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Science

Amec Working on Long-Term Nuclear Waste Solution 477

Ckwop writes "The Daily Telegraph is reporting that Amec, the company that cleaned up Ground Zero, have developed a new process for storing nuclear waste that lasts two hundred thousand years - far longer than any radioactivity will last. The process works by mixing eighty percent soil with twenty percent waste and then heating the mixture to three thousand degrees centigrade. When the mixture cools it forms into a glass harder than concrete. While this is not the first waste process of this type it is the first to be cost effective and produces a glass much harder than previous methods. " We'll see if we still need a ten mile field of spikes I guess. A pilot facility is being built in Washington State.
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Amec Working on Long-Term Nuclear Waste Solution

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  • by jimhill ( 7277 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:37AM (#10361319) Homepage
    Bring forth your ignorant, your undereducated and uneducated, your readers of dubious websites, and maybe, just maybe, one or two people who actually know what they're talking about.

    Time for another nuclear waste disposal imbroglio!
    • Oh my god! NOW THEY"RE using glass to protect us from the NUKES? I CAN see through glass! THose in glass houses should not store nukes, the old adage goes!

      WTF _ damn BUSH ! WHo does he THINK WE ARE? HE and this company are in it totghther! BUSH did 9/11 SO THISESE guys could GET MONEY! THEM ANd Halle-bruton!
    • by GigsVT ( 208848 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @10:55AM (#10362478) Journal
      Bah, its simple. They just need to encase the waste in nickle, bury it 100 feet underground, or maybe just dump it in an old missle silo. Then keep records in the computer so they don't loose track of it.

      The people soley responsible for it is the government. If they have to, they could pass an amenment to the charter of the DOE to take care of it. The heirarchy of government would probly ensure accountability. Its rediculus to think that no one has thought of this before.

      Of course, all these plans have a kernal of validity to them, but most of them are just BS that the CEO of these companies can talk about at some speach to investors.

      Thank $diety that those people usually don't get much political power. ;)
  • Nice! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Opalima ( 744615 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:38AM (#10361321)
    Cool - imagine an entire line of quasi-radioactive collectibles to decorate your Xmas tree and decorate that shelf above the fireplace that needs that something special.
    • Re: Nice? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Alwin Henseler ( 640539 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:51AM (#10361405)
      Turning it into a glass isn't so much to reduce radiation in any way, but to immobilise the radioactive material. It can remain highly radioactive.

      This sort of thing is done already, and often glass is packed inside a metal layer/container. Take transport: if you got fluid components, dust, or pressurised gasses, and there's an accident, the stuff spills all over the place, and into air, ground water. If it's glass, it may go in pieces, but the pieces stay were they are, with the radioactive material trapped inside.

      • Re: Nice? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by AndroidCat ( 229562 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:58AM (#10361469) Homepage
        Since they mix the material with soil to form the glass, maybe they should use soil from a place where it's been contaminated by lead? (Safe storage and toxic cleanup, bonus!)
      • Re: Nice? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by T5 ( 308759 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @10:11AM (#10362010)
        Sometimes you don't get immobilization. We had a prototype of this years ago here in Oak Ridge, TN, developed by Martin Marietta Molten Metals (M4) where they tried in situ vitrification by sticking these huge carbon electrodes into a prepared testbed in an open field. What little water was trapped inside caused a massive steam explosion that blew hot dirt for a radius of hundreds of feet.

        I'm now the technical support for the financial servers for the federal bankruptcy court for M4.

    • Re:Nice! (Score:5, Funny)

      by Aumaden ( 598628 ) <Devon...C...Miller@@@gmail...com> on Monday September 27, 2004 @11:04AM (#10362578) Journal
      I can see it now:

      Are you sick of this!

