Hanford
Nuclear Waste Cleanup Plant May Be Too Dangerous
Safety
issues make plans to clean up a mess left over from the construction
of the U.S. nuclear arsenal uncertain
By
Valerie Brown
9 May, 2013
The
pulse jet mixers suck waste into their vertical tubes and then eject
it forcefully back into the tanks. Unfortunately, they have not yet
been shown to provide sufficient mixing at the scale necessary for
the Vit Plant. They do, however, apply enough force to the slurry for
the solids to grind away at the stainless steel of tanks and pipes,
weakening them enough to risk leakage. Besides this erosion, there’s
also potential for chemical corrosion. The Defense Nuclear Safety
Board, which advises the White House, has called these problems “a
show-stopper.”
“The
way [the plant] is currently designed poses unacceptable risks. DoE
now admits that,” says Tom Carpenter, executive director of the
watchdog group Hanford Challenge. In December the Government
Accountability Office issued a highly critical
analysis of the Vit Plant’s
unresolved safety issues
Disagreements
over the safety risks have also prompted outspoken protests from
several senior Hanford officials. Chief project engineer Gary Brunson
resigned in January. Busche and former deputy chief process engineer
Walter Tamosaitis filed whistleblower complaints alleging that their
concerns about safety were suppressed by Bechtel. (Bechtel declined
to be interviewed for this story, citing nondisclosure agreements
signed with Chu’s expert panel.)
But
Langdon Holton, DoE’s senior technical authority for the Vit Plant
and a member of Chu’s expert panel, believes the project’s
problems are technical snags, rather than the insoluble consequence
of incompetence or hubris. He also thinks that although the current
risks are real, they are unlikely and would be of low magnitude if
they did occur. For example, he says, “You’d have to have a
vessel unmixed for half a year” for enough hydrogen to accumulate
for a significant explosion. “Do I have concern we won’t be able
to resolve the issues? No, but it will take some time,” he adds.
(Chu’s panel does not expect to issue a formal report, according to
Holton.)
Time
may be limited. The 177 tanks, built between 1943 and 1986 and most
intended for only about a 20-year life span, are decaying; at last
count, six are leaking. The Vit Plant was supposed to start operating
in 2007 and is now projected to begin in 2022. Its original budget
was $4.3 billion and is now estimated at $13.4 billion. Nobody is
suggesting the project be abandoned, yet forging ahead without
confidence in the plant’s safe operation is not really an option
either. The real question, many Hanford watchers say, is whether the
country wants to pay for doing it right.
Busche
is adamant that the safety issues must be solved before plans proceed
further. “The level of robustness we have to put in all our systems
is derived from the waste itself,” she says. “It’s the gift
that keeps giving until it’s in a glass log.”
Overall,
the tanks hold every element in the periodic table, including half a
ton of plutonium, various uranium isotopes and at least 44 other
radionuclides—containing a total of about 176 million curies of
radioactivity. This is almost twice the radioactivity released at
Chernobyl, according to Plutopia:
Nuclear Families, Atomic Cities, and the Great Soviet and American
Plutonium Disasters,
by Kate Brown, a history professor at the University of Maryland,
Baltimore County. The waste is also physically hot as well as laced
with numerous toxic and corrosive chemicals and heavy metals that
threaten the integrity of the pipes and tanks carrying the waste,
risking leakage.
The
physical form of the waste causes problems, too. It’s very
difficult to get a representative sample from any given tank because
the waste has settled into layers, starting with a baked-on “hard
heal” at the bottom, a layer of salt cake above that, a layer of
gooey sludge, then fluid, and finally gases in the headspace between
the fluid and the ceiling. Most of the radioactivity is in the solids
and sludge whereas most of the volume is in the liquids and the salt
cake.
Going
with the flow
All
of these considerations contribute to the overall problem, which can
be summed up in one word: flow. To get to the glass log stage the
waste has to travel through an immense labyrinth of tanks and pipes.
It has to move at a fast enough clip to avoid pipe and filter clogs
as well as prevent solids from settling. This is quite a challenge
given the multiphasic nature of the waste: solids, liquids, sludge
and gases all move differently. The waste feed through the system
will be in the form of a “non-Newtonian slurry”—a mixture of
fluids and solids of many different shapes, sizes and densities. If
the solids stop moving, problems ensue.
