Schneibster
Unregistered
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
- Messages
- 3,966
OK, first things first. I screwed up, and forgot the transuranics that are present in spent single-cycle fuel. There are three classes of radioactive isotopes present in single-cycle spent fuel, more or less:
1. High-activity short half-life radioisotopes of relatively light elements like cesium, strontium, and so forth. The longest lived of these is samarium-151, with a half-life of 90 years. These are an extreme short-term danger because of their high activity.
2. Medium-activity medium half-life radioisotopes of transuranics like plutonium-239 with a half-life of 24,100 years. These are the long-term danger in nuclear wastes, because these are also gamma emitters.
3. Low-activity long half-life radioisotopes of light elements; the shortest half-life among these is technetium-99, with a half-life of 211,000 years. These are low-activity radioisotopes that don't present much danger.
If you process spent nuclear fuel made from low-enriched uranium, that is, about 5% U-235 to start with, and remove the transuranics from it, or if you burn such fuel in an integral fast reactor or some designs of pebble-bed reactors, which burn all of the transuranics, you're left with the short-term high-level and long-term low-level isotopes, but none of the medium-term medium-level isotopes that make the spent fuel hazardous long-term. Such waste is very hot in the short term, but cools down after a hundred years or so quite a bit; most of the short-term high-activity waste is gone. After 100-300 years (depending on who you believe), the activity is no greater than uranium ore. Processing to remove the transuranics, which are primarily plutonium-239, is relatively simple because they are all actinides, and therefore chemically similar. You'll also incidentally remove most if not all of the uranium, which is also an actinide. This will leave you with a small amount of waste compared to the original, composed of the short half-life and long half-life isotopes of light elements. The actinides can all be used again as fuel; the waste is disposed of (after separation of some of the light isotopes that are useful in medical research and therapy and for the manufacture of certain products).
However, I have to confess my mistake; since spent fuel in the US is not reprocessed to remove the transuranics, and since we don't use reactor designs that burn all the actinides, such waste as they produce is, indeed, dangerous for thousands of years. However, to the best of my knowledge, no such waste has ever been buried. It's still sitting in dumps at the sites of nuclear plants, since there's no other safe place to put it. The obvious solution is to wait for the integral fast reactors, or other fast neutron reactors, in which it can be burned, then reprocess it (or even just put it in as-is; designs capable of using the majority of this stuff as fuel are available) and dispose of the greatly reduced amount of waste of a lower level of hazard. And if it doesn't all get put in casks and shipped off to Yucca Mountain, that's almost certainly what we'll do. That spent fuel will then represent a resource rather than a problem. And the safety of nuclear waste will be increased (at least in the medium term, over 300 years).
This information is cribbed from the Wikipedia article on Integral Fast ReactorsWP. It is sourced from the Cal State Berkeley Nuclear Engineering department's site here.
1. High-activity short half-life radioisotopes of relatively light elements like cesium, strontium, and so forth. The longest lived of these is samarium-151, with a half-life of 90 years. These are an extreme short-term danger because of their high activity.
2. Medium-activity medium half-life radioisotopes of transuranics like plutonium-239 with a half-life of 24,100 years. These are the long-term danger in nuclear wastes, because these are also gamma emitters.
3. Low-activity long half-life radioisotopes of light elements; the shortest half-life among these is technetium-99, with a half-life of 211,000 years. These are low-activity radioisotopes that don't present much danger.
If you process spent nuclear fuel made from low-enriched uranium, that is, about 5% U-235 to start with, and remove the transuranics from it, or if you burn such fuel in an integral fast reactor or some designs of pebble-bed reactors, which burn all of the transuranics, you're left with the short-term high-level and long-term low-level isotopes, but none of the medium-term medium-level isotopes that make the spent fuel hazardous long-term. Such waste is very hot in the short term, but cools down after a hundred years or so quite a bit; most of the short-term high-activity waste is gone. After 100-300 years (depending on who you believe), the activity is no greater than uranium ore. Processing to remove the transuranics, which are primarily plutonium-239, is relatively simple because they are all actinides, and therefore chemically similar. You'll also incidentally remove most if not all of the uranium, which is also an actinide. This will leave you with a small amount of waste compared to the original, composed of the short half-life and long half-life isotopes of light elements. The actinides can all be used again as fuel; the waste is disposed of (after separation of some of the light isotopes that are useful in medical research and therapy and for the manufacture of certain products).
However, I have to confess my mistake; since spent fuel in the US is not reprocessed to remove the transuranics, and since we don't use reactor designs that burn all the actinides, such waste as they produce is, indeed, dangerous for thousands of years. However, to the best of my knowledge, no such waste has ever been buried. It's still sitting in dumps at the sites of nuclear plants, since there's no other safe place to put it. The obvious solution is to wait for the integral fast reactors, or other fast neutron reactors, in which it can be burned, then reprocess it (or even just put it in as-is; designs capable of using the majority of this stuff as fuel are available) and dispose of the greatly reduced amount of waste of a lower level of hazard. And if it doesn't all get put in casks and shipped off to Yucca Mountain, that's almost certainly what we'll do. That spent fuel will then represent a resource rather than a problem. And the safety of nuclear waste will be increased (at least in the medium term, over 300 years).
This information is cribbed from the Wikipedia article on Integral Fast ReactorsWP. It is sourced from the Cal State Berkeley Nuclear Engineering department's site here.