4.7 Article

Retardation capacity of altered granitic rock distributed along fractured and faulted zones in the orogenic belt of Japan

Journal

ENGINEERING GEOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue 3-4, Pages 116-122

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.enggeo.2009.03.008

Keywords

Orogenic belt; Altered granite; Retardation capacity; Flow experiments; Radioactive waste; Geological disposal

Funding

  1. Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) of Japan

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There are wide areas of granitic rocks in the Japanese orogenic belt. These granitic bodies inevitably contain fracture and fault systems associated with alteration zones. However, relatively little attention has been given to the possible influence of such widely distributed alteration zones on the migration of radionuclides from any radioactive waste repository that might in future be sited within granitic rock. In particular, the influences of alteration products and micro-fractures, due to chemical sorption and/or physical retardation require further consideration. In order to understand the retardation capacity of the altered deep granitic rocks, detailed geometrical characterization of pores, geochemical analysis, and batch sorption and flow-through experiments have been carried out. Those results show that the altered granite has a large volume of accessible pores, particularly in potassium-feldspar grains, which would influence nuclide retardation more than the accessible porosity in other minerals present, such as biotite. The distribution coefficients, Kd estimated from batch sorption tests and flow-through experiments suggest that altered granite has a high capability to retard the migration of nuclides. The retardation would probably be due to sorption on altered minerals such as sericite and iron hydroxides formed along grain boundaries and in pores created by dissolution, in addition to sorption on primary sorptive minerals. These results provide confidence that even altered and fractured parts of any granitic rock that might be encountered in a site for the disposal of high level radioactive waste may still retard radionuclide migration and thereby help the geosphere to function as a barrier. (c) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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