For
one thing, there’s a chance that enough plutonium could congregate
to trigger a nuclear chain reaction, or criticality—the
self-sustaining cascade of atomic fission that releases massive
amounts of energy. That would be a serious event even if an explosion
did not breach the concrete containment building. Hot slurry could
surge backward through the piping, spreading the problem to other
parts of the system. Waste solids could also clog pipes, along with
ion-exchange filters designed to grab the most radioactive
constituents from the low-level waste for addition to the high-level
stream.
Whether
the solids pile up in the vessels, the pipes or the filters, says
Donna Busche, nuclear and environmental safety manager for Hanford
contractor URS Corp., “that’s where I’ve got the problem.”
Further construction of the Vit Plant’s flawed components cannot
proceed unless Busche issues an operating permit, which she is loath
to do. She calls the DoE’s failure to require that Bechtel resolve
the safety issues sooner “obscene.”
A
second explosive risk could arise because both heat and radiation can
disassemble water
into oxygen and hydrogen. If there are not places along the piping
and in the vessels for hydrogen to exit the flow of waste, enough
could build up to explode.
And
then there’s the extreme radioactivity of the waste, which is far
too high for direct human exposure. Enter the Vit Plant’s notorious
“black cells.” These are 18 massive concrete enclosures populated
by smaller stainless steel vessels. The idea is to guide the waste
through the vessels without any human intervention over the 40 years
officials believe it will take to process all the waste. The only way
to do this is to ensure that the black cells have no moving parts.
But because the waste has to be constantly stirred to prevent
settling of the noxious and radioactive solids, the plan calls for
pulse jet mixers—described as “turkey basters”—to keep the
solids suspended.
The
pulse jet mixers suck waste into their vertical tubes and then eject
it forcefully back into the tanks. Unfortunately, they have not yet
been shown to provide sufficient mixing at the scale necessary for
the Vit Plant. They do, however, apply enough force to the slurry for
the solids to grind away at the stainless steel of tanks and pipes,
weakening them enough to risk leakage. Besides this erosion, there’s
also potential for chemical corrosion. The Defense Nuclear Safety
Board, which advises the White House, has called these problems “a
show-stopper.”
“The
way [the plant] is currently designed poses unacceptable risks. DoE
now admits that,” says Tom Carpenter, executive director of the
watchdog group Hanford Challenge. In December the Government
Accountability Office issued a highly critical
analysis of the Vit Plant’s
unresolved safety issues
Disagreements
over the safety risks have also prompted outspoken protests from
several senior Hanford officials. Chief project engineer Gary Brunson
resigned in January. Busche and former deputy chief process engineer
Walter Tamosaitis filed whistleblower complaints alleging that their
concerns about safety were suppressed by Bechtel. (Bechtel declined
to be interviewed for this story, citing nondisclosure agreements
signed with Chu’s expert panel.)
But
Langdon Holton, DoE’s senior technical authority for the Vit Plant
and a member of Chu’s expert panel, believes the project’s
problems are technical snags, rather than the insoluble consequence
of incompetence or hubris. He also thinks that although the current
risks are real, they are unlikely and would be of low magnitude if
they did occur. For example, he says, “You’d have to have a
vessel unmixed for half a year” for enough hydrogen to accumulate
for a significant explosion. “Do I have concern we won’t be able
to resolve the issues? No, but it will take some time,” he adds.
(Chu’s panel does not expect to issue a formal report, according to
Holton.)
Time
may be limited. The 177 tanks, built between 1943 and 1986 and most
intended for only about a 20-year life span, are decaying; at last
count, six are leaking. The Vit Plant was supposed to start operating
in 2007 and is now projected to begin in 2022. Its original budget
was $4.3 billion and is now estimated at $13.4 billion. Nobody is
suggesting the project be abandoned, yet forging ahead without
confidence in the plant’s safe operation is not really an option
either. The real question, many Hanford watchers say, is whether the
country wants to pay for doing it right.
Busche
is adamant that the safety issues must be solved before plans proceed
further. “The level of robustness we have to put in all our systems
is derived from the waste itself,” she says. “It’s the gift
that keeps giving until it’s in a glass log.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.