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.
Cue the inevitable! (Score:5, Funny)
Time for another nuclear waste disposal imbroglio!
Re:Cue the inevitable! (Score:3, Funny)
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!
Re:Cue the inevitable! (Score:5, Funny)
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.
Re:Cue the inevitable! (Score:3, Funny)
Nice! (Score:5, Funny)
Re: Nice? (Score:5, Informative)
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)
Lead vapor (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Lead vapor (Score:5, Funny)
Heating the soil up that high to melt it into glass will also vaporize the lead and send it into the air.
...which you capture and sell - Profit!
Use amber.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: Nice? (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm now the technical support for the financial servers for the federal bankruptcy court for M4.
Re:Nice! (Score:5, Funny)
Are you sick of this!
Or this! Or even this! Well, you need all new Amec PermaLights!Amec Permalights never wear out and never need replacing! Order before midnight tonight and we'll include this nativity scene complete with glowing baby Jesus, absolutely free!
Nothing new? (Score:5, Informative)
Not exactly incremental (Score:4, Insightful)
RTFA! (Score:5, Insightful)
They've increased the performance of this technology by a factor of 80 - 100. That's impressive.
You are comparing apples and oranges, and I believe that the fact that you've been "tricked" into making this comparison makes my point that the article isn't exactly without bias.
The 200-500 year figure is for CONCRETE ENTOMBMENT, which is NOT vitrification.
Vitrification is not new. And I would doubt anyone who claimed even 20,000 years of containment. There are a lot of factors that can come into play on those kind of timescales, and these numbers have nothing to back them up. Of course I haven't backed up my doubts of these numbers, but hey, I'm not the one saying "problem solved"...
Re:RTFA! (Score:4, Insightful)
Do you see any way to experimentally back up their claims of 200,000 years longevity? "Accelerated weathering" isn't a valid answer.
The burdon of proof is on the person making the extreme claim, not on the person who doubts it.
Re:Nothing new? (Score:5, Insightful)
=Smidge=
Re:Nothing new? (Score:4, Insightful)
Can't help but wonder if that's "200,000 years under ideal, laboratory conditions" and this is projected (unless they've been working on it for a really long time.
Nothing that a human hand has made has lasted much past 10,000 years, much less 10,000 years with no maintenance. It's safe to say that 200,000 years is a guess at best.
Re:Nothing new? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Plutonium has a half-life of 24,300 years. (Score:4, Informative)
Storage, not technology, is the problem (Score:5, Insightful)
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...
Re:Storage, not technology, is the problem (Score:4, Insightful)
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.
Re:Storage, not technology, is the problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Storage, not technology, is the problem (Score:4, Interesting)
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.
Re:Storage, not technology, is the problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Storage, not technology, is the problem (Score:5, Insightful)
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)
NO; Politics, not technology is the problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:NO; Politics, not technology is the problem (Score:5, Interesting)
"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
Wrong technology (Score:4, Informative)
One hundred PBMRs would produce 17,000 MWe (Score:5, Informative)
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.
Why not back in the Uranium mine ? (Score:5, Interesting)
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].
Re:Eh? (Score:3, Informative)
Or we drop them into tectonic subduction zones. The glass would (eventually) get pulled into the earth.
Re:Storage, not technology, is the problem (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to get a clear i
Wiley Coyote (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Wiley Coyote (Score:4, Informative)
Half-life (Score:4, Insightful)
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)
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)
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.
200 billion million trillion years (Score:3, Funny)
I won't believe them until they have done it just once. Until then it theoretically lasts two hundred thousand years
The acceptable cost of disposal? (Score:4, Interesting)
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.
Re:The acceptable cost of disposal? (Score:5, Informative)
I can't seem to figure out which planet you're from, but if your homepage URL is any clue, the British cars kill just under 3,000 people every year. In case you're a yank, that figure goes up to a bit over 40,000. I'd like to see this super-duper-hyper jumbo jet of yours.
Re:The acceptable cost of disposal? (Score:5, Interesting)
You know what the most dangerous form of power is, based on real disasters that actually happened and not ignorant peoples' imaginations? Hydroelectric power. On August 8th 1975, the Banqiao and Shimantan dams in China burst during a storm. The flooding, water born diseases, and destruction of farm land is estimated to have killed over 200,000.
Re:The acceptable cost of disposal? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:The acceptable cost of disposal? (Score:4, Insightful)
The technologies available to dispose nuclear waste, imperfect as they are, render the risk comparable, in terms of damages, to alternatives ways to obtain the same amount of usable energy in comparable quantities.
the point is that the human being is incapable to assess low probability events
As you said, you see the same psychology at work in air transport: people that habitually use a car (and drive recklessly, BTW) regard air travel as "dangerous", while statistically just the opposite is true.