      (shot of man sturggling with tangled Xmas lights)
      Or this!
      (woman looks on in dismay as pet runs into wires toppling the Xmas tree)
      Or even this!
      (Xmas light bulb pops, shoots sparks, tree ignites)
      Well, you need all new Amec PermaLights!
      Amec Permalights never wear out and never need replacing!
      (flash disclaimer "actual life expectancy ~10,000 years")
      Order before midnight tonight and we'll include this nativity scene complete with glowing baby Jesus, absolutely free!
      (flash disclaimer: "5% of all profits donated to the American Cancer Society)
  • Nothing new? (Score:5, Informative)

    by pedestrian crossing ( 802349 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:41AM (#10361338) Homepage Journal
    After R'ing TFA, it looks like this is nothing new, just a slightly better method of vitrification. I don't know, the tone of the FA was a little, um, enthusiastic for an incremental improvement to an established method...
    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:46AM (#10361369)
      The article stated that the current processes uses concrete and lasts 200 years. I would say that the "incremental change" to 200,000 years IS significant. Now, I would have doubts that it actually lasted that long. And I would be interested in seeing how they determined that deterioration rate. Is 200K years a conservative estimate or a best case scenario one?
    • Re:Nothing new? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Smidge204 ( 605297 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:51AM (#10361399) Journal
      341 years of safe storage to 200,000 years of safe storage, done at 75% of the cost... that's a pretty big increment! Not to mention that this appears to be the first truly viable long-LONG-term solution to preventing the waste from leaking out of where it's stored. Still have to agree on a spot to put it, but once it's there you don't have to worry about it. That's half the battle won, and that's what makes it news.

      =Smidge=
    • Re:Nothing new? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by jstave ( 734089 )
      The point is that it passes a significant milestone, i.e. the length of time it takes for the radiation to fade. If it just increased the storage time to, say 500 years, then I would agree with your assessement. TFA, however, claims that this basically keeps the stuff safe until its no longer a radioactive threat. That's important. Lowering the cost of processing is a nice bonus, but less important (IMO) than that 200,000 year figure.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:41AM (#10361340)
    While it's good to see another neat/good idea, the problem is having a place to put it. Until such a site exists AND IS ALLOWED TO OPERATE, we're left twiddling our thumbs. Since nothing is 100% safe and secure, I'm not optimistic such a site will be operational.

    To head off some flames, I'm sure people are fully secure living near dams, powerplants, coal mines and transmission wires. Oh, and I assume they're suitably slathered with SPF 30+ outside in the sun...
    • by joib ( 70841 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:54AM (#10361430)

      While it's good to see another neat/good idea, the problem is having a place to put it. Until such a site exists AND IS ALLOWED TO OPERATE, we're left twiddling our thumbs. Since nothing is 100% safe and secure, I'm not optimistic such a site will be operational.


      Unfortunately, that is the political reality.

      However, IMHO any reasonably well thought out burial method, flaws and all, is still orders of magnitude better than how nuclear waste is currently stored in the world.

      In a way, this is just another case of the NIMBY crowd winning against the best interests of the rest of mankind.
      • by CustomDesigned ( 250089 ) <stuart@gathman.org> on Monday September 27, 2004 @10:29AM (#10362178) Homepage Journal
        It seems to me that there is a potential synergy here.
        1. People don't want to live near nuclear waste disposal sites.
        2. We want to preserve large tracts of land in an undeveloped state for a variety of reasons including biodiversity and aesthetics.
        So put the storage facilities in the middle of national parks you want to protect. No one wants to build house there, and the stream of tourists is reduced to those who can overcome irrational fears enough to be within a few hundred miles of some rocks that are slightly more radioactive than the rocks they are hiking on.
        • by gadget junkie ( 618542 ) <gbponz@libero.it> on Monday September 27, 2004 @01:00PM (#10363838) Journal
          "So put the storage facilities in the middle of national parks you want to protect. No one wants to build house there, and the stream of tourists is reduced to those who can overcome irrational fears enough to be within a few hundred miles of some rocks that are slightly more radioactive than the rocks they are hiking on.

