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        검색결과 1

        1.
        2023.11 구독 인증기관·개인회원 무료
        In general, radioactive waste with high radioactivity is made into a solid form with performance such as leaching restriction, shape retention, and structural stability so that radioactive waste does not affect humans and the environment as much as possible. This should be applied equally to radioactive waste, whether homogeneous or heterogeneous. The requirements are stipulated in the “Low and Intermediate Level Radioactive Waste Delivery Regulations” notice of the Korea Nuclear Safety and Security Commission. On the other hand, the waste acceptance criteria for domestic disposal facilities require immobilization of heterogeneous waste when the activity concentration is above a certain level, but do not provide specific immobilization performance requirements. In this study, the immobilization requirements applied to heterogeneous radioactive waste in various overseas countries operating low and intermediate-level radioactive waste disposal facilities were studied. First, the IAEA’s safety standards for radioactive waste immobilization, domestic regulations, and disposal facility waste acceptance criteria were reviewed. Countries operating surface disposal facilities such as the United States, France, Spain, and Japan and countries operating underground disposal facilities such as Sweden and Finland were divided to review the current status of immobilization application to heterogeneous waste in overseas countries. When reviewing overseas cases, each country’s disposal methods, types of disposal waste, and waste treatment criteria were also reviewed. It was found that the immobilization requirements for heterogeneous radioactive waste vary depending on the disposal method and the type of barrier used to ensure disposal safety in each country. The common point is to surround heterogeneous radioactive waste within a concrete lining of a certain thickness, and to apply the thickness, compressive strength, and diffusion coefficient of the concrete lining as immobilization performance requirements. Through this study, the immobilization performance requirements for heterogeneous radioactive waste in various overseas countries that stably operate low- and intermediate-level radioactive waste were confirmed, which is expected to contribute to specifying the performance requirements for immobilization of heterogeneous radioactive waste in domestic disposal facilities.