4.7 Article

Feasibility of constructing a full-scale radioactive high-level waste disposal cell and characterization of its thermo-hydro-mechanical behavior

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrmms.2020.104555

Keywords

In-situ experiments; THM behavior; Thermal pressurization; Claystone; Buried steel sleeve; Numerical simulation

Funding

  1. Andra
  2. BGR/UFZ
  3. CNSC
  4. US DOE
  5. ENSI
  6. JAEA
  7. IRSN
  8. KAERI
  9. NWMO
  10. RWM
  11. SURAO
  12. SSM
  13. Taipower
  14. European Atomic Energy Community [269905]

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The French National Radioactive Waste Management Agency (Andra) is conducting a research program at the Meuse/HauteMarne Underground Research Laboratory (MHM URL) to demonstrate the feasibility of constructing and operating a High Level Waste (HLW) disposal facility in the Callovo-Oxfordian (COx) claystone formation. The ALC1604 experiment is an in-situ heating test replicating a full-scale HLW disposal cell, studying the response of the cell and the surrounding rock under thermal loading. The lessons learned from this experiment have provided valuable feedback towards implementing new fullscale heating experiments consistent with a new benchmark concept.
Within the context of deep geological radioactive waste disposal, the French National Radioactive Waste Management Agency (Andra) is conducting a research program including in-situ experiments at the Meuse/HauteMarne Underground Research Laboratory (MHM URL), which aims to demonstrate the feasibility of constructing and operating a High Level Waste (HLW) disposal facility in the Callovo-Oxfordian (COx) claystone formation and to improve it. ALC1604 experiment is an in-situ heating test reproducing a full-scale HLW disposal cell. Heating devices were placed in the last 15 m of a 25 m long steel cased micro-tunnel to mimic the heat emitted by the HLW packages. The present experiment allows to study the response of the cell and the surrounding rock under thermal loading. More specifically, this experiment studied the thermo-mechanical (TM) behavior of the steel sleeve, equipped with strain gauges, displacement sensors, temperature sensors, etc., and monitored the evolution of the annular space (the gap between the sleeve and the rock). It also studied the thermo-hydromechanical (THM) behavior of the near/far field rock through pore pressure and temperature measurements installed in peripheral boreholes. The TM response of the steel sleeve and the THM response of the surrounding rock are numerically reproduced and the chosen THM parameters are compared with previous small-scale in-situ experiments conducted at the MHM URL in order to improve the reliability of the material parameters of the COx. The lessons learned from this experiment has provided valuable feedback towards implementing new fullscale heating experiments consistent with a new benchmark concept.

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