter and includes a section on the strengths associated with this waste form and the needs for additional data and remaining questions yet to be answered. The reader is directed elsewhere for more information on other waste forms such as Cast Stone (Lockrem, 2005), Ceramicrete (Singh et al., 1997, Wagh et al., 1999) and geopolymers (Kyritsis et al., 2009; Russell et al., 2006).

Revised: June 22, 2012 | Published: May 1, 2012

Citation

Neeway J.J., N. Qafoku, J.H. Westsik, C.F. Brown, C. Jantzen, and E.M. Pierce. 2012. Radionuclide and contaminant immobilization in the fluidized bed steam reforming waste products. In Radioactive Waste, edited by RA Rahman. 239-262. Rijeka:InTech Europe. PNNL-SA-83289.