The kinetics of the feed-to-glass conversion affects the waste vitrification rate in an electric melter. The primary area of interest in this conversion process is the cold cap, a layer of reacting feed on top of molten glass. Knowing the temperature profile within a cold cap will help determine its characteristics and relate them to the rate of glass production. The work presented here provides an experimental determination of the temperature distribution within the cold cap. Since a direct measurement of the temperature field within the cold cap is impracticable, an indirect method was developed where the textural features in a laboratory-made cold cap with a high-level waste feed were mapped as a function of position using optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, energy dispersive spectroscopy, and X-ray diffraction. To correlate the temperature distribution to microstructures within the cold cap, microstructures were identified of individual feed samples that were heat treated to set temperatures between 400°C and 1200°C and quenched. The temperature distribution within the cold cap was then established by correlating cold-cap regions with the feed samples of nearly identical structures and was compared with the temperature profile from a mathematical model.
Revised: November 17, 2015 |
Published: July 21, 2015
Citation
Dixon D.R., M.J. Schweiger, B.J. Riley, R. Pokorny, and P.R. Hrma. 2015.Temperature Distribution within a Cold Cap during Nuclear Waste Vitrification.Environmental Science & Technology 49, no. 14:8856-8863.PNNL-SA-108118.doi:10.1021/acs.est.5b00931