          This is slighly OT, but that's what happens in military training areas. No one wants to risk being run over by a tank, and Voilà! wildlife has a place to call home.
      • by RCulpepper ( 99864 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @10:35AM (#10362253)
        The NIMBY thing is particularly tragic because the Yucca Mountain debate is painted as though, because the site isn't 100% safe, we shouldn't store our waste there, as though our waste were currently stored in some kind of interdimensional X-zone, instead of spread around the country in vast stretches of poorly defended and leaky containment vessels. Yucca may not be 100% stable -- but it's orders of magnitude more stable than the system we have in place now.

    • by yog ( 19073 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:58AM (#10361461) Homepage Journal
      I'd really like to see this type of technology implemented to store nuclear waste and perhaps other kinds of toxic compounds that are otherwise too expensive to treat.

      200,000 years sounds long enough that we'll either not care by then or have evolved into beings that can withstand the radiation.

      Perhaps this combined with pebble bed nuclear reactors [slashdot.org] will at last make nukes a realistic and safe alternative to oil.

      A hundred nuclear fission plants using the safer pebble technology and a really solid waste storage approach would go a long way to weaning the U.S. and its allies off the Wahhabi oil machine. They could generate hydrogen during low demand times for use in fuel cell vehicles and straight power for peak time use, and solar power could fill in the gaps.

      • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

        by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:20AM (#10361595)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • by museumpeace ( 735109 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:40AM (#10361703) Journal
          the answer, without going into a lot of phyics is that between proven sources and the regenerative capacity of so-called breeder reactors, we could could go [at present power consumption levels] for centuries. This was the original "power too cheap to meter" argument made for nukes back in the [naive, optimistic] '50s. It would outlast oil by several generations. Politics always trumps science and acute accidents like Chernobl always change peoples minds more effectively than diffuse accidents like our overheated bioshpere slipping by with little alarm despite wiping out entire species. If one percent of what our nation spends to secure an oil supply [you may even leave out the cost of the Iraq misadventure] were spent on building nuke plants that were idiot proof and safe disposal methods, we would not be worried about another three mile island, and we would be able to afford to turn on our air conditioners.
          • by Ralph Spoilsport ( 673134 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @12:19PM (#10363385) Journal
            museumpeace wrote:

            "the answer, without going into a lot of phyics is that between proven sources and the regenerative capacity of so-called breeder reactors, we could could go [at present power consumption levels] for centuries."

            This is true, however: as you noted in the title: POLITICS is the problem. And it's not the kind of politics of Republicrats vs Demoblicans - it's the politics of CRAZY insane and desperately poor nations getting their mitts on fissile material for ugly bomb making. Breeder reactors make plutonium, and the last thing I want to do is let people like North Korea, Sudan, Chechnya, Congo, Burma, etc. get any of it.

            Proliferation of breeder reactors will permit theft and sale of Pu - even if the reactor isn't in the troubled country. All it has to do is be in a Ally's land and that ally may not be on the up and up. Example: Pakistan.

            I agree - in the Best OF Worlds, we should be able to do breeders, but due to political realities, we can't and shouldn't bother "going down that road".

            I think a much more fruitful direction would be to
            1. make present fission plants safer and more efficient,
            2. increase research and development of other sources of power (geothermal used to crack water for hydrogen - I trust Iceland a lot more than Saudi Arabia...) such as geothermal, hydrogen, tidal, wind and solar.
            3. improve efficiency of consumption, so as to reduce load
            4. Reduce the population. A lot.

            point 4 is probably the most important and oddly, the most obvious, but will be the most difficult policy to implement, and would tend to obviate a lot of the power problems.

            cheers,

            RS

      • by Jack_Frost ( 28997 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:42AM (#10361731)
        That's about the same amount of output as 17 modern LWRs. THe PBMR is well suited to areas without an existing electrical infrastructure. Using PBMRs to power the U.S. isn't practical and that's not what they're designed to do.

