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Radioactive waste management and contaminated site clean-up reviews
radioactive waste management processes, technologies, and
international experiences. Part one explores the fundamentals of
radioactive waste including sources, characterisation, and
processing strategies. International safety standards, risk
assessment of radioactive wastes and remediation of contaminated
sites and irradiated nuclear fuel management are also reviewed.
Part two highlights the current international situation across
Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America. The experience in Japan,
with a specific chapter on Fukushima, is also covered. Finally,
part three explores the clean-up of sites contaminated by weapons
programmes including the USA and former USSR.
Radioactive waste management and contaminated site clean-up is a
comprehensive resource for professionals, researchers, scientists
and academics in radioactive waste management, governmental and
other regulatory bodies and the nuclear power industry.
Explores the fundamentals of radioactive waste including sources,
characterisation, and processing strategiesReviews international
safety standards, risk assessment of radioactive wastes and
remediation of contaminated sites and irradiated nuclear fuel
managementHighlights the current international situation across
Africa, Asia, Europe, and North America specifically including a
chapter on the experience in Fukushima, Japan
Radioactive wastes are generated from a wide range of sources,
including the power industry, and medical and scientific research
institutions, presenting a range of challenges in dealing with a
diverse set of radionuclides of varying concentrations.
Conditioning technologies are essential for the encapsulation and
immobilisation of these radioactive wastes, forming the initial
engineered barrier required for their transportation, storage and
disposal. The need to ensure the long term performance of
radioactive waste forms is a key driver of the development of
advanced conditioning technologies.
The Handbook of advanced radioactive waste conditioning
technologies provides a comprehensive and systematic reference on
the various options available and under development for the
treatment and immobilisation of radioactive wastes. The book opens
with an introductory chapter on radioactive waste characterisation
and selection of conditioning technologies. Part one reviews the
main radioactive waste treatment processes and conditioning
technologies, including volume reduction techniques such as
compaction, incineration and plasma treatment, as well as
encapsulation methods such as cementation, calcination and
vitrification. This coverage is extended in part two, with in-depth
reviews of the development of advanced materials for radioactive
waste conditioning, including geopolymers, glass and ceramic
matrices for nuclear waste immobilisation, and waste packages and
containers for disposal. Finally, part three reviews the long-term
performance assessment and knowledge management techniques
applicable to both spent nuclear fuels and solid radioactive waste
forms.
With its distinguished international team of contributors, the
Handbook of advanced radioactive waste conditioning technologies is
a standard reference for all radioactive waste management
professionals, radiochemists, academics and researchers involved in
the development of the nuclear fuel cycle.
Provides a comprehensive and systematic reference on the various
options available and under development for the treatment and
immobilisation of radioactive wastesExplores radioactive waste
characterisation and selection of conditioning technologies
including the development of advanced materials for radioactive
waste conditioningAssesses the main radioactive waste treatment
processes and conditioning technologies, including volume reduction
techniques such as compaction
Sustainability of Life Cycle Management for Nuclear
Cementation-Based Technologies, edited by Dr. Rahman and Dr.
Ojovan, presents the latest knowledge and research on the
management of cementitious systems within nuclear power plants. The
book covers aging, development and updates on regulatory frameworks
on a global scale, the development of cementitious systems for the
immobilization of problematic wastes, and the decommissioning and
decontamination of complex cementitious systems. The book's editors
and their team of experts combine their practical knowledge to
provide the reader with a thorough understanding on the
sustainability of lifecycle management of cementitious systems
within the nuclear industry. Sections provide a comparative tool
that presents national regulations concerning cementitious systems
within nuclear power plants, check international and national
evaluation results of the sustainability of different systems, help
in the development of performance test procedures, and provide a
guide on aging nuclear power plants and the long-term behavior of
these systems in active and passive safety environments.
An Introduction to Nuclear Waste Immobilisation, Third Edition
examines nuclear waste issues, including natural levels of
radionuclides in the environment, the geological disposal of
waste-forms, and their long-term behavior. It covers all-important
aspects of processing and immobilization, including nuclear decay,
regulations, new technologies and methods. The book has been
updated to include a discussion of the disposal of nuclear waste
from non-energy sources, also adding a chapter on the nuclear fuel
cycle. Significant focus is given to the analysis of the various
matrices used, especially cement and glass, with further discussion
of other matrices, such as bitumen. The book's final chapter
concentrates on the performance assessment of immobilizing
materials and safety of disposal, providing a full range of
resources needed to understand and correctly immobilize nuclear
waste.
This book summarises approaches and current practices in actinide
immobilisation using chemically-durable crystalline materials such
as ceramics and monocrystals.As a result of the increasing
worldwide growth of the nuclear industry, long-lived -emitting
actinides such as Pu, Np, Am and Cm are fast becoming a serious
environmental concern - actinide-bearing wastes have accumulated in
different countries due to nuclear weapons production. On the other
hand, as actinides are chemical elements with unique properties
they could be beneficially used for humankind in areas such as
medicine and technology. Durable actinide-containing materials are
attractive for various applications. These include in
chemically-inert sources of -irradiation used for a variety of
functions such as energy sources for unmanned space vehicles and
microelectronic devices, as well as hosts for nuclear waste and in
nuclear fuels to burn excess Pu.Unfortunately, there is currently
no appropriate balance between safe actinide disposal and use, even
though both processes require their immobilisation in a durable
host material. Thus, the choice of an optimal actinide
immobilisation route is often a great challenge for
specialists.Although a wealth of information exists about actinide
properties in many publications, little has been published
summarising currently accepted approaches and practices for
actinide immobilisation. Crystalline Materials for Actinide
Immobilisation fills this gap using information based on the
authors' first-hand experience and studies in nuclear materials
management and actinide immobilisation.
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