Geeky mutant coolness (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Geeky mutant coolness (Score:3, Insightful)
If the phosphur could be combined with the soil so it was evenly distributed, it would make the whole thing a bit safer in so far as it would make it easier to to find all the shards if the glass breaks. "Hey Bob, there is some glowing dust on your butt, you better go through decon."
Far longer than what exactly? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Far longer than what exactly? (Score:5, Informative)
The usual design standard used... (Score:3, Informative)
Hey, if Mama nature can do it [curtin.edu.au], we should be able to pull it off.
Re:Far longer than what exactly? (Score:3, Insightful)
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 (
Re:Far longer than what exactly? (Score:3, Informative)
Also, the grandparent seems not to realize that the "main isotope" of Urainium is U-238, which is mostly harmless (you'll notice I didn't say "totally harmless"). You can't built a fission bomb out of it, it's worthl
Slings and arrow..... (Score:3, Funny)
Half life anyone? (Score:5, Interesting)
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)
This was done 20 years ago (Score:4, Insightful)
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.
Re:This was done 20 years ago (Score:3, Informative)
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.
Value added.... (Score:3, Funny)
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.
Storage and long term availability (Score:3, Interesting)
30 years... (Score:4, Informative)
Harder than Concrete? How about Solubility (Score:5, Informative)
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)
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)
Also there there tend to be volcanoe [nodak.edu]
Re:Volcanoes you say? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Volcanoes you say? (Score:3, Insightful)
Find me a volcano that sucks in molten rock and it might work. As I understand it, though, volcanos only spew out. Trying to shoot radioactive waste down a volcano to the earth's core is like tr
Re:Subduction zones? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Subduction zones? (Score:3, Interesting)
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)
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)
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
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
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
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)
Vitrification is nice (better be multi-layer), but there'll have to be one hell of a vapor recovery system.
One thing to say about Nuclear Waste (Score:3, Insightful)
Technical details on the process used in France (Score:4, Informative)
I trust that 200,000-year figure... (Score:3, Insightful)
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].
Re:I trust that 200,000-year figure... (Score:4, Informative)
Christ, is that urban legend still around? No, glass is not a liquid. [google.com]
200000 years is not longer than radiactifity lasts (Score:4, Informative)
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)
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!
Misconceptions driving much of the posting: (Score:3, Interesting)
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.
What's the energy budget for this idea? (Score:3, Insightful)
two hundred thousand years.... (Score:3, Informative)
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.
Re:200,000 years my ass (Score:4, Insightful)
Right?
Ah.
--Dan
Re:200,000 years my ass (Score:4, Informative)
You'd rather I didn't correct it?
I'd rather you not correct it with a half-truth like say, oh, picking an extremely long-lived compound whose contribution to the total radioactivity of the waste is minute at best.
Plutonium also has a very long half life.
24000 years, IIRC. As you admit yourself, after 10x the half-life (=240000 years, in the same ballpark as the 200 000 years claimed) most of the radiactivity from plutonium has disappeared.
I assume you wouldn't eat it for breakfast.
Of course not. I wouldn't want to eat any other heavy metal for breakfast either, they all tend to be quite toxic to biological life.
Re:200,000 years my ass (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:200,000 years my ass (Score:5, Informative)
One of the waste products produced by nuclear reactors is Iodine-129. The half-life of I129 is 15.7 million years.
You'll have a greater risk of radiation exposure from going outside on a sunny day than from all the iodine-129 in the world. The point about keeping an eye on iodine-129 is because it's found together with the more dangerous isotopes, iodine-131 and iodine-133, which have half-lifes of 8.02 days and 21 hours respectively, making them very active and dangerous substances:
From http://www.jaeri.go.jp/english/press/2001/011017/ (Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute):
Among the radionuclides emitted during a nuclear accident, the Iodine (131I, 133I) isotopes exhibit strong radioactivity that affects the human body but they are difficult to quantify because they have short half-lives and turn quickly into stable, non-radioactive substances. On the other hand, the iodine-129 that is hardly hazardous at all due to its long half-life period is emitted at a certain ratio with respect to iodine-131 and iodine-133. The measurement of iodine-129 makes it possible to estimate the emission of radioactive substances such as iodine-131
Iodine-129 by itself is hazardous for roughly 0 seconds, 0 minutes and 0 years. So which physics course did you take again?
Re:200,000 years my ass (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm not disagreeing with the statement, but just wanted to point out that iodine-131 saved my wife's life:
http://cpmcnet.columbia.edu/dept/thyroid/RAI.html [columbia.edu]
Re:I wonder if this can be used for other applicat (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I wonder if this can be used for other applicat (Score:5, Interesting)
Well-made glass is not just hard, it is *tough*. Proper formulation and annealing yields a very durable material. Not much at all like that cheap stuff they use to make jars for spaghetti sauce.