        Now if you built 100 additional LWRs and double the nuclear power production in the U.S. (up to 40% from today's 20%) you'd have a massive impact on greenhouse gas emissions (We'd be able to join the Kyoto protocol) and reduce our reliance on foreign sources of natural gas. Very little oil is used for electricity generation in the U.S.
    • by anti-NAT ( 709310 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:12AM (#10361542) Homepage

      After all, my Uncle says that is what they do with the radio active mining equipment, and he has been down the largest uranium mine in Australia - Olympic Dam [mining-technology.com].

  • by tgv ( 254536 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:42AM (#10361343) Journal
    Was I the only one that read "ACME" instead of Amec?
  • Half-life (Score:4, Insightful)

    by doodlelogic ( 773522 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:42AM (#10361344)
    lasts two hundred thousand years - far longer than any radioactivity will last

    There will be some residual radioactivity in any nuclear waste forever - I presume that they meant far longer than the half-life...
    • Re:Half-life (Score:4, Insightful)

      by joib ( 70841 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:47AM (#10361375)

      There will be some residual radioactivity in any nuclear waste forever


      Of course, but after a few hundred thousand years it will IIRC be at about the same level as background radiation.
    • Re:Half-life (Score:3, Informative)

      by Ckwop ( 707653 ) *

      There will be some residual radioactivity in any nuclear waste forever - I presume that they meant far longer than the half-life...

      I assume they probably mean until the radio activity falls to around background level.

      Doing a quick back of the envelope calculation I computer that if the half-life is 10,000 years than after two hundred thousand years the radioactivity is about one hundred thousandth of a percent what it is today.

      Simon.

  • by aussie_a ( 778472 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:42AM (#10361345) Journal
    Ground Zero, have developed a new process for storing nuclear waste that lasts two hundred thousand years

    I won't believe them until they have done it just once. Until then it theoretically lasts two hundred thousand years :P
  • by gilgongo ( 57446 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:44AM (#10361356) Homepage Journal
    Couple this story with the recent pronouncement by James Lovelock and others that nuclear power may in fact be the only way to save the world after all, how does this square?

    Nuclear energy seems to boil down to two things: cost and danger. If we sort out the first one, will we learn to live with the second? After all, in terms of simple loss of life, cars kill about the same number of people every year as a jumbo jet going down with all hands, and we accept that as necessary.

  • by AndroidCat ( 229562 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:44AM (#10361362) Homepage
    Glowing glass spikes would be even cooler than lava lamps. (Yes, you'd have to mix stuff in to get the glow.) And they'd last for generations of stunted mutant troglodytes with no use of fossil fuels--talk about your green power!
  • by fstanchina ( 564024 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:48AM (#10361384) Homepage
    Well, "far longer than any radioactivity will last" is obviously wrong, because it depends on which kind of radioactive isotopes we're talking about. It's far longer than *most* radioactivity will last, because the most abundant isotopes in this kind of waste have half times of a few hundred years, but some radioactivity will last for millions of years.
    • by renoX ( 11677 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:05AM (#10361512)
      Yes, but of course what is needed is not a package that will last until any radioactivity has disappeared, but a package that will last until the remaining radioactivity is negligible compared to the normal background radioactivity.

    • So who says you gotta get rid of every last millirem? Hate to burst you bubble, but you're probably carrying around a few rads right now. And if radiation scares you that much don't ever go near an x-ray machine.

      If this process can hold the nastier stuff inside until it decays into something harmless (I'm thinking Strontium 90 here) I'm happy. Remember the _really_ nasty stuff is the least stable. By extension it is the shortest lived (half-lives in decades instead of millenia). And if vitrification (
  • by hcob$ ( 766699 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:50AM (#10361392)
    Why don't they just form it into a nice little arrow/bullet shape and use that instead of depleted uranium in the military.... That way it will be in one of 3 places, a firing range, a foreign country, or an enemy of the US. :) Ready.... aim.... glow.........
  • Half life anyone? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by vg30e ( 779871 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:50AM (#10361394)
    No offense intended to the people of the article, but some of that waste (if we are talking used fuel elements) still contains Uranium and Plutonium which has a half life of 10^8 years. While I am pretty sure I won't live to see that, It still is a pretty messy thing to deal with.

