Ion Beam Irradiation for High Level Nuclear Waste Form Development (INWARD)
Closed for proposals
Project Type
Project Code
F11022CRP
2183Approved Date
Status
Start Date
Expected End Date
Participating Countries
Description
The safe long term disposal of high level nuclear waste from reprocessing has proven to be problematic worldwide with few countries having a long term strategy. This may be due to a range of reasons, ranging from technical to socio-political in nature. Issues remain, including the fabrication and the long term behaviour of high level waste forms during geological storage. This project addresses the nature of such challenges, focusing on the long term behaviour of proposed waste forms and the impacts arising from induced radiation damage, through alpha and beta decays. Radiation damage induces change over long timescales, i.e. hundreds to millions of years, making long term effects difficult to examine. However, the accelerated damage produced by ion beams provides a method for developing predictive models that can then be verified and tested; conditions such as temperature, rate of damage, in situ testing can all be controlled during ion beam irradiation. Materials of interest include the international standard glass and pure silica glass; zircon; pyrochlore–fluorite ceramics and a representative glass composite. Where available, the results will be validated using synthetic and natural samples that have undergone differing degrees of damage due to self-irradiation. The knowledge will be used to identify and quantify mechanisms of material transformations, and the long term predictability required for geological repositories. The results will define the source terms for waste forms in evolving repository designs, enhancing the design and reducing uncertainty and costs.
Objectives
Better understanding and predictability in the behaviour of high-level wasteforms through their operational lifetimes due to the damaging effects of self-irradiation.
Specific objectives
Determination of the changes in induced damage arising from changes in methodology for multiple ion irradiation, to mimic two particle decay (i.e. alpha decay).
Protocols for characterisation of ion beam irradiated materials, e.g. measurement of material density change arising from damage, or surface fracture toughness.
Quantification of the nature and magnitude of radiation damage in candidate wasteforms on the basis of ion irradiation and the modelling of its effects.
Quantitative intercomparison of the behaviour of wasteforms subjected to ion irradiations, coupled with comparable observations in actinide-doped systems, natural samples, or available historical wasteforms.