Re:I must say... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I must say... (Score:3, Informative)
Quite a tricky problem - the researchers reckoned one of the key tasks was to make it look important but obviously valueless in order to prevent tomb robbers (after all, the Egyptian curses in the pyramids din't work too well).
Unfortunately, I can't seem to find it online, though some of the same material is covered in:
"An Architecture of Pe
Re:Just a thought (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Just a thought (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Just a thought (Score:3, Informative)
Easily achievable. 18.5 miles/sec is roughly 30 km/s. So, you need to cancel that energy? Well, that's 450 megajoules per kilogram you'll need to put in. I believe you get _substantially_ more power than that out of fission reactions.
Re:nice location (Score:5, Informative)
Is it really true this time? (Score:3, Interesting)
The head of the ultrasonics research group at Battelle Institute told me about the plans for "glassification" in 1975.
Is it really true this time?
--
Bush: Borrowing money [brillig.com] to give to the rich.
...USA has not built nuclear plants since 1970s (Score:5, Insightful)
So, this new way of processing nuclear waste will benefit all other Western nations besides the USA.
The USA is a great nation, and it is built by kind-hearted people with good values even though they have only an average intellect in areas of science. This average intellect is being manipulated by science frauds who claim that nuclear enery is a disaster waiting to happen. Most of Japan's electricity is generate by nuclear power plants.
Re:Nuclear energy is really bad (Score:3, Insightful)
The sulfur in coal is reabsorbed?
As far as that goes, is anything at all reabsorbed with oil/coal/gas burning? Even the carbon dioxide may take many, many thousands of years to reach a level that it was at before we started burning things.
Re:Nuclear energy is really bad (Score:3, Interesting)
Fusion will indeed be the solution, but how long have we got before we can use it, always assuming that we actually get it working in the first place!
If we run out of power before we get fusion working how are we going to get the simply huge amounts of power we need to continue to experiment?
We need something that can (reliably) take over from fossil fuels, and
Re:Wrong Numbers! (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you know how much of that stuff you'd need before you would even notice the difference from background levels? Remember that the longer the half life, the more atoms you need to produce the same amount of radioactivity. Doubling the half life halves the amount of danger posed by the radiation emitted. Its as simple as that.
Re:Wrong Numbers! (Score:3, Insightful)
Rubidium 87 has a half-life of 47 billion (10^9) years (our soloar system is not yet 5 billion years old). Uranium 238 has a half-life of 4.5 Billion (10^9) years, Plutonium 239 has a half-life of 25.000 years. Half-life means that after some billion years, you still have half of your nuclear waste happily emitting radioactivity, while the other half has decayed to other, possibly also radioactive elements.
Correct. OTOH, the longer the half-life the less intense will the radiation be, as there are of co
Lesson learned? (Score:5, Informative)
The faster a substance decays, the more energy it emits. Conversely, substances which only decay very slowly emit very little radiation. Thus U-238, with it half-life of 4.5 billion years is far less radioactive than, say, Carbon-14 with its half-life of approximately 5,730 years. There are, of course, different types of decay, and heavier atoms tend to decay producing alpha particles and gamma rays rather than the beta particles that are common in lighter elements. Even so, elements with half-lives measured in millions of years do not typically emit enough radiation to be a threat to humans or to nature. The intensively radioactive products tend to get rid of themselves, so it is the medium intensity materials, such as the infamous Sr-90, with half-lives measured in months to millenia, that are particularly dangerous. It is also worth noting that alpha, beta and gamma rays can not make materials radioactive - it is neutrons that do that - and that alpha particles, which are the least penetrative of the three primary radiative products of nuclear decay, are also the most strongly ionising, while gamma rays, the most penetrating, are the least ionising, given the fact that they consist of mere EM radiation rather than charged particles like alpha and beta rays.
Humans are exposed to ionising radiation every day, and have been during the entirety of history. For this reason we have a variety of genetic repair mechanisms [wikipedia.org]. The mere presence of ionising radiation is not a matter of concern; under normal circumstances the most significant sources of such radiation are natural. It is only when the level of radioactivity overwhelms the body's natural defenses that radioactivity becomes a threat to human health.
Re:Wrong Numbers! (Score:3, Insightful)
Which is why you find these isotopes naturally...Very long lived isotopes are not really a problem, life has been dealing with them since it first appeared.
Plutonium 239 has a half-life of 25.000 years.
This is why you don't find Pu239 naturally, though you do find it's daughter (U235) naturally.
It is practically impossible to guarantee a s