    One thing that this sort of storage technology is good for is for the short lived stuff with half lives in the hundreds of years.

    My humble opinion is that this technology is used after the really long lived nasty stuff is separated and destroyed (neutron bombardment looks promising). There was an Argone National Labs Experimental Sodium reactor that in "proof of concept" separated all the uranium from spent fuel (electro refining)but the program was cancelled due to budget cuts.

    Believe it or not, there is technology being researched to destroy radioactive waste products with accelerators that actually looks like it may work.
  • Chernobyl (Score:3, Insightful)

    by hartba ( 715804 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:50AM (#10361395)
    The real question is, how can we apply this technology to finally seal up the leakage from around Chernobyl permanently? The last time I read anything about it, the sarcophagus that was built around the plant was leaking terribly and radiation is permiating the area. This sounds like a great application of the new process, but I wonder what sort of hurdles will have to be overcome to actually implement the design in that part of the world.
  • by gtoomey ( 528943 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:52AM (#10361412)
    This does not address the underlying problem. Synthetic Rock [uic.com.au] for securing nuclear waste has been around for decades.

    The problem is factoring in the cost of running a nuclear waste compound for 200,000 years, into the price of the electricity generated today by nuclear power.

    • The problem is factoring in the cost of running a nuclear waste compound for 200,000 years

      You only need to run it for long enough to get to the point where the waste mixed with the carrier is slightly less radioactive than the ore you originally mined. Then shove it back down the mine (or dig a new equivalent) and the whole cycle reduces the radiological hazards in the world.

  • by tcdk ( 173945 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:53AM (#10361418) Homepage Journal
    They need to shape it as something interesting and pass it on as prices or bonuses.

    Like you get a small glow-in-the-dark Wolverine figure, when you see X-Men n, and you even get a chance at having X-Men like kids of your own!

    It's just at questing of selling it right.
  • by Un0r1g1nal ( 711750 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:54AM (#10361424)
    If we are able to develop means to 'safely' store radioactive waste (and we are just taking them on their word at the moment) then surely nuclear power will become a viable alternative to fossil fuels. Now we just have to develop decent security to keep terrorists out...
  • 30 years... (Score:4, Informative)

    by reluctantengineer ( 557965 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @08:56AM (#10361445)
    The Vitreous State Lab at The Catholic University of America has been doing this for 30 years. Read a recent article here [cua.edu].
  • by G4from128k ( 686170 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:00AM (#10361476)
    Although "harder than concrete" sounds "strong" it does not address the chief danger in long-term storage. Chemical erosion and leaching are a bigger issue than brute strength. Anyone who has ever thought about geology and objects like geodes will realize that quartz is both much harder than concrete, but also (over the long term) water soluble. The real trick is to encapsulate the waste in something that won't dissolve or allow the migration of waste isotopes in the heat, potential liquids, and long timescales of waste storage. (I'm sure hardness is somewhat of an issue when trapped alpha particles and decay products create expansion stresses in the glass)

    I do think that vitrification is the way to go, but statements like these do the public no good when they mislead them on what characteristics actually make for a good containment system.
  • Subduction zones? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by david.given ( 6740 ) <dg@cowlark.com> on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:13AM (#10361544) Homepage Journal
    What's wrong with simply burying the waste at the bottom of a very, very deep hole somewhere in a geologically active subduction zone? That way the waste will get sucked into the mantle fairly quickly (on a geological timescale). The material will then dissolve and disperse.

    And since the mantle's already highly radioactive --- radioactive heating is one of the things that drives Earth's geology --- the fact that the waste is radioactive is hardly going to be a problem.

    Provided you make sure that the initial hole is deep enough to be well under the water table, this form of disposal should be both cheap and entirely safe.

