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        검색결과 3

        1.
        2022.10 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        Lubricant oil waste contaminated with radioactive materials generated at nuclear facilities can be disposed of as industrial waste in accordance with self-disposal standards if only radioactive materials are removed. Lubricant oil used in nuclear facilities consists of oil of 75-85% and additives of 15-25%, and lubricant oil waste contains heavy metals, carbon, glycol, etc. In addition, lubricant oil waste from nuclear facilities contains metallic gamma-ray emission radionuclides including Co-60, Cs-137 and volatile beta-ray emission radionuclides such as C-14 and H-3, which are not present in lubricant oil waste from general industries and these radionuclides must be eliminated according to the Atomic Energy Act. In general industries, the wet treatment technologies such as acid-white soil treatment, ion purification, thin film distillation, high temperature pyrolysis, etc. are used as the refining technology of lubricant oil waste, but it is difficult to apply these technologies to nuclear industrial sites due to restrictions related with controlling the generation of secondary radioactive waste in sludge condition containing radionuclides of metal components, and limiting the concentration of volatile radioactive elements contained in refined oil to be below the legal threshold. In view of these characteristics, the refinement system capable of efficiently refining and treating lubricant oil waste contaminated with radioactive materials generated in nuclear facilities has been developed. The treatment process of this R&D system is as follows. First, the moisture in the radioactive lubricant oil waste pretreated through the preprocessing system is removed by the heated evaporating system, and the beta-emission radionuclides of H-3 and C-14 can be easily removed in this process. Second, the heated lubricant oil waste by the heated evaporating system is cooled through the heat exchanging system. Third, the particulate matters with gamma-ray emission radionuclides are removed through the electrostatic ionizing system. Forth, the lubricant oil waste is stored in the storage tank and the purified lubricant oil waste is discharged to the outside after sampling and checking from the upper, middle and lower positions of the lubricant oil waste stored in the storage tank. Using this R&D system, it is expected that the amount of radioactive waste can be reduced by efficiently refining and treating lubricant oil waste in the form of organic compounds contaminated with radioactive materials generated in nuclear facilities.
        2.
        2022.10 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        Encapsulation using cement as a solidification method for disposal of radioactive waste is most commonly used in most advanced countries in the nuclear technology to date due to its advantages such as low material cost and accumulated technology. However, in case of cement solidification, since moisture or hydroxyl group in cement is decomposed by radioactivity, it may happen that gas is generated, structural stability is weakened, and leachability is increased due to low chemical durability. Therefore, the various new solidification methods are being developed to replace it. As one of these alternative technologies, for dispersible metal compounds generated through the incineration replacement process, the study on engineering element technology for powder metallurgy is under way, which overcomes the interference problem between mechanical elements and media that may occur during the process such as the homogeneous mixing process of the target powder substance and additives used in the powder metallurgy concept-based sintering process for the solidification of the final glass composite material (GCM), the process of creating a compressed molded body using a specific mold, the process of final sintering treatment. The solidification process of dispersible radioactive waste can be largely divided into pre-treatment stage, molding stage, and sintering stage, and the characteristics of the final radioactive waste solidification material can vary depending on the solidification treatment characteristics of each stage. In relation with these characteristics, the matters to be considered when designing device for each stage to solidify dispersible radioactive waste (property of super-mixing device for homogenized powder formation, structural geometry and pressure condition of molding device for production of compressed molded body, temperature and operation characteristics of sintering device for final glass composite material (GCM), etc.) are drawn out. It is expected that the solidification device design reflecting these considerations will meet all disposal conditions of radioactive waste material, such as compressive strength and leaching characteristics of solidified radioactive waste material, and create a uniformized solidification of radioactive waste material.