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        검색결과 2,006

        101.
        2023.05 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        The soils contaminated with radionuclides such as Cs-137 and Sr-90 should be solidified using a binder matrix, because radioactively contaminated soils pose environmental concerns and human health problems. Ordinary Portland cement has been widely used to solidify various radioactive wastes due to its low cost and simple process. In this study, simulant soil waste was solidified using cement waste form. The soils were collected around ‘Kori Nuclear Power Plant Unit 1’ and they were contaminated with the prepared simulant liquid waste containing Fe, Cr, Cs, Ni, Co, and Mn. The water-to-dry ingredients (W/D) ratio of cement waste form was 0.40. The cement paste was poured into a cubic mold (5×5×5 cm) and then cured for 28 days at room temperature. The 28-day compressive strength, water immersion, and EPA1311-toxicity characteristic leaching procedure (TCLP) tests were performed to evaluate the structural stability of cement waste form. The compressive strength was not proportional to soil waste loading, and the lowest compressive strength (4±0.1 MPa) was achieved in cement waste form containing 50wt% soil waste. After the water immersion test for 90 days, the compressive strength of cement waste form with 50wt% soil waste increased to 7.5±0.6 MPa, meeting the waste form acceptance criteria in the repository. It is believed that long-term water immersion test contributed to the additional curing and hydration reaction, resulting in the enhanced compressive strength. As a result of the TCLP test, the released amount of As, Ba, Cd, Cr, Pb, Se, Co, Cs, and Sr was less than the domestic and international standards. These results imply that cement waste form can be a promising candidate for the solidification of radioactive soil wastes.
        102.
        2023.05 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        The homogeneity of radioactive spent ion exchange resins (IERs) distribution inside waste form is one of the important characteristics for acceptance of waste forms in long-term storage because heterogenous immobilization can lead to the poor structural stability of waste form. In this study, the homogeneity of metakaolin-based geopolymer waste form containing simulant IERs was evaluated using a laser-induced breakdown spectroscopy (LIBS) and statistical approach. The cation-anion mixed IERs (IRN150) were used to prepare the simulant spent IERs contaminated by non-radioactive Cs, Fe, Cr, Mn, Ni, Co, and Sr (0.44, 8.03, 6.22, 4.21, 4.66, 0.48, and 0.90 mg/g-dried IER, respectively). The K2SiO3 solution to metakaolin ratio was kept constant at 1.2 and spent IERs loading was 5wt%. For the synthesis of homogeneous geopolymer waste form, spent IERs were mixed with K2SiO3 solution and metakaolin first, and then the fresh mixture slurry was poured into plastic molds (diameter: 2.9 cm and height: 6.0 cm). The heterogeneous geopolymer waste form was also fabricated by stacking two kinds of mixtures (8wt% IERs loading in bottom and 2wt% in top) in one mold. Geopolymers were cured for 7d (1d at room temperature and 6d at 60°C). The hardened geopolymers were cut into top, middle, and bottom parts. The LIBS spectra and intensities for Cs were obtained from the top and bottom of each part. Cs was selected for target nuclide because of its good sensitivity for measurement. Shapiro-Wilk test was performed to determine the normality of LIBS data, and it revealed that data from the homogeneous sample is normal distribution (p-value = 0.9246, if p-value is higher than 0.05, it is considered as normal distribution). However, data from the heterogeneous sample showed abnormal distribution (p-value = 7.765×10-8). The coefficient of variation (CoV) was also calculated to examine the dispersion of data. It was 31.3% and 51.8% from homogeneous and heterogeneous samples, respectively. These results suggest that LIBS analysis and statistical approaches can be used to evaluate the homogeneity of waste forms for the acceptance criterion in repositories.
        103.
        2023.05 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        Since high-level radioactive wastes contain long-lived nuclides and emit high energy, they should be disposed of permanently through a deep geological disposal system. In Korea, the first (2016.07) and the second (2021.12) basic plans for the management of high-level disposal systems were proposed to select sites for deep geological disposal facilities and to implement business strategies. Leading countries such as Finland, Sweden and France have developed and applied safety cases to verify the safety of deep geological disposal systems. By examining the regulatory status of foreign leading countries, we analyze the safety cases ranging from the site selection stage of the deep geological disposal system to the securing of the permanent disposal system to the investigation, analysis, evaluation, design, construction, operation, and closure. Based on this analysis, we will develop safety case elements for long-term safety of deep geological disposal systems suitable for domestic situation. To systemically analyze data based on safety cases, we have established a database of deep geological disposal system regulations in leading foreign countries. Artificial intelligence text mining and data visualization techniques are used to provide database in dashboard form rather than simple lists of data items, which is a limitation of existing methods. This allows regulatory developers to understand information more quickly and intuitively and provide a convenient interface so that anyone can easily access the analyzed data and create meaningful information. Furthermore, based on the accumulated bigdata, the artificial intelligence learns and analyzes the information in the database through deep learning, and aims to derive a more accurate safety case. Based on these technologies, this study analyzed the legal systems, regulatory standards, and cases of major international leading countries and international organizations such as the United States, Sweden, Finland, Canada, Switzerland, and the IAEA to establish a database management system. To establish a safety regulation base suitable for the domestic deep geological disposal environment, the database is provided as data to refer to and apply systematic information management on regulatory standards and regulatory cases of overseas leading countries, and it is expected that it will play a key role as a forum for understanding and discussing the level of safety of deep geological disposal system among stakeholders.