    • Re:Subduction zones? (Score:3, Informative)

      by jstave ( 734089 )
      Its an idea I've heard mentioned before (can't remember where) and on the face of it, seems like a good one. However, I'm not so certain it would be a cheap method of disposal. If I remember my college geology, most of the subduction zones are under water, which would raise the cost of drilling the disposal hole. Also there tend to be earthquakes along plate boundaries (including subductions zones) which might collapse the disposal hole, making re-drilling necessary.

      Also there there tend to be volcanoe [nodak.edu]
    • by MustardMan ( 52102 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:42AM (#10361733)
      GREAT, just what we need, radioactive volcano-monsters!
    • It's a good idea, but we don't know enough about the subduction zones to ensure it will be trapped underneath the crust.

      It would really suck if we have highly radioactive lava spewing out of a volcano a few thousand years after we put this stuff in the ground.

    • Re:Subduction zones? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Malc ( 1751 )
      You do know what minor geological feature is associated with subduction zones, right? Volcanoes. It's been a while since I studied geology, but I believe they also tend to be the explosive types of volcano, which tends to put more in to the atmosphere. Whether the subducted plate ends up in the uprising magma, I don't know. Any geologists here?

      Another issue with subduction zones is the accretionary prism. If you don't dig deeply enough then I believe you run the risk of the material being scraped off
    • Re:Subduction zones? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by LaCosaNostradamus ( 630659 ) <`moc.liam' `ta' `sumadartsoNasoCaL'> on Monday September 27, 2004 @11:39AM (#10362928) Journal
      (I was going to post this seperately, but decided to ride along in reply to your existing posting.)

      The first question that comes to mind about nuclear "waste" is: is it really waste? Heavy atoms are still difficult to come by in Human manufacturing processes. I think that if we really want to keep such heavy atoms around in such quantities, that such "waste" should be "disposed" of in a manner that is recoverable ... by geographic location and by internment process.

      The second question that comes to mind, if we decide to actually "get rid" of the "waste", is: what lasts for along time? The "long term storage" locations and processes currently under consideration and development are all uniformly absurd. The public really doesn't understand how much they are being fooled about these things. We'd be lucky to get a 2 centuries of storage out of Yucca Mt. before a serious leak or theft occurs. We need a combination of internment and storage that is rated for millenia.

      A space elevator would be the minimum transport system for any serious consideration of launching the material away from Earth. Until we have that, I must reject all space-launch ideas.

      But note that we are talking about storage for geologic times. So, it seems natural to consider geological methods. Yucca Mt. was the outcome of that, but we can take things a step farther: why not put the nuclear material deep into the Earth? Let's call it "Earth injection". (Please put aside jokes about "fucking the Earth".)

      We can use two methods for Earth injection.

      1. Drill a very deep hole in continental crust ... kilometers deep. Pack the hole's depth with diffuse waste. The vitrification method seems basically sound since they are effectively making rocks out of the stuff, and you can always choose the density of nuclear material in such a method. The hole is obviously conducive to receiving cylindrical objects, and the engineers can tweak the variables to produce an optimal size of hole diameter. Then the forming company can clunk kilometers of cylinder glass, in meter-long chunks. They can be inserted into the hole, and the engineers can figure out how to pack them down kilometers of pipe. A 11-kilometer long pipe, .2m in diameter, can hold over 300 cubic meters of waste (which must include the vitrifying matrix) assuming the top kilometer is the cap. Assuming 20% of the mass is actual waste material, this means each 10k hole can hold 60 cubic meters ... which is enough waste to fill a container 4 meters on a side.

      2. Drill a hole like #1, but in oceanic crust. You'd face the barrier of packing the hole from a drillling ship, kilometers above on the surface of the ocean ... but that would add security, since only a major government or corporation could afford to make the same investment to go back and drill your hole open.

      3. Use an oceanic trench. This brings up all kinds of engineering problems, but if you can pack the material in the trench bottom, then after 1 million years it will be securely subducted under the encroaching continental plate. After 5 million years, it may come up in the volcanoes above the deep subduction zone, but with the half-life involved, it should be no more radioactive than lava is usually.

      I'd like to see how vitrified blocks act in sea-bottom mud. If they are stable for thousands of years, then that's long enough for them to be deeply buried in the bottom of a trench like the Marianas, and after that the material will slowly subduct into the mantle. That means they can be pipe-dropped from a ship instead of being actually injected into a drilled hole. "Pipe-dropped" means lowering a pipe from the ship down the trench to just above one of the lowest sections of the bottom, and sliding the cylinders of vitrified waste down like a piece of mail down a mail chute. The ship could move along and dump piles of cylinders.

      And for security purposes, only a major government or corporation could spend the money to undertake a mission to go into the trench, dig it up and recover material. We should be safe from it, and it should be safe from us.
  • Hot volatiles! (Score:3, Interesting)

    by redelm ( 54142 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:27AM (#10361628) Homepage
    At 3000'C many compounds break down and/or vaporize! There's a whole slew in spent nuclear fuel.

    Vitrification is nice (better be multi-layer), but there'll have to be one hell of a vapor recovery system.

  • by Slick_Snake ( 693760 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:44AM (#10361750) Journal
    We are not creating more radioactive material than was already on this planet. All we are doing is moving it around. So If we can safely store it there is no harm. The problem in the past has been storage. This method seems like a safe way to store the waste material until a better solution such as recycling it into a usable product is found.
  • by c_ollier ( 35683 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:52AM (#10361823) Journal
    It's been around here since 1969, and still used today in La Hague nuclear repocessing plant. You will find many details (in english) on the web site of the CEA [www.cea.fr] (Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique), a governmental agency. They say that glass packages are guaranteed for millions of years [www.cea.fr].
  • by dpbsmith ( 263124 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @09:54AM (#10361847) Homepage
    ...about as much as I trust the statements that CD-R's will last for a century.

    After all, it's such a confident, unqualified statement. The process, they say, "will enable nuclear waste to be stored safely for 200,000 years." Now, me, I'm no expert and I'm constantly getting taken by surprise by little adjustments in our understanding of the physical universe... you know, like plate tectonics and black holes and asteroid collisions causing the extinction of the dinosaurs.

    So, I'm really glad there are people that know what will happen over the next 200,000 years. People who can also assure me "We know that nuclear plants work and are safe." I'd been getting a little nervous after things like Browns Ferry and EBR-1 and Detroit Fermi and Three Mile Island and Chernobyl.

    But those Brits are real experts. After all, they've hardly had any nuclear accidents except Windscale [nucleartourist.com].
  • An error in the story:

    Plutonium has a half time of 44.000 years.
    If you put 1 kg plutonium in a glass block, after 44.000 years 500 grams are still there. After 88.000 its down to 250 grams, after 200000 years still 30 grams are left. So if you put 10 kg into such a block, after 200000 years still 300 grams are left.

    The press release of the research team is missleading as well. In germany the deposition of waste, radioactive or not, in different kinds of glass is a long researched topic.

    At my town where I live is the research center, and I know people involved in such researches.

    Most glasses are somewhat vulnerable to acids. So the question, still to answer is: where to deposite the glass blocks? In germany it was for a long time an idea to place them in salt mines (we have a lot under surface piles of old stone salt).

    Salt mines are considered "dry", very dry. However: a lot of salt compositions contain so called "crystal water". That means a crystal, a kind of big mollecule, contains captured water.

    The ionisating rays of decaying material can break up such molecules and the water is set free. As such water can dissolve salt it can become to an aggressive acid which even harms very robust glass kinds.

    Now you would think about a protecting surface over the glass blocks, that wont help much. Most places where you would store the glass blocks, will eventually be covered by the montain. The pressure if the mountain moves likely cracks a block once a while, and that block then is vulnerable to aggressive acids.

    That said, glass blocks surely are a "quite save" way to handel our current problems. But they are no holly grail like the industrie likes to tell us.

    Interesting is: in germany the research results are not public disclosed. In politics its still talked as if salt mines would be a perfect storage, but a granit mountain would be likely much better. I guess if you ask (or search for PDFs) you might get the information easyly, its an EU sponsored research project. However in media its not covered: htp://www.fzk.de (or probably the institute site: www.ine.fzk.de -- I did not check if they have their own site)

    angel'o'sphere
  • Plasma Torch (Score:3, Interesting)

    by skroz ( 7870 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @10:32AM (#10362223) Homepage

    This is an interesting application of the basic premise of the plasma torch. A company called Startech Environmental [startech.net] has been working on the technology [startech.net] for quite some time. The basic gist is that if you heat just about anything hot enough, molecular bonds will break down, and you'll be left with a uniform mixture of all of the elements found in whatever you were trying to destroy. When cooled, you get a black glass and a flammable gas that can be used to power turbines that provide the power necessary to run the torch itself.

    This is the first I've heard of it being used for radioactive disposal, but Startech uses it for disposing of toxic waste, biohazardous materials... all kinds of dangerous stuff.

    With enough research and development, it may be possible to "skim" individual elements from the melted slag based on their density. Perfect recycling!

  • by Big_Breaker ( 190457 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @12:09PM (#10363286)
    Radioactive compounds and their isotopes are dangerous for two reasons.

    1. They are radioactive and emit energy in dangerous quantities/frequencies. This energy destroys DNA and tissue causing burns and genetic mutations.

    2. The elements are inherently toxic in the same way that lead and mercury vapor is toxic. Uranium is a toxic heavy metal separate from its potential radioactivity. This is why depleted uranium bullets and shells are such a bad idea.

    Radioactive waste that is dangerous for reason #1 is low volume, high level and short-lived.

    Radioactive waste that is dangerous for reason #2 is high volume, low level (radioactive intensity) and is long lived. In fact is is always toxic just like lead is always toxic.

    #1 Radioactive waste turns into #2 radioactive waste pretty quickly. The half lives are between years and decades (maybe centuries).

    Long-term storage requires a combination of "burning out" the high level stuff with breeders or keeping it safe for a few decades and then burning the resulting low level waste with all the other low level waste somewhere relatively safe. This low level waste is not going to kill anyone anytime soon. In fact diluting it is probably better than keeping it in the same place. These elements of low level waste are found in nature as a matter of course but at lower concentrations. A few thousand year round trip under the earth's crust would elminate the risk.

    The bigger risks come from transporting the waste to the waste disposal site. Glass beads/bricks that can take the impact of a train wreck may be more important than beads that can take 5000 years of pressure sitting under a mountain.

    Let's also not discount the fact that we will have amazing technologies in the next few centuries. If we blow ourselves up instead then the disaster of that outcome will probably sterilize the earth for eons. But if we do last a few more centuries than we will be burning this "waste" as fuel anyhow. It's not that big of a problem.
  • by TigerNut ( 718742 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @12:31PM (#10363507) Homepage Journal
    Say you have one ton of radioactive waste. You need to heat this up, along with four tons of dirt, to 3000 degrees and let things melt into a big happy ball of goo. So how much energy is spent on mining, pre-processing, and finally disposing of that one ton of material, compared to the electrical (and maybe heat) energy extracted from it?
  • by tiger99 ( 725715 ) on Monday September 27, 2004 @12:52PM (#10363764)
    Radioactivity does in fact last that long, and a lot more. The point is that with exponential decay, the amount halves every half life, but it never gets to zero. Some isotopes may have very long half-lives, after 20 half lives for example, the activity may have reduced by a factor of about a million, but might still not be negligible. But it should probably be safe to handle for short periods, but probably not ingest or inhale, after that time.

    But this idea is not entirely new, in fact it would have first been mentioned in the 1960s if not before. Still, it is a good idea, whose time maybe has come at last.

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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